Samadhi Zendejas (born December 27, 1994), also known simply as Samadhi, is a Mexican actress and performer. She got her first role as Amaya on Atrevete a Soñar.
Samadhi currently attends classes at Televisa's acting school, CEA in Mexico City.
In 2009, she got her first acting role in Atrevete a Soñar, playing student, Amaya. She also was in a relationship with the actor Alejandro Speitzer, who played the role of Raymundo. She also lent her voice for the show's CDs. She won the award for best female revalation of 2010.
In 2010, she starred in an episode of La rosa de Guadalupe. She was also a part of Mujeres Asesinas 3. She starred in the episode Marta, manipuladora alongside Aislinn Derbez, Manuel Landeta, and Lorena Meritano.
Samadhi is the oldest of 3 siblings: Adriano Zendejas , a Mexican actor, and Dassana Zendejas , mexican actress as well.
Samadhi had a romantic relationship with Jorge Coch , brother of famous actress Jessica Coch , this relationship ended on May.
Samadhi is a 1972 Hindi film directed by Prakash Mehra. The film stars Dharmendra in a dual role as father and son, Asha Parekh and Jaya Bhaduri as the love interests. Music is by R.D. Burman. The memorable songs in the film include "Bangle ke Peeche", "Jab Tak Rahe" and "Jaane Jana". The film was remade in Telugu as Nindu Manishi (1978). The film became a success at the box office.
"Kanta Laga" is the most popular hit song from the film of which several remixes were made later.
Agony may refer to:
Agony is the second studio album by Italian death metal band Fleshgod Apocalypse.
On July 18, 2011, Fleshgod Apocalypse released a music video for "The Violation". On December 22, 2012, Fleshgod Apocalypse released a music video for "The Forsaking".
Max Lussier of The NewReview said that Agony "is a very different album than its predecessors". While he praised the speed of the songs and the guitar and drum work, he thought that the orchestral parts were "too large a part of the album's sound", resulting in "the guitar playing [becoming] slightly muddled and lost in the shuffle".
Agony (Russian: Агония, translit. Agoniya; U.S. theatrical/DVD title Rasputin) is a film by Elem Klimov, made c.1973-75 and released in Western and Central Europe in 1982 (USA and Soviet Union 1985), after protracted resistance from Soviet authorities. The film is notable for its rich, sometimes baroque style, its sumptuous recreation of episodes from the final year of Imperial Russia and the psychological portraits of Grigori Rasputin and the Imperial family.
The storyline of the film follows the final months of 1916 up to the murder of Rasputin; some events have been telescoped into this time though they actually happened earlier, during the war. Rasputin's effect on people around him is shown as almost hypnotic, and the film avoids taking a moral stance towards him—breaking not only with Soviet history but also with how he was regarded by people near the court at the time, some of whom regarded him as a debilitating figure who disgraced the monarchy and hampered the war effort.
SEA or Sea may refer to:
The se'ah or seah (Hebrew: סאה) is a unit of dry measure of ancient origin used in Halakha (Jewish law), which equals one third of an ephah, or bath. Its size in modern units varies widely according to the criteria used for defining it.
According to Herbert G. May, chief editor of two classic Bible-related reference books, the bath may be archaeologically determined to have been about 5.75 gallons (22 liters) from a study of jar remains marked 'bath' and 'royal bath' from Tell Beit Mirsim. Since the bath unit has been established to be 22 litres, 1 se'ah would equal 7.33 litres or 7.33dm3.
In the context of a mikveh, a se'ah can be about twice as much in order to accommodate even the most stringent rabbinical ruling on immersion. A mikveh must, according to the classical regulations, contain enough water to cover the entire body of an average-sized person; based on a mikveh with the dimensions of 3 cubits deep, 1 cubit wide, and 1 cubit long, the necessary volume of water was estimated as being 40 se'ah of water. The exact volume referred to by a seah is debated, and classical rabbinical literature specifies only that it is enough to fit 144 eggs; most Orthodox Jews use the stringent ruling of the Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz, according to which one seah is 14.3 litres, and therefore a mikveh must contain approximately 575 litres . This volume of water could be topped up with water from any source, but if there were less than 40 seahs of water in the mikveh, then the addition of 3 or more pints of water from an unnatural source would render the mikveh unfit for use, regardless of whether water from a natural source was then added to make up 40 seahs from a natural source; a mikveh rendered unfit for use in this way would need to be completely drained away and refilled from scratch.