ऑरिफिशियल Meaning in English
ऑरिफिशियल शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : orifying
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
गैस, तरल आदि का सतह पर अधिशोषणपर कम उद्भासित करना
पाकी
पंचमी विभक्ति मामले
केवल पेशियों का पक्षाघात
पिशन
पैंच
पेशाब कर
पेकर
पेकर्स
पेकरवुड
नमदे से बनी नोक वाले कलम
पीसेड
दूध में भिगोई रोटी का टुकड़ा
पिस
ऑरिफिशियल इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Šantić belonged to poets who wrote whole collections of songs glorifying victories of Army of Kingdom of Serbia during the Balkan Wars, including On the coast of Drač (На обали Драча) which glorifies liberation of the ancient city that once was part of the Serbian Kingdom under King Milutin.
The pair record videos glorifying God and their cause, and bid their unknowing families and loved ones goodbye, while trying to behave normally to avoid arousing suspicion.
Sale of the apparel led to a legal case in Germany, in an attempt to have it banned as "glorifying genocide".
to a new morning show") attracted criticism for glorifying suicide by bridge jumping, while Padres executive Ron Fowler expressed concerns over being associated with the station's content.
Administrators, also known as Wizards, who can manage the MOO, and assign certain global names to these objects, which are prefixed with ', a process known as corifying.
DeMatteis recalled, "Tom [DeFalco] had gotten a bunch of letters from people saying, 'Oh, you’re glorifying suicide!' Normally I would dismiss that as the usual rantings, except it really disturbed me that people would think that the purpose of that story was to glorify suicide.
On this occasion Xenophon reports that Callias gave an absurd and self-glorifying speech.
Moczar tended to play down the significance of the role of the Home Army while glorifying smaller pro-Communist resistance movements.
This will include an offence of condoning or glorifying terrorism.
But this will also be applied to justifying or glorifying terrorism anywhere, not just in the United Kingdom.
Glorifying Terrorism.
British Law Against Glorifying Terrorism Has Not Silenced Calls to Kill for Islam by Souad Mekhennet and Dexter Filkins, The New York Times, 21 August 2006.
Such claims were intended as propaganda glorifying a royal patron by trumpeting the antiquity and nobility of his ancestry.