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  1. Nindana village is located in Maham tehsil of Rohtak district in Haryana, India. It is situated 10km away from sub-district headquarter Maham (tehsildar office) and 30km away from district headquarter Rohtak. As per 2009 stats, Nindana Tigri is the gram panchayat of Nindana village.

    • Maham
    • Nindana Tigri
    • Rohtak
    • Haryana
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › NindanaNindana - Wikipedia

    Nindana is a village near Rohtak city in the Rohtak district of Haryana, India. It comes under the jurisdiction of Meham tehsil of Rohtak district. It is located on the Gohana to Bhiwani road. It is surrounded by Meham, Farmana, Bheran, Ajaib, Bainsi, Gugaheri, Kharak, and Girawad villages.

  3. Nidana or Nidaana or Nindana (निन्दाणा, निदाणा) is a prominent village of Maham-Chaubissi, in Rohtak district of Haryana. It is a village of Nehra Khap. [1] The village comes under Lakhan Majra sub-tehsil.

  4. Nindana is a large village located in Maham Tehsil of Rohtak district, Haryana with total 2373 families residing. The Nindana village has population of 12760 of which 7016 are males while 5744 are females as per Population Census 2011.

    • Caste Data as Per Census 2011
    • Working Population as Per Census 2011
    • Reference

    Schedule Caste (SC) constitutes17.9%while Schedule Tribe (ST) were0%of total population in Nindana village.

    In Nindana village out of total population, 5,923 wereengaged in work activities. 82.9% ofworkers describe their work as Main Work (Employment or Earning more than 6 Months)while 17.1% wereinvolved in Marginal activity providing livelihood for less than 6 months. Of 5,923 workersengaged in Main Work, 2,259 were cultivators (owner or co-owner)while ...

  5. May 8, 2024 · Public Utilities. NINDANA KHAS-MEHAM. VIKASH. Email : VIKASHSAROHA58 [at]GMAIL [dot]COM. Pincode: 124112.

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  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › NidanaNidana - Wikipedia

    Nidāna is the term used to describe the standard introduction of a Buddhist sutra, where the formula "Thus have I heard" (attributed to Ānanda) is followed by a description of the location and occasion on which the Buddha gave a particular teaching. [7]