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#sunuwar
sendandburn · 1 year
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Ideas for Hp ship names
Hi guys. So, normally i would be doing yet another mute & block/follow list but, i've noticed that there are a shit ton of yet unnamed ships (both problematic & not) in this fandom so i decided to propose some names for them, startin with the non Problematic ones:
Heat:
Angelotter: the ship between Angelina Johnson and Harry Potter
Reason for the name: its her name and his last name
Jarlene : The ship between James Potter and Marlene McKinnon.
Reason for the name: its their names
Prince's Bones: Severus Snape and Amélia Bones
Reason for the name: it's his mom's last name and her last name... Plus it makes it sound like she belongs to him.
Severlene: Severus Snape and Marlene McKinnon
Reason for the name: it's their names
PaddyPet: Sirius black and Petunia Evans Dursley
Reason for the name: it's both of their nicknames combined
Maregulus:Mary Macdonald and Regulus Black
Reason for the name: it's their names combined
Prince's Pet: Severus Snape and Petunia Evans Dursley
Reson for the name: it's his mom's last name and her nickname.
Femslash:
Chhaang and Gin- the ship between Ginny Weasley and Cho Chang
Reason for the name:
"Chhaang or chhyang (Tibetan: ཆང་, Wylie: chang, Nepali: छ्याङ, Newar: थो:) is a Nepalese and Tibetan alcoholic beverage also popular in parts of the eastern Himalayas, Yakkha, Limbu, Dura, Newar, Sunuwar, Rai, Gurung, Magar, Sherpa, Tamang and Lepcha communities. " (from Wikipedia) & " Gin (/dʒɪn/) is a distilled alcoholic drink that derives its flavour from juniper berries and other botanical ingredients." (from Wikipedia). It also happens that Ginny can be shortened to Gin and Chhaang could also be a misspelling of Cho's last name so it kinda works out.
Gin & Fleur- the ship between Ginny Weasley and Fleur Delacour
Reason for the name: it's a shortened version of Ginny's name and Fleur's name.
Slash:
Drorge- the ship between Draco Malfoy and George Weasley
Dred- the ship between Fred Weasley and Draco Malfoy
Garry-the ship between George Weasley and Harry Potter
Frarry- the ship between George Weasley and Harry Potter
Reverus - the ship between Regulus Black and Severus Snape
Poly:
JoKer Darling - The ship between George Weasley, Fred Weasley Draco Malfoy
Reason for the name : the series of ficts bellow
Chosen JoKer- the ship between George Weasley, Fred Weasley and Harry Potter
Reason for the Name: the same fict series and He is the chosen one
Joker Granger : the ship between George Weasley, Fred Weasley and Hermione Granger
Reason for the name: the same fict series and its her last name
Joker Lee: the ship between George Weasley, Fred Weasley and Lee Jordan
Reason for the name: the same series of ficts and its his name.
Dramionarry: the ship between Draco Malfoy,Harry Potter and Hermione Granger
reason: Its a combination of their ship names
Have more ideas? Leave them in the comments and i will add them to the list. Let's make these ship names official
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koubou-minakusi · 2 years
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春の京都で絢爛なジュエリー展が期間限定でオープンしています。 とっておきのMinakusiバッグチャームも京都に旅しています。 という私は絶賛制作仕事中です。 Wanderersさんで美味しいコーヒー飲みたいなぁ。 麗らかで美しいものへの散策に、京都 Masami Caravanまでお出掛けください! #Repost @masamichara ・・・ Minakus の新作by Masami Caravan @at_wanderers でお披露目ネックレスたち。 ちょうど暖かくなってきて、ボリュームネックレスにもよき季節です。 by Masami Caravan 京都 🐈‍⬛2023 Preview ‘TARA’ 3/17 Fri -21 Tue @at_wanderers 11:00-19:00(最終日は18:00まで) 💎Indra Man Sunuwar (Jewelry : Nepal) @indramansunuwar 🙏Minakusi ( Accessory : Japan) @minakusi 💍Jaipur Jewelry by Masami (Jewelry: India) @jaipur_jewelry_bymasami ☕️Chie ( Culinary “dashi” creator sweet&drink) @chiedashi 銀座TARA Salonプレオープンイベントとして、第2のホームである京都Wanderersで新作をお披露目いたします。 @at_wanderers 美味しいお茶とスイーツと共に、今年最初の極上ジュエリーキャラバンをお愉しみください。 🐈‍⬛ Indra Man Sunuwar オーダー会 3 days 3/19 14:00-18:00 3/20 11:00-19:00 3/21 11:00-18:00 アポイントはDMにてお待ちしております。 → @masamichara 🐈‍⬛Jaipur Jewelry by Masami 新作お披露目オーダー会 🐈‍⬛Minakusi コレクションお披露目会 #bymasamicaravan #indramansunuwar #minakusi #jaipurjewelrybymasami #india #nepal #kyoto (Wanderers) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp6_Z8UP7n4/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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atlanticcanada · 2 years
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Man charged in triple stabbing: Halifax Regional Police
A 30-year-old man is facing charges for allegedly stabbing three people in Halifax Thursday night, according to Halifax Regional Police.
Around 7:45 p.m., police were called to the 3600 block of Joseph Howe Drive for an injured man in the area.
When officers arrived, they found three men who were stabbed by someone they knew, according to police.
The force says the suspect left the scene before they arrived.
The three men were taken to hospital for non-life-threatening injuries.
Police say patrol officers and a K9 unit found the suspect in the area a short time later.
Khadga Bahadur Mukhiya Sunuwar was due in Halifax provincial court Friday to be charged with:
three counts of assault with a weapon
two counts of aggravated assault
one count of possession of a dangerous weapon
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/Iyrd0Qq
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gemsartsjewellery · 2 years
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Udhauli (उधौली) is a festival of the Kirat communities celebrated to thank mother nature for providing ample harvests every year marking the migration phase downwards towards the low-elevation regions when the winter season arrives.
[src.: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Udhauli]
#gemsartsjewellery#Udhauli#Parva#Kirat#community#hill#harvest#mother#nature#sunuwar#rai#limbu#yakkha#Day#Lazimpat#kathmandu#kathmanduvalley#nepal#diamonds#gold#silver#gems#ring#earring#necklace
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Pratima Gurung
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Pratima Gurung (Gurung) became disabled at the age of seven after she lost her hand in an automobile accident. She has spoken about how her parents valued education and made sure she received a quality education, a rare opportunity for most Indigenous women and women with disability in Nepal. Today, Gurung is leading the advocacy effort for women with disabilities and Indigenous women in Nepal and internationally. She is the general secretary for Indigenous Persons with Disabilities Global Network and Nepal Indigenous Disabled Association (NIDA), chair of the National Indigenous Disabled Women Association Nepal (NIDWAN), and a faculty member at Padma Kanya College in Kathmandu. Indigenous Peoples comprise more than 35 percent of Nepal’s population, and persons with disabilities make up at least 1.94 percent of that population. Gurung is fighting for access, inclusion, and participation in decision making, and collective rights of Indigenous women and persons with disabilities, as the current Nepalese constitution does not ensure full and effective participation of all Indigenous Peoples at all levels due to their exclusion in the document’s drafting process. Cultural Survival’s Dev Kumar Sunuwar spoke with Gurung about her work at this year’s UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York.
Read the interview at: https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/nothing-about-us-without-us-struggle-inclusion-indigenous
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tarotbyflora · 2 years
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Hello dear how are you?
Could i please request you if sunuwar will come talk to me ,will we be great friends?thanks sweetheart<33i am S
Hi ☀️
I see you two will interact together but it will take some time. I see a waiting period and end up together in a group maybe. You two will become friends but somehow its not the way you hope for
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grsunuwar · 2 years
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samaya-samachar · 3 years
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नेपाली–अमेरिकन कलाकार सङ्घको अध्यक्षमा सुनुवार
नेपाली–अमेरिकन कलाकार सङ्घको अध्यक्षमा निशा सुनुवार निर्वाचित हुनुभएको छ । सङ्घको मङ्गलबार सम्पन्न चौथो अधिवेशनबाट सुनुवारको नेतृत्वमा १७ सदस्यीय कार्यसमिति निर्विरोध निर्वाचित भएको हो ।
नेपाली–अमेरिकन कलाकार सङ्घको अध्यक्षमा निशा सुनुवार निर्वाचित हुनुभएको छ । सङ्घको मङ्गलबार सम्पन्न चौथो अधिवेशनबाट सुनुवारको नेतृत्वमा १७ सदस्यीय कार्यसमिति निर्विरोध निर्वाचित भएको हो । सङ्घको वरिष्ठ उपाध्यक्षमा वसन्ती राई, उपाध्यक्षमा विमल डाँगी, विक्की पुलामी, ऐटना कार्की, राजेन्द्र राई, महासचिवमा सङ्गीता थापा, सचिवमा मधुकुमार गिरी, कोषाध्यक्षअख पुष्कर बराल, सहकोषाध्यक्षअख पूजा न्यौपाने र युथ…
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arjuna-vallabha · 4 years
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Mahadeva by Ankita Sikari Sunuwar
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youthincare · 5 years
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Pratima Gurung (Gurung) became disabled at the age of seven after she lost her hand in an automobile accident. She has spoken about how her parents valued education and made sure she received a quality education, a rare opportunity for most Indigenous women and women with disability in Nepal. Today, Gurung is leading the advocacy effort for women with disabilities and Indigenous women in Nepal and internationally. 
She is the general secretary for Indigenous Persons with Disabilities Global Network and Nepal Indigenous Disabled Association (NIDA), chair of the National Indigenous Disabled Women Association Nepal (NIDWAN), and a faculty member at Padma Kanya College in Kathmandu. Indigenous Peoples comprise more than 35 percent of Nepal’s population, and persons with disabilities make up at least 1.94 percent of that population. 
Gurung is fighting for access, inclusion, and participation in decision making, and collective rights of Indigenous women and persons with disabilities, as the current Nepalese constitution does not ensure full and effective participation of all Indigenous Peoples at all levels due to their exclusion in the document’s drafting process. Cultural Survival’s Dev Kumar Sunuwar spoke with Gurung about her work at this year’s UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York.
Cultural Survival: Please give us a brief background about the challenges facing Indigenous Peoples, and particularly Indigenous women with disabilities.
Pratima Gurung: If you look at the global data, we are 54 million Indigenous people with disabilities all around the globe. When it comes to my country, Nepal, we are 1.3 million Indigenous people with disabilities. When when we look at the overall population of women and Indigenous women in Nepal, we have about 7 million women with disabilities in Nepal. The first challenge I experience as an Indigenous woman with disabilities is about meaningful representation. It involves who you are, where you are represented. Because as soon as you are a woman, and an Indigenous woman, and a woman with disabilities, all of these identities keep you limited within the four walls. It comes to a point that your voice, your representation, your identification, and your recognition is the primary thing, and that begins from home, from the family, from the private sphere to the public sphere. The second challenge is about being disabled and the stigma associated with it. When you are a woman with disabilities, you have many serious and critical issues related with your life. The third thing is insuring your basic fundamental needs, like education, your social background, your economic status, your employment opportunities, your accessibility.
CS: What is it like to lead the Indigenous Peoples with disabilities movement as an Indigenous woman?
Pratima: It has really been a challenge for me. I was working for the Indigenous Peoples’ movement in 2001, looking over all the holistic dimensions of Indigenous women. As a researcher in the field, I was working with people with disabilities’ issues and I was not able to identify the issue of Indigenous people with disabilities or Indigenous women with disabilities. I began to realize that Indigenous women with disabilities are not able to make their voices heard. That made me question even myself as an Indigenous woman with disabilities: What am I contributing to my community, and what is my role? That was the dilemma for me, whether to move within the Indigenous movement or to move forward within the disability movement. So, I thought, why not have intersections of Indigenous and disability.
I got an opportunity to work with the International Disability Alliance as a fellow in 2013. That was the turning point for me: why not work on the issues of Indigenous people with disabilities in my own country? Nepal has so much diversity, not only in terms of religion/language, but also in terms of human diversity. That led me to move forward in working on Indigenous people with disabilities and also Indigenous women with disabilities, to also raise the issue at the global forum, in the international forum, even the United Nations. Disability has become a cross-cutting issue. How can disability issues be sensitized within the Indigenous movement and discourse, and how can the disability movement in the discourse value and integrate Indigenous values and practices? These are the things we are focusing on collectively from the ground and to the national level and international level.
CS: You have been involved in Indigenous Peoples’ issues for about two decades. Could you share guidelines for how Indigenous women can take the lead?
Pratima: First, I really want to highlight the effective and meaningful participation of Indigenous women at all levels. Today we want Indigenous women at the table, we want them to make their decisions, we want them to make their concrete ideas known about the issues and concerns that are affecting their lives. We don’t want others who would make a decision and an agreement on behalf of us. Indigenous women with disabilities have to be brought to the frontlines by their effective and meaningful participation. The second thing is about the level of awareness and active engagement at the national level and at the grassroots level, to bring a collective and collaborative approach to raise the issues that Indigenous women with disabilities are facing not only within the Indigenous women’s movement, or Indigenous Peoples movement, but beyond it. We have to look at it in a very comprehensive way...how can we collaborate and move forward to face these challenges with our government, the United Nations, and all the relevant stakeholders.
CS: What are some of the core rights guaranteed by the international human rights treaties or conventions? 
Pratima: The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) is an evolving and recent human rights treaty body. In the preamble B, it mentions Indigenous identity. Also, if you see the number of recommendations in the concluding observations that have been provided by the CRPD Committee to a number of member states, we can clearly find the issues of Indigenous people with disabilities or Indigenous women with disabilities reflected in those documents which state that these groups are marginalized, vulnerable, and excluded within the disability discourse and movement. For example, the recent CRPD concluding observations given to Nepal and also the Committee on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) concluding observations that have been provided to Indigenous women and women of Nepal. These two documents clearly highlight some of the emerging issues, like intersectional discrimination, and how Indigenous people with disabilities are vulnerable and in very dire situations; the earthquakes and other natural disasters and climate change have been clearly mentioned in those documents. Treaty bodies like the CEDAW are drafting a general recommendation that is specifically on Indigenous women. We also want to highlight the issue of intersectional discrimination so that other marginalized women like Dalit and Muslim women with disabilities in my country can be integrated. At the global level, we are trying to connect with the special rapporteurs so their reports and recommendations will highlight and reference these documents.“. . . we want Indigenous women at the table, we want them to make their decisions, we want them to make their concrete ideas known about the issues and concerns that are affecting their lives. We don’t want others who would make a decision and an agreement on behalf of us. Indigenous women with disabilities have to be brought to the frontlines by their effective and meaningful participation.” 
CS: What is the global situation for Indigenous Peoples living with disabilities? 
Pratima: We have been highlighting not only at the Permanent Forum, but in the global arena, that the situation of Indigenous people or Indigenous women with disabilities is very critical. Our goal is to come up with a very intensive and comprehensive global report on Indigenous people with disabilities. We have networks in Latin America, Asia, and Africa. We are also trying to push the Permanent Forum members to bring disability into the main agenda. We have been doing this followup meeting since 2012, which has brought attention to the Permanent Forum members about the sensitivity of including and integrating disability issues. By bringing these things as a main agenda point, I think we will be able to reach other Indigenous brothers and sisters in other parts of the globe, to hear their voices and issues and concerns and to network and collaborate with them. We hope still to integrate in the Indigenous persons with disabilities global network so that we can collectively raise our voices in the global arena.The Sustainable Development Goals slogan is “leave no one behind.” Since we are working on the ground, we have to keep these things in mind about who is not in the room while we are having a discussion. We need to figure out those groups, and we need to have policies and strategies to bring them inside the room so that their voices will be heard and integrated. People with disabilities are still being left behind, and we have to mainstream and integrate if we are working as human rights activists for an inclusive society. Thank you.
Photo by Dev Kumar Sunuwar. 
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koubou-minakusi · 2 years
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今週金曜日17日から京都Wanderers さんイベント始まります。 主催はお馴染み、土村さん。 土村さんの新ブランドTARAお披露目会にMinakusi 作品も帯同させていただきます。 お近くの方は是非お立ち寄りください! #Repost @masamichara ・・・ Minakusiさんと久々の京都キャラバン!心躍ります! 今回は作品のお披露目となります。 by Masami Caravan 京都 🐈‍⬛2023 Preview ‘TARA’ 3/17 Fri -21 Tue @at_wanderers 11:00-19:00(最終日は18:00まで) 💎Indra Man Sunuwar (Jewelry : Nepal) @indramansunuwar 🙏Minakusi ( Accessory : Japan) @minakusi 💍Jaipur Jewelry by Masami (Jewelry: India) @jaipur_jewelry_bymasami ☕️Chie ( Culinary “dashi” creator sweet&drink) @chiedashi 銀座TARA Salonプレオープンイベントとして、第2のホームである京都Wanderersで新作をお披露目いたします。 @at_wanderers 美味しいお茶とスイーツと共に、今年最初の極上ジュエリーキャラバンをお愉しみください。 🐈‍⬛ Indra Man Sunuwar オーダー会 3 days 🐈‍⬛Jaipur Jewelry by Masami 新作お披露目オーダー会 🐈‍⬛Minakusi コレクションお披露目会 #bymasamicaravan #indramansunuwar #minakusi #jaipurjewelrybymasami #india #nepal #kyoto (Wanderers) https://www.instagram.com/p/CpyYpIqSghI/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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sunusunuk · 6 years
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#buy1get1free 😂🤣😅at #sunuwar #chandi 2018 ❤️ (at Oak Farm Community School)
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sunuwarorg-blog · 7 years
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Bassai baja (mouth organ) By Shyam Sunuwar Bassai baja | Koinch | Mukhiya |
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nepal123 · 7 years
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Sunuwar passes test KATHMANDU: Nepali triathlon coach Yubaraj Sunuwar passed the Level-II Coach Course conducted in Incheon, South Korea.
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reportwire · 2 years
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Aspiring actor, tourists among 22 killed in Nepal plane crash | Aviation News
Aspiring actor, tourists among 22 killed in Nepal plane crash | Aviation News
Kathmandu, Nepal – Prakash Sunuwar was an aspiring actor based in the capital Kathmandu. He worked as a trekking guide to help achieve his dream. The 37-year-old often used to get foreign clients, taking them to exotic Himalayan landscapes. On Sunday, he was accompanied by two German tourists – Meike Graf Grit and Uwe Willner – on a flight to Jamson, a popular trekking and pilgrimage destination…
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grsunuwar · 2 years
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Mt Everest
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