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The primary language spoken in Fuvahmulah is Dhivehi (the official language of the Maldives), but the island is famous for its highly distinct and unique local dialect known as Fuvahmulaki Baha (or Mulaki Baha). Because Fuvahmulah is a single-island atoll geographically isolated in the equatorial channel, its language has evolved differently from the standard Dhivehi spoken in the capital,...
The Maldives is world-renowned for its "infinite shades of blue," where deep sapphire oceans suddenly give way to pale turquoise lagoons. To the casual observer, it looks like a flooded mountain range. In reality, the geological story of why the Maldives is so shallow is a fascinating mix of ancient volcanoes, industrious coral polyps, and the delicate balance of sea levels. ...
The primary reason is a combination of the specific species found in the region, an abundance of natural food, and a highly protected marine environment. 1. The Species Are Non-Aggressive The most common sharks you will see—Blacktip Reef Sharks, Whitetip Reef Sharks, and Nurse Sharks—are inherently shy and docile. Unlike Great Whites or Bull Sharks (which are rare in shallow...
އަފިރިން.ނެޓް މި ޕްލެޓްފޯރމްގެ ބޭނުމަކީ ބޭރު ގައުމުތަކުން އާމްދަނީ ލިބޭނެ ގޮތެއް ހޯދުން މި ޕްލެޓްފޯރމް ގަ ބައިވެރިވާން ބޭރު ގައުމުތަކުގެ މީހުން އިންވައިޓް ކޮއްލައިގެން، އެ މީހުން ހޯދާ އާމްދަނީ އިން ދިވެހިންނަށް ކޮމިޝަން ހޯދާލެވޭނެ އަފިރިން.ނެޓްގަ އެކައުންޓެއް ހުޅުވީމަ ކޮންމެ މެމްބަރަކަށް ލިބޭނެ އެފިލިއޭޓް ލިންކެއް މިސާލަކަށް އަލީ އަކީ އަފިރިން.ނެޓްގެ ފްރީ މެމްބަރެއް، އަލީގެ އެފިލިއޭޓް ލިންކު...
If you’re planning a trip to the sun-drenched atolls of the Maldives, your mind is likely filled with images of overwater bungalows and turquoise lagoons. However, a common question often pops up for first-time visitors: Are there man-eating sharks in the Maldives? The short answer is: No. There has never been a recorded fatal shark attack in the Maldives. While the Maldives is home...