Sunday 23 April 2017

Dedicated to all the Bengalis KOLKATA HUMOUR - A to Z .......😎


Dedicated to all the Bengalis

KOLKATA HUMOUR
- A to Z .......😎

A is for Awpheesh (as in Office). This is where the average Kolkakatan goes and spends a day hard at work. And if he works for the 'Vest Bengal Gawrment' he will arrive at 10, wipe his forehead till 11, have a tea break at 12, throw around a few files at 12.30, break for lunch at 1, smoke the 7th unfiltered cigarette at 2, break for 5th cup of tea at 3, sleep sitting down at 4 and go home at 4:30. It's a hard life!

B is for Bhision. For some reason many Bengalis don't have good bhision. In fact in Kolkata most people are wearing spectacles all the time....Bhishon Bhalo and Bibhotso.... though means opposite ...used for same situations.. depending on the Beauty of fairer sex...are close ...almost in a tie for second spot....

C is for Chappell. Currently, this is the Bengali word for the Devil,for the worst form of evil. In the night mothers put their kids to sleep saying, 'Na ghumoley ebar Chappell eshey dhorey niye jabe.'

D is for Debashish or any other name starting with Deb. By an ancient law every fourth Bengali Child has to be named Debashish. So you have a Debashish everywhere and trying to get creative they are also called Deb, Debu, Deba with variations like Debopriyo, Deboprotim, Debojyoti, etc. thrown in at times....as creations of God himself !!

E is for Eeesh. This is a very common Bengali exclamation made famous by Aishwarya Rai in the movie Devdas. It is estimated that on an average a Bengali, especially Bengali women, use eeesh 10,089 times every year. 'Ei Morechhey' is a close second to Eeesh.

F is for Feeesh. These are creatures that swim in rivers and seas and are a favourite food of the Bengalis. Despite the fact that a fish market has such strong smells, with one sniff a Bengali knows if a fish is all right. If not, he will say 'eeesh what feeesh is theesh!'

G is for Good name. Every Bengali boy will have a good name like Debashish or Deboprotim and a pet name like Motka, Bhombol, Thobla, etc. While every Bengali girl will have pet names like Tia, Tuktuki, Mishti, Khuku, et cetera.

H is for Harmonium. This Bengali equivalent of a rock guitar. Take four Bengalis and a Harmonium and you have the successors to The Bheatles!

I is for Ileesh. This is a feeesh with 10,987 bones which would kill any ordinary person, but which the Bengalis eat with releeesh!

J is for Jhola. No selfrespecting Bengali is complete without his Jhola. It is a shapeless cloth bag where he keeps all his belongings and he fits an amazing number of things in. Even as you read this there are two million jholas bobbling around Kolkata, and they all look exactly the same! Note that 'Jhol'with mysterious condiments.. . as in Maachher Jhol is a close second. Jhaamela and Jachhetai are distant 3rd and 4th

K is for Kee Kaando! It used to be the favourite Bengali exclamation till eeesh took over because of Aishwarya Rai.Kee mushkil is a close second.

L is for Lungi, the dress for all occasions. People in Kolkata manage to play football and cricket wearing it not to mention the daily trip in the morning to the local bajaar. Now there is talk of a lungi expedition to Mt Everest.

M is for Minibaas. These are dangerous half buses whose antics would effortlessly frighten the living daylights out of all James Bond stuntmen as well as Formula 1 race car drivers.
                
N is for Nangto. This is the Bengali word for Naked. It is the most interesting naked word in any language!

O is for Oil. The Bengalis believe that a touch of mustard oil will cure anything from cold (oil in the nose), to earache (oil in the ear), to cough (oil on the throat).

P is for Phootball. This is always a phavourite phassion of the Kolkattan. Every Bengali is born an expert in this game. The two biggest clubs there are MOHUNBAGAN and East Bengal and when they play the city comes to a stop.

Q is for Koshchen (question) as in "Mamatadi koshchens Prufessaar in Writaars Buiding."

R is for Robi Thakur. (not to be confused with our very own Robee-da). Many many years ago Rabindranath got the Nobel Prize. This has given the right to all Bengalis no matter where they are to frame their acceptance speeches as if they were directly related to the great poet and walk with their head held high. This also gives Bengalis the birthright to look down at Delhi and Mumbai and of all non-Bengawlees'! Note that 'Rawshogolla' comes a close second!

S is for Shourav. Now that they finally produced a genuine cricketer, that too a captain, Bengalis think that he should be allowed to play until he is 70 years old.

T is for Trams. Hundred years later there are still trams in Kolkata. Of course if you are in a hurry it's faster to walk....Trams are still existing in Paris too.......you see !

U is for Aambrela. When a Bengali baby is born he is handed one.b it sunmer/rainy season or winter,u vl find evry bengali carrying it with themselves till their last breadth.

V is for Bhaayolence. Bengalis are the most non-violent violent people around. When an accident happens they will fold up their sleeves, shout and scream and curse and abuse, "Chherey De Bolchhi" but the last time someone actually hit someone was in 1939.

W is for Water. For three months of the year the city is underwater and every year for the last 200 years the authorities are taken by surprise by this!

X is for X'mas. It's very big in Kolkata, with Park Street fully lit
up and all Bengalis agreeing that they must eat cake that day.

Y is for Yesshtaarday. Which is always better than today for a Bengali (see R for Robi Thakur)?. It is also for Jubraj Shingh and Joga.

 Z is for Zindabaad.


 


Saturday 15 April 2017

Anurag Singal_A short talk for Chartered Accountancy students

10 types of Investors in Indian markets!

10 types of Investors in Indian markets!

The Gold class (Silent on Twitter, social media)– Age group 38-55 yrs- 100-200 crores in stocks. Self made wealth. Did 10-100x in few stocks. Investing since 2003 or earlier

Honest beginner value investor (usually silent on Twitter)– 50-80% of assets in stocks, usually 28-35 yr old, made some wealth (50L-2cr) in last 3-5 yrs, looking at building 5-7 cr portfolio in 3-4 years and leaving job. Subscribes to Multiple advisory services

Typical Twitter value investor- Diverse age group, Asset allocation- 99% real estate (1-10cr), stocks- 1% – 1-10 lakhs. Whatsapp group name- Value investing. Discussion on- Intra-day trades, Futures, Options, Break-outs etc. Churns whole portfolio every week

Smart Twitter value investor- 30-40 yr old, 50% asset allocation in stocks- Sells all portfolio in demonetisation time. But keeps tweeting about value investing. After demonetisation market picks up- RTs old tweets of old stocks (in reality- could not buy them again as they have run away before he could buy again)

Beginner, 25 yr old- has no clue what stock market is about. Portfolio size 1-5 lakhs. Joins some groups etc to pass time. Primary motive from stock mkt- time pass & some thrill

The SIP investor– 30-55 yr old. Invests through SIP in Mutual funds. Doesn't have a clue about stocks. Looks at stocks that go 10x in awe. Beginning to invest in direct stocks

The F&O trader/Broker- primarily gives tips on Nifty, Bank Nifty etc. Earns money via brokerage. Hasn't made a penny in profits (mostly losses) but portrays himself as a successful trader

The Networked value investor- Has networks with good stock investors. Doesn't have a clue about value investing. Gets stock picks from others and talks about them with everyone else

The Sleepy value investor– a RARE breed- Buys and holds 10-12 compounders for 3-5 years time frame (e.g pvt banks)

The Break out value investor– One who thinks buying break outs and value investing is one and the same! A very common breed!


Mother Markets Takes Care of its EVERY CHILD ðŸ˜„

 


Indian Born Student's Exceptional Speech in United States