Jump to content

User:Bauani

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ahamed Bauani

[edit]
Full Name: Noor Ahamed Bauani 
Location: Dhaka, Bangladesh 
Call Me: +880-1818-BAUANI 
URL: http://www.bauani.org/
Blog URL: http://blog.bauani.org/


This User contributes using Google Chrome
The bearer of this is a Wikipedian who shall be permitted to freely edit Wikipedia.
This user is not an administrator on the English Wikipedia. (verify)
This user uses Google as a primary search engine.
This user uses Wikipedia as a primary point of reference.
This user is part of the Fair use WikiProject.

Useful Templates

[edit]

{{cn}}{{uw-vandalism1}} {{subst:Uw-vandalism3|article|additional text}} {{Refimprove|date=February 2008}} {{resolved}} {{copyvio|Book Cover Image by Other Then Copyright Holder}}

[edit]

Special:Contributions/Md.altaf.rahman

WatchList

[edit]

Few Wikipedia Articles on my WatchList Need Special Care to *Improve* Quality:

Articles

[edit]

Quazi Johirul Islam - Paid Writing?

Picture of day

[edit]
Coconut
The coconut (Cocos nucifera) is a member of the palm tree family, Arecaceae. Originally native to the Central Indo-Pacific, in the regions of Maritime Southeast Asia and Melanesia, coconuts are now found across the world due to human cultivation and dispersal. They are normally cultivated in hot and wet tropical climates. The term coconut also commonly refers to the seed and fruit of the coconut tree, which is botanically a drupe. The fruit has three layers including an edible white, fleshy endosperm and is filled with a liquid known as coconut water. The coconut thus played a critical role in the migration of Austronesian peoples across the Indian Ocean, as it provided a portable source of both food and water for long sea voyages. In modern times coconuts are used extensively in cooking and cuisine, using the raw flesh, the water or in alternative forms such as coconut milk and coconut butter. These coconuts, one whole and one halved, were grown in the Dominican Republic; this photograph was focus-stacked from 19 separate images.Photograph credit: Ivar Leidus