What CNN international what:

How Pakistani media reported on Trump's visit:

What New York Times said:

The Guardian on Trump's visit:

Here is what the BBC wrote:

NEW DELHI: US President Donald Trump landed in India on Monday on a 2-day state visit along with First Lady Melania Trump . He arrived in Ahmedabad where he was received by PM Narendra Modi . Trump and Melania later visited Agra to see Taj Mahal . They later arrived in Delhi for the last leg of their visit to India.Here is how the international media covered the visit:"Trump feels the love" is how the CNN international reported the US President's India visit on Day one. "He was promised crowds -- big ones -- by his charismatic but increasingly nationalistic counterpart, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who greeted Trump upon arrival with a hug," it wrote.It added, "And while a major trade agreement seems unlikely on this trip, Trump was more than happy to bask in the type of adulation that doesn't typically follow him when he travels abroad."Calling the preparations by India visit to welcome Trump an "elaborate display", the CNN said it was done to illustrate just how close Trump and Modi are, or at least how close they want to world to believe they are.The CNN, in another piece, wrote about Trump's mispronunciation of names of Indian cricket greats and how it lit up the social media."The vast crowd lapped it up, but reaction around the world was one of more amusement as US President Donald Trump had a bit of a tongue twisting problem with the names of two of India's greatest cricket stars while addressing thousands of people packed into the Motera stadium in Ahmedabad. This is a country where your people cheer on some of the world's great crickets players from 'Soo-chin Tendulkerr' to 'Virot Ko-lee,'" the President, said to a huge roar. But the reaction on social media was more mixed about his pronunciations.Most of the Pakistani media on Monday avoided mentioning US President Donald Trump's remarks on his administration working in a "very positive way" with Pakistan to crack down on terror groups operating from the country's soil.Instead the websites of the Pakistani media highlighted Trump's comment that the US and Pakistan have a "good relationship" and their efforts to reduce tension in the region.While the Dawn newspaper website gave the full quotes of the US president on the issue of terrorism, the websites of media outlets like The Express Tribune, Geo News, The News and Daily Times avoided any mention of it when this report was filed.On US-Pakistan relations, the president described it as "a very good one".With the headline ‘America Loves India, chosen from the US President's speech in Ahmedabad, the New York Times said the preparations for him were an "unabashed homage to Trump, whose name and image appeared in dozens of banners and billboards throughout the stadium.""The “Namaste Trump” rally, a daylong affair featuring popular singers, dancers and pounding music, took place under a blazing sun in the city’s Motera Stadium, which India calls the largest of its kind in the world," it said.It also said, "Making no mention of a growing backlash against what critics call Modi’s anti-Muslim Hindu nationalism, Trump praised India for its unity and echoed the Indian leader’s own stump speeches by noting anti-poverty efforts that have provided more electricity, cooking gas and toilets to rural Indians."Saying the event, organised in Ahmedabad in Modi’s home state of Gujarat, was the "pinnacle of Trump’s visit to India" and a platform for the two leaders to show off their enthusiastically friendly relationship, the Guardian wrote, "Little significant in terms of agreements between the US and India is expected to come out of Trump’s 36 hours in India, with trade deal negotiations at a current standstill, and the president’s speech served only to further the sense this was simply an opportunity for both leaders to pat each other on the back."It further said, "Such optics are particularly vital for Modi, who has been facing a sustained backlash and period of protest in India for the past three months after his Hindu-nationalist BJP government passed a controversial citizenship law."From mentioning the Trumps visiting Agra to their huge welcome in Ahmedabad upon their arrival in India, the BBC focussed on the preparations and the mood of the people.Saying there was "energy but little excitement", BBC said, "Inside the arena Mr Trump was welcomed warmly, but the biggest cheers were for Prime Minister Modi - no surprise, this is his home town. There were some awkward moments as President Trump tried his best with Indian names. In the world's largest cricket stadium, he managed to mangle the pronunciation of one of the world's greatest cricketers, Sachin Tendulkar ."