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Paniki
Paniki may refer to: * Paniki (cutting instrument), a traditional East Indian tool * Paniki (food), a bat dish from Indonesia * Paniki, Kursk Oblast, a rural locality in Russia See also * Paniqui Paniqui (), officially the Municipality of Paniqui (; ; ), is a municipality in the province of Tarlac, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 103,003 people. It is the birthplace of the 11th President of the Philippin ...
, a municipality in the Philippines {{Disambiguation, geo ...
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Paniki, Kursk Oblast
Paniki () is a rural locality () and the administrative center of Panikinsky Selsoviet Rural Settlement, Medvensky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia. Population: Geography The village is located on the Paniki Brook (a left tributary of the Polnaya in the basin of the Seym), from the Russia–Ukraine border, south of Kursk, south-east of the district center – the urban-type settlement Medvenka. ; Streets There are the following streets in the locality: 1st Brigada, 3rd Brigada, 5th Brigada, 6th Brigada, 7th Brigada, Koptevka, Molodyozhnaya and Shelkovskaya (381 houses). ; Climate Paniki has a warm-summer humid continental climate (''Dfb'' in the Köppen climate classification). Transport Paniki is located from the federal route Crimea Highway (a part of the European route ), on the roads of intermunicipal significance ("Crimea Highway" – Paniki – Drachyovka) and ("Crimea Highway" – Paniki – 38N-229), from the nearest railway halt ''457 km'' (railwa ...
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Paniki (cutting Instrument)
Paniki or Panikhi ( Odia- ପନିକି) is a tool with a cutting edge and a wooden footrest, used for chopping vegetables, fish and meat. Panikis are mostly used in Odisha, India. A variation of the tool, known as ''Boti'' (Bengali- বটি), is found in the Indian states of West Bengal and Tripura, as well as in Bangladesh. Various tribes of Odisha used for different purposes. The tribe members of the Mutkia Kondha worship paniki as deity and do not keep their feet with their feet. They rather use a special type of paniki with a wooden stand. Panikis of ancient times show engraving of cultural and religious elements. Traditionally in rural Odisha, panikis are made from wrought iron or recycled steel by the blacksmith A blacksmith is a metalsmith who creates objects primarily from wrought iron or steel, but sometimes from #Other metals, other metals, by forging the metal, using tools to hammer, bend, and cut (cf. tinsmith). Blacksmiths produce objects such .... In pop ...
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Paniki (food)
Bats as food are eaten by people in some areas of North America, Asia, Africa, Pacific Rim countries, and some other cultures, including the United States, China, Vietnam, the Seychelles, the Philippines, Indonesia, Palau, Thailand, and Guam. Half the megabat (fruit bat) species are hunted for food but only eight percent of the insectivorous bat species are. In Guam, Mariana fruit bats (''Pteropus mariannus'') are considered a delicacy. History Bats have likely been consumed as a food source since prehistoric times in the Asia–Pacific, Asia-Pacific region. Chronostratigraphy, Chronostratigraphic analysis of archaeological sites indicate that bats could have been exploited as a food source since 74,000 years ago by ''Homo floresiensis''. On tropical islands, hunting large fruit bats was a worthwhile expenditure for prehistoric hominins. These megabats could be easily captured in caves in large numbers, and processing effort was also minimal. Bats have been hunted by Aboriginal A ...
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