आर्मगह Meaning in English
आर्मगह शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : arm
, armgah
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
अरमियनआर्मिगर्स
एर्मिन्ड
अर्मिनिअनिस्म
अंगद
कवच वाहक
कवच प्लेट
बख़्तरबंद डायनासोर
बख़्तरबंद कार्मिक वाहक
बख़्तरबंद कर्मियों वाहक
आर्मोरिक
तनुत्राण
कवच कोठरी
कवचकिराया
अंगत्राण
आर्मगह इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Retailers' cooperatives in the United States The Clibanarii or Klibanophoroi (κλιβανοφόροι, meaning "camp oven-bearers" from the Greek word κλίβανος meaning "camp oven" or "metallic furnace"), in Persian Grivpanvar, were a Sasanian Persian, late Roman and Byzantine military unit of armored [cavalry].
Similar to the cataphracti, the horsemen themselves and their horses were fully armoured.
There are several theories to the origins of this name, one being that the men were literally nicknamed "camp oven-bearers", due to the amount of armour they wore causing them to heat up very quickly in battle, or that the name is derived from Persian word griwbanwar or griva-pana-bara meaning "neck-guard wearer".
The clibanarii cavalry of Shapur II is described by Greek historian Ammianus Marcellinus, a Roman staff officer who served in the army of Constantius II in Gaul and Persia, fought against the Persians under Julian the Apostate, and took part in the retreat of his successor Jovian, as:.
Of these some who were armed with pikes, stood so motionless that you would have thought them held fast by clamps of bronze.
Types of cavalry unit in the army of ancient Rome.
It is an important crop for subsistence farmers in Africa.
A combined Bavarian and French army under the command of Jérôme Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon, besieged the Plassenburg in 1806.
Presumably he was also the founder of the castle, which was built to the west of an earlier fortified farmstead.
Later, at the age of seventeen, Chávez joined the Venezuelan armed forces.
Later, Donald uses a mouse named Montmorency to disarm the kidnapper.
Sheltered from prevailing winds, Cwm-yr-Eglwys has its own microclimate, being a few degrees warmer and drier than other parts of the Pembrokeshire coast.
In the caverns below Duckburg, Scrooge and his nephews soon discover that the smooth "rocks" are really subterranean beings calling themselves Terries and Fermies who look like bowling balls with arms and a head, but no legs, and move around by rolling on the ground.