Top 10 features of the ShareChat App

3404
24025

One of the best social apps to communicate with friends, share jokes, and avail daily news from India within seconds is ShareChat India. ShareChat is the most convenient messaging app which enables you to make new friends, share videos, jokes, GIFs, audio songs, shayaris, motivational quotes, funny quotes, bhajans, devotional songs and funny images all in one platform.

ShareChat has all theIndian languages like Hindi, Telugu, Marathi, Gujarati, Punjabi, Malayalam, Bengali, Tamil, Kannada, Odia, Bhojpuri, Assamese, Rajasthani and Haryanavi available on ShareChat’s multi-linguistic keyboard which allows the users to connect with friends and family in their native language, all over the country more efficiently and effectively.

Here are the Features of ShareChat:

1. The App allows you to make new friends and find friends using the simple inbuilt friends’ search tool.

2. It has a vast collection of jokes, video status, memes and trolls

3. It also has a huge album of videos from Tamil movies, Bollywood movies, Telugu movies, Marathi movies and Bengali movies. It also allows the user to keep up with the latest news related to Indian movies.

4. One can get famous by showcasing your talent and become an internet celebrity.

5. It offers the best Hindi shayari, pyar shayari, romantic shayari, marathi shayari and more.

6. It has high-quality images, wallpapers and cool backgrounds.

7. It offers Beauty tips, home makeup tricks and fitness videos.

8. Get fresh news, the latest GK for school students, current affairs for competitive exams like IAS, SSC, Bank PO exams and all the latest trends of the internet.

9. It as well has Daily horoscope feature, and has best astrology in all Indian languages by birth date

10. One can send Diwali wishes, Christmas & New Year wishes, Valentine, and Holi wishes to their near and dear ones in one click on WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram.

Read more on-

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=in.mohalla.sharechat&hl=hi&gl=US

https://www.facebook.com/ShareChatApp/

https://www.instagram.com/sharechatapp/?hl=hi&__coig_restricted=1

https://www.reuters.com/technology/google-backs-indias-sharechat-300-mln-funding-round-5-bln-valuation-2022-05-30/

3404 COMMENTS

  1. Надежный поставщик динамических и статических прокси, сохраняющий стабильность вашей web активности: где взять резидентский прокси – https://residential-proxy.ru/

  2. The ghost town that has stood empty for more than a century
    жесткое порно
    There’s a large and very dignified school in Kayakoy. There are narrow streets, lined with houses, that wend and rise up both sides of a steep valley. There’s an ancient fountain in the middle of the town. And there are churches, one with million-dollar hilltop views over the blue Aegean.

    But, for most of the past 100 years, there have been no people.

    Kayakoy, in southwestern Turkey’s Mugla Province, is a true ghost town. Abandoned by its occupants and haunted by the past. It’s a monument, frozen in time – a physical reminder of darker times in Turkey.

    With hillsides dotted by countless crumbling buildings slowly being swallowed by greenery, and endless views into vanished lives, it’s also a fascinating and starkly beautiful place to visit. In summer, under clear skies and blazing suns, it’s eerie enough. Even more so in cooler seasons, wreathed in mountain or sea mists.
    Just over a century ago, Kayakoy, or Levissi as it was known, was a bustling town of at least 10,000 Greek Orthodox Christians, many of whom were craftspeople who lived peacefully alongside the region’s Muslim Turkish farmers. But in the upheaval surrounding Turkey’s emergence as an independent republic, their simple lives were torn apart.

    Tensions with neighboring Greece after the Greco-Turk war ended in 1922 led to both countries ejecting people with ties to the other. For Kayakoy, that meant a forced population exchange with Muslim Turks living in Kavala, in what is now the Greek region of Macedonia and Thrace.

    But the newly arrived Muslims were reputedly less than happy with their new home, swiftly moving on and leaving Kayakoy to fall to ruin.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here