User:Luziyca/Sandbox3: Difference between revisions

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(Replaced content with "{{Infobox company | name = Aunt Majoni's | logo = TBD.png | logo_size = 220 | logo_caption = TBD | type = {{wp|Public company}} | traded_as = | predecessor = | foundatio...")
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{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| name = Aunt Majoni's
| name = Ajeng's
| logo = TBD.png
| logo = TBD.png
| logo_size = 220
| logo_size = 220
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| homepage =
| homepage =
}}
}}
'''Aunt Majoni's''' is (TBC).
'''Ajeng's''' is an [[Imagua|Imaguan]]-based {{wp|fast food restaurant|fast food}} chain.


==History==
==History==
===Origins===
===Origins===
In 1919, [[Bagas Majoni]], a son of a gowsa labourer who moved to [[Bronstad]], opened a [[ganome]] known as the Majoni Ganome. Due to the ganome's position near the railway station, and its location on the main road linking [[Nua Taois]] and [[Cuanstad]], the ganome became successful as it catered to both local [[Coian-Imaguans]] and to travellers. After Bagas Majoni died of tuberculosis in 1925, as Bagas' sons were uninterested in taking over the ganome, his daughter, [[Ajeng Majoni]], took over the ganome.
In the aftermath of the Great War, Ajeng would remodel the ganome, and in 1938 renamed the Majoni Ganome to Aunt Ajeng's Ganome to reflect both the more popular name, and to make the ganome feel "more inviting" to potential customers. Ajeng Majoni would continue operating the ganome until her death in 1958, with her nephew, [[Robert Majoni]] taking over as owner of Aunt Ajeng's Ganome.
Robert Majoni would
(TBC)
(TBC)

Revision as of 01:52, 30 September 2023

Ajeng's
Public company
IndustryFast food restaurants
FoundedNovember 23, 1963; 60 years ago (1963-11-23) in Bronstad, Imagua
FounderTBD
Headquarters
TBD
,
TBD
Number of locations
TBD (2020)
Area served
Worldwide (68 countries)
Key people
  • TBD (Chair)
  • TBD (CEO)
  • TBD (COO)
Products
  • TBD
RevenueTBD

Ajeng's is an Imaguan-based fast food chain.

History

Origins

In 1919, Bagas Majoni, a son of a gowsa labourer who moved to Bronstad, opened a ganome known as the Majoni Ganome. Due to the ganome's position near the railway station, and its location on the main road linking Nua Taois and Cuanstad, the ganome became successful as it catered to both local Coian-Imaguans and to travellers. After Bagas Majoni died of tuberculosis in 1925, as Bagas' sons were uninterested in taking over the ganome, his daughter, Ajeng Majoni, took over the ganome.

In the aftermath of the Great War, Ajeng would remodel the ganome, and in 1938 renamed the Majoni Ganome to Aunt Ajeng's Ganome to reflect both the more popular name, and to make the ganome feel "more inviting" to potential customers. Ajeng Majoni would continue operating the ganome until her death in 1958, with her nephew, Robert Majoni taking over as owner of Aunt Ajeng's Ganome.

Robert Majoni would

(TBC)