Bengali, and English, keywords for some publications of Sergei Ostroumov, Fulbright Award winner, Moscow State University,
http://5bio5.blogspot.com/2016/07/bengali-keywords-for-some-publications.html
**
**
Bengali: India, Bangladesh,
**
Moscow State University:
**
The Role of Biodetritus in Accumulation of Elements in Aquatic Ecosystems;
http://5bio5.blogspot.com/2016/07/bengali-keywords-for-some-publications.html
**
**
Bengali: India, Bangladesh,
**
Moscow State University:
**
The Role of Biodetritus in Accumulation of Elements ... - ResearchGate
https://www.researchgate.net/.../225471572_The_Role_of_Biodetritus_in_Accumulati...
Official Full-Text Publication: The Role of Biodetritus in Accumulation of Elements in Aquatic EcosystemsThe Role of Biodetritus in Accumulation of Elements in Aquatic Ecosystems;
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/225471572
Article in: Contemporary Problems of Ecology 3(4):369-373 · August 2010;
DOI: 10.1134/S1995425510040016;
**
About Bengali language :
With about 250 million native and about 300 million total speakers worldwide, it is the seventh most spoken language in the world by total number of native speakers and the tenth most spoken language by total number of speakers.[5][6] The importance of this language to the countries of South Asia is illustrated by the history of national anthems of India and Bangladesh and the national song of India, all first composed in the Bengali language.
Today, literary form and different dialects of Bengali constitute the primary language spoken in Bangladesh, and the second most commonly spoken language in India.[7][8][9] With a rich literary tradition arising from the Bengali renaissance, the Bengali language binds together a culturally diverse region and is an important contributor to Bengali nationalism.
The Bengali Language Movement (ভাষা আন্দোলন Bhasha Andolôn) was a movement in 1951–52 in what was then East Pakistan(today Bangladesh) that heavily linked Bengali identity with the Bengali language. On 21 February 1952, protesting students and activists sacrificed their lives at the Dhaka University campus for the right to read, write, and speak in their mother language of Bengali. In 1999, UNESCO declared February 21 as International Mother Language Day in recognition of the people who sacrificed their lives for their right to use the Bengali language, instead of the then-state-imposed Urdu.[10][11] In Bangladesh, the language was renamed from Bengali to Bangla by the Eighth Constitutional Amendment of Bangladesh in 1988.[12] [Wikipedia]