Kālidāsa
Kālidāsa (Sanskrit: कालिदास, "Akkwa Kali (Servant of Kali)"; 4th–5th century CE) A̱ yin yet a̱zu̱zrak a̱ntyok du̱jem Sanskrit ṵ ba yin hwa di a̱ yet a̱ngwak u̱ jem a̱bvom a̱tushuk bu̱ a̱nzzup ni. [1][2] A̱kpa a̱mbvwo nu na bu̱ a̱bvom a̱tushuk a a̱ yin yet a̱nyyi Hindu Puranas bu̱ a̱huhwa nba nu. Npfong nu na bu̱ tat ka̱pfun a̱ sshi ba̱ na ntat. Ba yin byin Proust a̱za̱gbang Auteuil ka̱yat Paris, ka̱ryyi a̱ntyok nzwa bu̱ ssha hwat. A̱tyi nu nu̱, Adrien Proust, a̱ yin yet a̱ntyok du̱twang nkyang kwak nhyyu bu̱ kpa rwam, nu a̱ yin ngyak hyyu cholera. A̱na nu nu̱, Jeanne Clémence Weil, a̱ yin wruk nyai u̱ ka̱ryi ba̱nyet ssha nyyai sot Yahuda. Proust a̱ yin ndai an bvwak a̱tyyi na a̱ yin yet a̱ntyok katolik u a̱ bvo yin su brak a̱n nwwa trong n sshi Ka̱za ni.
Kālidāsa An cei a̱rya a̱mba 20th-Aryya a̱sa̱bvom ntyi rya Kālidāsa u̱ wwang a̱bvom Meghadūta
Pfwong a̱bvom, Dramatist wap Sanskrit, Prakrit ka̱ram c. 4th-5th century CE Genre Sanskrit drama, Classical literature Subject Epic poetry, Puranas Notable works Kumārasambhavam, Abhijñānaśākuntalam, Raghuvaṃśa, Meghadūta, Vikramōrvaśīyam, Mālavikāgnimitram
A̱kpok swatka̱sa nu nu̱ ba bvwo ba ma̱dei bu̱ kyang a ba ni yyat a̱ tun ka̱yat ni nkpa yet a̱bvom a̱ta̱shuk bu̱ a̱nbvwo nu na.