#things to do in hyderabad
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saurabhgt · 6 months ago
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Discovering Hyderabad: Top Things to Do in the City of Pearls
Hyderabad, fondly known as the City of Pearls, offers a rich tapestry of history, culture, and modern attractions. This bustling metropolis seamlessly blends the old and the new, providing visitors with a plethora of activities and sights to explore. Here’s a guide to the top things to do in Hyderabad that will ensure you experience the best this vibrant city has to offer. This vibrant city offers an array of experiences, making it a must-visit destination for travelers. Also there is lot of places to visit in Hyderabad .
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1. Visit the Iconic Charminar
No trip to Hyderabad is complete without a visit to the iconic Charminar. Built in 1591 by Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, this stunning monument stands in the heart of the old city and is surrounded by bustling bazaars. Climb to the top for a panoramic view of the area and immerse yourself in the lively atmosphere below.
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2. Explore Golconda Fort
A short drive from the city center, Golconda Fort is a testament to Hyderabad’s rich history. Known for its impressive architecture and acoustics, the fort was once a hub of diamond trade. Explore its ancient structures, and don’t miss the captivating light and sound show in the evening that tells the story of its glorious past.
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3. Experience Ramoji Film City
For a taste of the glitz and glamour of Indian cinema, head to Ramoji Film City, one of the largest film studios in the world. Take a guided tour to see movie sets, enjoy live performances, and perhaps catch a glimpse of a film shoot in progress. It’s a fun-filled destination for families and film enthusiasts alike.
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4. Relax at Hussain Sagar Lake
Hussain Sagar Lake, with its large Buddha statue standing in the middle, is a serene escape from the city’s hustle and bustle. Enjoy a boat ride on the lake, and explore the nearby Lumbini Park and Necklace Road for a pleasant evening outing.Source : Telangana Tourism
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5. Discover the Salar Jung Museum
Art and history buffs will be fascinated by the Salar Jung Museum, home to one of the largest collections of antiques and art in the world. With artifacts from different civilizations, including rare manuscripts, sculptures, and paintings, the museum offers a deep dive into the past.
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Conclusion
Hyderabad’s unique blend of history, culture, and modernity makes it a captivating destination for travelers. Whether you’re exploring its historic monuments, shopping in its bustling bazaars, or enjoying its diverse culinary offerings, Hyderabad promises a memorable and enriching experience. So, pack your bags and get ready to discover the myriad things to do in Hyderabad!
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onedaytripin · 8 months ago
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Best 10 Places to visit in Hyderabad : Best Destinations for Heritage and Hospitality
Introduction: In this comprehensive guide, we’ll embark on a journey to discover the best 10 places to visit in Hyderabad, unraveling their historical significance, accessibility, and the enchanting experiences they offer to visitors. Hyderabad, the capital city of Telangana, is a vibrant metropolis steeped in rich history, culture, and architectural splendor. One day Hyderabad Local sightseeing…
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buindia · 9 months ago
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Things to do in Hyderabad: Discover the City Beyond
Source- Business Upside India 
Hyderabad is more than just the Charminar. It is well-known for a variety of activities, including thrilling adventures and uncovering the city's hidden treasures. As a result, several one-of-a-kind activities in Hyderabad can provide you with enchanting memories that last a lifetime.
Things to do in Hyderabad: How Can You Keep Yourself Engaged?
Hyderabad is well-known for its extensive history, delectable cuisine, and proud culture. However, in addition to seeing the conventional Charminar, exploring the city's streets, and visiting the Golconda Fort, there are certain activities that you may participate in by learning about the unique sites to visit in Hyderabad. Let us learn more about this topic in the following paragraphs.
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travenix123 · 1 year ago
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https://www.travenix.com/one-day-itinerary-hyderabad/
The One-Day Itinerary has everything sorted for you, from the best breakfast and dinner places to iconic monuments and serene lake in Hyderabad. Read on to know more
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itsnothingbutluck · 2 years ago
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indian-eagle · 6 months ago
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Discover the best things to do at Hyderabad Airport and nearby, including shopping, dining, relaxation, and cultural attractions Read on to know more
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statueofunitytentcity · 9 months ago
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Visit the Statue of Unity from Hyderabad
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Discover the ultimate guide to visit the Statue of Unity from Hyderabad. Explore nearby attractions and enjoy a luxurious stay at Statue of Unity Tent City-1. For detailed information and bookings, visit the official website of the Statue of Unity Tent City-1 (statueofunitytentcity.com) or call us at +91 97979 49494.
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abhi-views · 10 months ago
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Neon Wonderland at Nagole: Dive into a Fluorescent Fiesta of Fun!
Calling all Hyderabadis with a creative itch and a love for all things splattery! Neon Wonderland has landed in Nagole, bringing with it the city’s first-ever neon paint splatter room experience. Unleash your inner artist and prepare to immerse yourself in a world of electrifying colors and uninhibited expression. Step into a Fluorescent Fantasy: Imagine this: you enter a 1,200 square feet…
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digibhav · 1 year ago
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BEST THINGS TO DO IN HYDERABAD
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Hyderabad the capital of Telangana and Andra Pradesh is a big city. Hyderabad houses most precious heritages, monuments, temples and even big IT companies too. It’s an amazing place to explore the city. Here are some best places and grand events in Hyderabad that you must not miss. Read more
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aletterinthenameofsanity · 4 months ago
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Art References for Chapter One of underneath the sunrise (show me where your love lies)
(aka this is the nerdiest thing I've done for this fandom)
Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, Pieter Bruegel the Elder, c. 1560
"Monty didn’t know what it felt like to fly through the air, the wind between your wings, the sun kissing your skin, until now. He didn’t know what it felt like for the wax to burn away and melt itself into your skin, searing your flesh, until now.
And he didn’t know why anyone would risk such a thing until now.
Until them."
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The Two Fridas, Frida Kahlo, 1939
"How the fuck is Monty supposed to reply when he finally has the thing that he’s ached for so long and he can’t even enjoy it? When his heart is ratcheting up his throat, a ticking time bomb that Frida Kahlo would adore?"
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Garden of Earthly Delights, Hieronymous Bosch, 1490-1510
"Monty is being torn apart in the hell panel of the Garden of Earthly Delights. He is some abomination that Bosch dreamed up to fill the inferno, to be tortured for all eternity, because both of the only two things that Monty has ever loved are being ripped from his trembling fingers by his mother and used against him, just because she can’t handle the fact that he wanted something, anything, to call his own."
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Textiles of South Asia (Fictional Exhibit, but here are photos of the clothing in question)
"But mostly, Monty spent his time drinking in Edwin’s knowledge, the way that that he went into professor-mode when explaining the symbolism behind certain artworks. Monty devoured the bits about artwork that Charles knew about, like a discussion in the Textiles of Southern Asia special exhibit where Monty had the privilege of seeing Charles get excited explaining the differences and purposes of lehengas and saris and sherwanis. The way that though they were surrounded by masterpieces, all Monty could stare at is the two muses in the middle of the room, holding hands, more breathtakingly beautiful than any of the painting surrounding them."
Lehenga
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Sari (Maharashtraian sari)
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Sherwani (Painting of the last Nizam of Hyderabad)
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Snow Storm, J. M. W. Turner, 1842
"His fingers catch under Monty’s jaw, guiding Monty’s mouth to his like a brushstroke of lightning hitting the mast of a J. M. W. Turner ship, all storm, all sensation"
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I will post another archival set for chapter 2- we've got plenty more coming!
@deadboy-edwin @icecreambrownies @anonymousbooknerd-universe @ashildrs
@tragedy-machine @just-existing-as-you-do-blog @orpheusetude @mj-irvine-selby
@pappelsiin @itsbitmxdinhere @rexrevri @sweet-like-h0ney-lavender @saffirez
@the-ipre @sunnylemonss @days-light @agentearthling @helltechnicality
@sethlost @catboy-cabin @secretlyafiveheadeddragon @vyther15
@anything-thats-rock-and-roll @queen-of-hobgobblers @every-moment-a-different-sound
@nix-nihili @mellxncollie @tumblerislovetumblerislife @lemurafraidofthunder
@likemmmcookies @wr0temyway0ut
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formulatrash · 4 months ago
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what do you think about formula e seemingly wanting to replace all of their street circuits in the calendar with permanent tracks? it feels like it’s starting to lose its street circuit racing identity already (and, that’s more of a personal opinion, but the permanent track racing feels like it has been much worse, it just doesn’t suit formula e cars at all)
it's very odd, at a point when F1 can't stop adding street tracks specifically to get hype venues and big-ticket promotional races, Formula E is hiding itself further and further away in permanent circuits.
they're sort of doing it for the same reasons, is the funny thing. little circuits will host FE much cheaper than the immense cost and logistics of building a street track and the lower the bill, the bigger likelihood a local business or tourist board will foot it. for F1, the cost of building a new, permanent facility is so staggering even oil states would likely baulk at it now. Yas Marina has cost over $1.3 billion so far, which Abu Dhabi can foot but isn't small change even for them and has led to other programmes being focussed around re-using and extracting value from the facility. (like the autonomous racing thing I was at earlier this year)
not that street tracks come much cheaper but you can build them faster, for an instant gratification on that investment.
F1 can boast massive figures for what a city stands to gain for hosting a grand prix. $449 million additional spending for Miami, for instance. Formula E... cannot throw around those numbers. it's not really a tourism draw and personnel are limited. so to go to a facility that desperately needs events, with an audience reliant primarily on local interest, means it can show an impact. FE claims that it brought an $84 million boost to the Hyderabad economy, for instance but a lot of that will have been in circuit construction.
so the financials add up. but also FE is supposed to be its own, distinct, world championship with a high profile not "F1 but it's electric and goes to lower grade circuits."
if a series does not have a profile of sufficient size, it has no hope of selling out venues. this happened to F1 - Silverstone didn't use to sell out at all, you could walk up to the gate and buy a ticket and I'm talking, like, 2016 not 1994. it took a long pathway of turning its visibility around to reverse that and yes they hit lightning in a bottle with DTS during lockdown but even things like social media had been a huge start in undoing a long, regressive slide into an ageing, shrinking fanbase.
FE cannot be small. manufacturers like Porsche are not in it for it to be small - yes, it is a useful test laboratory for regen but with long periods of homologation for powertrains, the marketing has to be a significant part of the draw. and you also need, reasonably, to be able to succeed: a manufacturer's board will not keep signing off on a racing budget, however small, if there are no or frustrating results on track. and no marketing function.
I know I've been saying this for years but it's still true: FE needs to keep developing itself, keep acting like a startup (since it is one) and continue to grow. ever since COVID it feels as though the championship just said "ah well, this is what we are now" and decided it wouldn't try to progress anything any further. it's a very odd lack of ambition for what could be such a hugely important series both to OEMs and fans.
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ramayantika · 1 year ago
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A goodbye needed
From being born in Hyderabad to living in the northern part of India, that is Gurgaon and then the Western side, Maharashtra to Vishakhapatnam in the south and finally in the eastern states of Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, and Odisha, I do get to say that I covered eighteen years of my life in the four main directions of India. But my favourite city has and will always be Kolkata.
To be honest, my brother desperately wanted to live in Kolkata because of Eden Gardens in our GK book. I wasn't that interested until I arrived in Kolkata in 2016 to appear for the written test in my school. The exam went well and so did the interview. I remember my father lived in a small bachelor's one room apartment in Ruby Park. My eleven year old eyes were stunned as they took in the grandeur of the old buildings from the British era to the modern metros and malls of Kolkata. When I came back to Raipur, all I knew was Kolkata would be life changing for me.
And in 2017, I did come home. To Kolkata. A small roadside apartment facing a canal where you don't have crystal clear water but drainage water. Somehow the water wasn't stinky until the arrival of the monsoon showers. I lived there from 2017 to 2020. I was supposed to stay there until 2022 but fate had other plans but that's a story for another day.
I always call Kolkata home even though I am from Odisha. It was the only city that embraced all shades of me. I spent the first two years of my teenage there. The damp roads leading to my apartment have heard my songs above sweet love and true friendship. On quiet midnights, my tiny balcony knew the whispers of my soul, and the questions it asked about fate and the world. The monsoon rainfall told me how to appreciate nature and beauty. I learnt to dance with storms, and dream of stories that I now write and desperately wish to be a part of.
I met a teacher who told me in a tone akin to a whisper in front of the class that I am like a small pandora box, hidden from view but having the most wonderful and beautiful things to offer the world. The next month I danced for a school event and God since then I never looked back. Kolkata connected my soul to literature and culture.
I am no longer in Kolkata but each time my calendar notifies Rabindranath Thakur's jayanti, my heart goes to the old tunes of Rabindra sangeet; the beauty and tenderness of his songs that captured my heart and caused me to spill some of my poetry in the last page of my rough notebook.
I visited kolkata again in December 2021 after first term examinations of class twelve. My connection with kolkata broke like a plant uprooted from its soil. It felt as if I had been banished from home. All the months that passed, and all the seasons that changed showed me memories and dreams of what could have been in kolkata. But when I visited kolkata, I saw how some things had changed.
My home appeared....... different? I always say that my young soul blossomed in Kolkata. The same soul turned sad at the emotion that the city showed me. Perhaps that's how growing up is. To see that things around you change, people, roads, hearts everything but somewhere there still lies a calling that says, 'hey, I know things are different. But I am still here. Look at me, embrace the new me. Embrace yourself. You are changing too.'
Where it once used to be wonder, nostalgia filled my heart as I met my friends after two years. I passed through my apartment again and smiled at the balcony, my small corner for solitude. I saw a few towels hanging there.
Going back from Kolkata felt a little sad. I could not accept the change. I had been uprooted from my roots, and when I come back I see new flowers springing up. Without me?
Then after a year, I visited Kolkata again in July 2023. I had grown so had the city. When I passed by the same British era buildings and Howrah bridge, the same wonder struck my soul. I saw a few flowers growing on the pathway, getting their nourishment from the July showers. The empty space in my heart too was filled with flowers. My friends who are now in their respective colleges, doing their own things with their own friend circles now but somehow we come together. Just like old days before.
Home is always home no matter how far you go or how long you stay away from it. Home will always welcome you back. The fragrance of wet earth filled my soul with a warm blanket, as if telling me that all this while, I waited for you. I am different but I am still your friend.
Era sukher laagi chahe prem, prem mele na.
Shudhu sukh chole jaye emoni mayar cholona
This song will always remind me of Kolkata, the warm monsoon nights that were filled with a longing of love, friendship and magic. It will take me back to dreams and whispers of a fantasy that my heart still believes in that I would one day bring forth the wonder and beauty of my Self to the world. It will remind me that there must be tender days to be spent in reading poetry on a cool evening.
The day I boarded the train to Durgapur, my heart hummed the tune of Era Sukher Lagi from Choker Bali. As the train left the station, I waved at my young self through the window. It was farewell. I would come home later for my dance work, a thread that shall tie me to this wonderful city forever but I would never come home this way ever again and for the first time I was happy. And perhaps to witness an end to a heartwarming journey of nostalgia, acceptance to change and farewell, the clouds showered rainfall against the window just like the cool monsoon nights years ago.
All was well....
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voidsteffy · 4 months ago
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Ok now, I'm gonna end up in RGI airport in Hyderabad by afternoon and wanna order food
But the thing is: my layover is gonna be very short (1 hour or less than that, which is practically eaten up by domestic transfer and security check) so I wanna know if I can order beforehand and when I land, I could rush and collect my order.
Does anyone know how I could do that?
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buindia · 9 months ago
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Find out the best things to do in Hyderabad. The city of Pearl has many places to visit.
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travenix123 · 1 year ago
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https://www.travenix.com/kids-places-in-hyderabad/
Read on to know about the best places in Hyderabad for kids for a memorable kid&'s day-out. From museums to amusement parks and theatre, our list has it all!
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mrhaitch · 4 months ago
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Hello Mr.Haitch!!
I hope you and your family are doing well ^^
So my questions for you are—
1) Would you consider yourself a picky eater?
2) Thoughts on the debate around pineapples on pizza. Do you like/dislike Hawaiian pizza? Also mint chocolate ice-cream yay or nay?
3) If you could eat only one thing for the rest of your life, what would it be?
4) Can you give me a lesser known food related fun fact?
5) Do you like Indian food? (Also I’ll add a little rant)— As an Indian, it peeves me a bit, whenever people reduce Indian food to only Naan, Tandoori chicken, Biryani, and Butter chicken.
India has such a vast variety of food. With each state having its own cuisine. The food which the western world is more familiar with, hails from different states. Like butter chicken is from Delhi, tandoori is from Punjab and Biryani (originally from Iran, brought to India by the Mughals) is typically from Hyderabad.
Also, India has a vast variety of vegetarian food. As far as I know, India is the only country with a vegetarian menu for McDonald’s
Okay. My rant here is done!
I hope you have a great rest of the day!
And thank you in advance for answering my silly questions ^^
1. Nope, I'm a fairly opportunistic eater when not at home. Otherwise I've got a fairly loose regimen that I follow.
2. I'm fairly neutral - I'll eat it if it's there but I won't seek it out. Mint chocolate has never been to my taste but I wouldn't deprive someone else of it.
3. This changes often, but probably salted pistachios.
4. Button mushrooms are incredibly toxic, but only at high concentrations. Unless you eat your bodyweight in mushrooms you're absolutely fine.
5. I'm hesitant to answer, in light of your comments, but not because I disagree. It's a colonial hangover where cuisines from other cultures are imported, bastardised, and then the bastardised version becomes the standard. I love what we call Indian food in the UK: lamb Rogan Josh with saag aloo is my standard. We also cook it a little, particularly keema muttar. I still use the same Madhur Jeffrey recipe my mum used, but even that's likely to have been altered for western palates.
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