छोटा सा आदमी Meaning in English
छोटा सा आदमी शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : little man
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
लिटिल मिसौरीनन्हे मुन्ने
छोटों
थोड़ा बैंगनी गुलाबी
थोड़ा देखा बदमाश
छोटी सी कहानी
लिटिल थियेटर
लिटिल थिएटर
लिटिल्स
लिटिलस्ट
लिटलिंग
लिटू
लिटम
लिटुस
लीटुवा
छोटा-सा-आदमी इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Below it was a double headed sea monster, the warrior's symbol; the third figure was of a little man who had grown from boyhood to become a warrior, and the fourth figure was that of the same warrior, grown to maturity as a tribal chief.
In this play Abell describes the life of the "white-collar worker" limited by old-fashioned conventions, and it is a fantasy about the mental emancipation of "the little man".
Forbes-Robertson described Vezin in the London Post as a "bright and dapper little man, who was both "learned and dictatorial on the art of acting.
He's an amazing footballer, the little man takes the ball in the tightest areas with people around him, wriggling out of situations.
Bomans stood next to the diva that he admired and told a frolicking anecdote ending with the famous line (attributed by him in this anecdote to a mumbling "very old little man" sitting next to him in the cinema): "I wish my wife had just one leg like that.
The films were animated and featured Joe, a tiny little man in pinstripes, and Petunia, his wife who wore a hat and sunglasses.
He was a close personal friend of Abraham Lincoln, who as President later eulogized him as "the greatest little man I ever met".
Ellsworth stood 5"nbsp;ft 6 in (168"nbsp;cm) tall; the six-foot-four Lincoln called him "the greatest little man I ever met".
Lifelong rancher Alva Springer testified for the defense to French's public ridicule, "Here sits a little man who has nothing to say.
A barker then says, "And the little man wins a big cigar!".
The tone of Perelman's feuilletons was very different from those sketches of the inept "little man" struggling to cope with life that James Thurber and other New Yorker writers of the era frequently produced.
Statham threw up his hands in anguish and the crowd was stunned, but "the little man, after one brief look back at his broken wicket, walked quickly away, the step firm, the head erect, but the shoulders, one thought, now slightly stooped.
One of his most popular recordings during the 1940s was "One Meatball", lyrics a song about a "little man" who could afford only one meatball.