ARY Zauq was a 24-hour cooking channel from Pakistan. It was part of the ARY Digital Network and was owned by ARY Group. It featured programming about food and cooking including programmes about Pakistani cuisine and international cuisine. ARY Zauq launched in 2009 and was available on Paksat 1 satellite at 38.0°E, free to air. In its final years it also aired reruns of popular Pakistani programs from the ARY Digital vault.
On June 8, 2011, ARY Zauq was launched in North America, available via Dish Network.
In 2014, ARY Zauq was replaced by ARY Zindagi, a television channel focusing on Pakistani and foreign television dramas along with some limited programmes focusing on cooking.
Żary [ˈʐarɨ] (German: Sorau, Lower Sorbian: Žarow) is a town in western Poland with about 39,900 inhabitants (2006), situated in the Lubusz Voivodeship (since 1999, previously in Zielona Góra Voivodeship (1975–1998)). It is the administrative seat of the Gmina Żary, although not part of it.
Żary is located in the east of the historic Lower Lusatia region, in the borderland with the Silesian lowlands and Greater Poland, roughly outlined by the Bóbr and Oder rivers. The city is one of the biggest economic and tourist centers in the southern Lubuskie region and the largest town in the Polish part of Lusatia, therefore also referred as its unofficial capital. The city, which history dates back more than 1000 years, features many historic sites.
The beginnings of settlement in the Żary area date back to prehistoric times. The name “Zara”, deriving most likely from a small, independent West Slavic tribe, appeared for the first time in 1007 in the chronicles of Thietmar of Merseburg, at the time, when Duke Bolesław I Chrobry of Poland had conquered the Żary land along with the eastern March of Lusatia. Regained by Emperor Conrad II in 1031, the city was chartered on the Magdeburg law by the Wettin margrave Henry III of Meissen about 1260. It covered the following three areas: a trade settlement on the “Salt Trail” running from Leipzig to Wrocław, a fortified town erected among bogs (in the area of the later castle), and a Franciscan settlement established in 1274.
ARY may stand for:
ARY may also refer to:
ary is the ISO 639-3 code for the Moroccan Arabic language.
Ary can also stand for Ary Escary the coolest kid in school.
Żary may refer to the following places:
Sheikh Muhammad Ibrahim Zauq (1789–1854) (Urdu: شیمحمد ابراہیم ذوؔق) was an Urdu poet and scholar of literature, poetry and religion . He wrote poetry under nom de plume "Zauq", and was appointed poet laureate of the Mughal Court in Delhi just at the age of 19. Later he was given the title of ' Khaqani e Hind'( The Khaqani of India) by the last Mughal emperor and his disciple Bahadur Shah Zafar .
He was a poor youth, with only ordinary education, who went on to acquire learning in history, theology and poetics in his later years. Zauq was a prominent contemporary of Ghalib and in the history of Urdu poetry the rivalry of the two poets is quite well known. During his lifetime Zauq was more popular than Ghalib for the critical values in those days were mainly confined to judging a piece of poetry on the basis of usage of words, phrases and idioms. Content and style were not much taken into account while appreciating poetry
Zauq was born at Delhi in 1789. His father, Sheikh Muhammad Ramzan was a lowly placed soldier in the Mughal army.
Este cuarto que esta a oscuras
con ganas de llorar
himpotencia, soledad
eterno el despertar
eterno mi pesar.
Con lagrimas en los ojos
ante la penumbra espesa
sin poderme levantar
hasta la tristeza pesa.
(Coro)
Es la cruel sentencia
de la vida hacia mi
soledad en mi alma
soledad sin ti.
Te me has ido
me cuesta sobrevivir
me puedo ir contigo?
o tengo que sufrir
este cruel castigo de vivir
sin tu amor y sin tus cariños.
(se repite coro)
La soledad me esta matando
me esta torturando.