गौचो Meaning in English
गौचो शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : gaucho
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
गौडीज़गौडरी
गौफर
गौफरिंग
गज़ की नाप
गेज
गेज बोसॉन
गेज बोसोन
गेजेबल
गेजर्स
गौलैश
गौरडे
गॉसिटरस
गैउस
गॉसे
गौचो हिंदी उपयोग और उदाहरण
उरुग्वे और अर्जेंटीना लोक और लोकप्रिय संगीत जैसे टैंगो और गौचो आदि साझा करते हैं।
"" उरुग्वे और अर्जेंटीना लोक और लोकप्रिय संगीत जैसे टैंगो और गौचो आदि साझा करते हैं।
यह तीसरा मिकी माउस कार्टून था, इसके पहले के दो थे प्लेन क्रेज़ी (छह महीने पहले जारी) और दी गेलोपिन गौचो (पहले बनी, लेकिन बाद में जारी हुई). यह सिंक्रनाइज़ आवाज़ वाला भी पहला कार्टून था।
गौचो इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
During the second voyage of HMS Beagle, the young naturalist Charles Darwin made many trips on land, and around August 1833 heard from gauchos in the Río Negro area of Northern Patagonia about the existence of a smaller rhea, "a very rare bird which they called the Avestruz Petise".
Adventure novels about the gold rush in Chile in the 1850s, such as Martin Rivas by Alberto Blest Gana, and the gaucho epic poem Martin Fierro by Argentine José Hernández are among the iconic and populist 19th century literary works written in Spanish and published in Latin America.
The magazine was named after Martín Fierro, the gaucho outlaw whose story constitutes Argentina's national poem, written by José Hernández.
The story centers on the life of a renegade gaucho.
Martin (Alfredo Alcon) is a gaucho and a happily married family man who is drafted by the army.
It was embodied on a statuette of a gaucho, by sculptor Luis Perlotti, weighing over .
In 1966, to commemorate his sixty years of age, he published "Poetics Anthology", with sixty poems, organized by Rubem Braga and Paulo Mendes Campos, and for this reason the poet was acclaimed by the Brazilian Academy of Letters by Meyer and Manuel Augusto Bandeira, who recited his own poem "Quintanares", in honor of his fellow gaucho.
Joining his father in some of his travels, he was exposed to the lifestyle and the music of the gauchos of Buenos Aires Province from his early days.
Publications established in 1874 A facón is a fighting and utility knife widely used in Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay as the principal tool and weapon of the gaucho of the South American pampas.
The facón was later universally adopted by the gaucho and by men of the rural working class in Argentina and Uruguay, and was used in countless lethal knife fights and murders.
Among the gauchos, many continued to wear the knife, though mostly for use as a meat carving or utility knife.
An 1830 article on the facón carried by the gaucho of that era describes it as a "carving knife" with a blade fourteen inches in length; it was carried in a leather sheath worn either in a waist sash or tucked into leggings.