Loi Pangnao is the highest mountain of the Daen Lao Range (Loi La range), a subrange of the Shan Hills. It is located near Mong Yawng in Shan State, Burma close to the border with China.
With a height of 2,563 m and a prominence of 1,596 m, Loi Pangnao is one of the ultra prominent peaks of Southeast Asia.
Loi is the word in the Meitei language (Meiteilon) for the term "scheduled caste". The term "Loi" is given to the Meitei villages of Manipur in northeast India who refused to adopt Hinduism when the newly converted Manipuri king ordered all his subjects to adopt the religion.
There are 73 Loi villages in Manipur. Only eight of them have come under presidential provision of scheduled caste reservation of the Indian Constitution.
There are more than 50 Loi families residing in Village Makhan Garh. This village falls in block Mahilpur (Hoshiarpur) State Punjab of India. More than 10 Loi Families shifted to Hoshiarpur city for there betterment. In 1994 Capt Ajit Singh belong to Loi family move to Patiala. Capt Ajit Singh's family left the Patiala in 2000 and shifted to Chhuani Kalan, Hoshiarpur. Capt Ajit Singh's Son Ranjit Singh Loi is also residing in Chhauni kalan, Hoshiarpur.
Ranjit Singh Loi Village Chhauni Kalan, Post Office Ram Colony Camp District Hoshiarpur State Punjab (India) Contact No. 08146792100, 09815532597 email [email protected]
As a surname, Loi may refer to:
Luoyang (IPA: [lwɔ̂jɑ̌ŋ]; Chinese: 洛阳), formerly romanised as Loyang, is the ancient capital located in the confluence area of Luo River and Yellow River in Central China. It is a prefecture-level city in western Henan province. It borders the provincial capital of Zhengzhou to the east, Pingdingshan to the southeast, Nanyang to the south, Sanmenxia to the west, Jiyuan to the north, and Jiaozuo to the northeast. As of the final 2010 census, Luoyang had a population of 6,549,941 inhabitants with 1,857,003 people living in the built-up (or metro) area made of city's five urban districts, all of which except the Jili District not urbanized yet.
Situated on the central plain of China, Luoyang is one of the cradles of Chinese civilization, and is one of the Four Great Ancient Capitals of China.
The name "Luoyang" originates from the city's location on the north or sunny ("yang") side of the Luo River. Since the river flows from west to east and the sun is to the south of the river, the sun always shines on the north side of the river. Luoyang has had several names over the centuries, including "Luoyi" (洛邑) and "Luozhou (洛州)", though Luoyang has been its primary name. It has been called, during various periods, "Dongdu" (东都, meaning the Eastern Capital, during the Tang Dynasty), "Xijing" (西京, meaning the Western Capital, during the Song Dynasty), or "Jingluo" (京洛, meaning the general capital for China).
Things are looking bad now
They never have been worse
To the north lie mountains
To the south a curse
Bloodstained footprints in the shifting sands
Among the olive groves of Cedarland
Lebanon
Lebanon...
Young girls go running around
Giggling out the door
Every generation has seen these wars before
Caught between a rock and a hard, hard place
Still you live your lives in a state of grace
Lebanon
Lebanon...
Old man smokes his pipe
And through world-weary eyes
He curses the cameras
And pleads to merciless skies
Through the ashes float the words of Khalil Gibran
Love in time will show her hand
Lebanon