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Bhopal
·Hindi
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
India's largest-circulation daily national newspaper in Hindi, as well as the fastest-growing Indian newspaper, which today is published in 63 versions. The newspaper explains its success with its merger in 1995 with Madhya Pradesh, the then leader in circulation.
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Kanpur
·Hindi
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
One of India's largest Hindi-language national dailies, it is published in 37 local versions for distribution across 11 states and major cities. According to the World Association of Newspapers (WAN), this newspaper is the most widely read daily in the world.
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Mumbai
·English
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
India's most respected national daily newspaper for foreign audiences, India's most widely read English-language newspaper, the world's most widely circulated English-language daily newspaper, Asia's leading newspaper according to George Nathaniel Curzon, and according to the British BBC, it is one of the world's top six newspapers.
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Kottayam
·Malayalam
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
The largest-circulation newspaper in the Indian city of Kottayam and Kerala in the Malayalam language, its daily audience is more than 20 million people, the second oldest newspaper in this state.
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Hyderabad
·Telugu
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
India's largest Telugu-language newspaper, mainly distributed in the states of Andhra Pradesh in the southeast of the country and Telingana in the Deccan Plateau. The newspaper has its own linguistic standard, which is understandable to most residents of cities and villages.
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Chennai
·Tamil
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
The largest-circulation Tamil-language newspaper in India, distributed in 16 cities mainly in the south of the country, and also available to residents of the Middle East as an international publication, especially in Dubai. Also known as «Tamil Daily # 1».
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Chennai
·English
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·Left
The second most popular English-language newspaper in India, the national publication with a predominant distribution in South India, where it covers 11 states and more than 5 million readers. It is aimed at a foreign audience — representatives of business, consulates, diplomatic missions, tourists and foreign readers.
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Mumbai
·English
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·Centre-left
A small-format daily newspaper in Mumbai, India, it was created in 2005 as a response by The Times Group media conglomerate to the attempts of its competitors HT Media Ltd and Diligent Media Corporation to enter the Mumbai newspaper market.
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Mumbai
·English
·Newspaper
·Daily
·Business, finance, money
·None
India's most popular and widely circulated business and financial newspaper, and the second most widely read English-language business newspaper in the world after The Wall Street Journal. It is devoted to the country's domestic financial markets, entrepreneurship, and investment.
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Calcutta
·Bengali
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
The daily newspaper of the Indian city of Kolkata and the entire state of West Bengal, published in Bengali in three versions, is known for its satirical mini-comics «Amal Aloy».
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Chandigarh
·Panjabi
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
India's leading Punjab-language newspaper, an independent publication with high standards of journalism and no advertising, is owned by The Tribune Trust media company. With the introduction of this newspaper, a new era of modern journalism has begun in the region.
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Chandigarh
·English
·Newspaper
·Daily
·General
·None
The oldest and most authoritative English-language newspaper in Northern India, distributed in the states of Punjab, Haryana and partly in Himachal Pradesh. The newspaper has related publications in Punjabi and Hindi.
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