जुझारूपन से Meaning in English
जुझारूपन से शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : tyranny
, combatively
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
जुझारूतासंबंधन
समिश्रण
युक्तता
मेल,संयोग
एक साथ जोड़ना
मिलाकर
युक्त
संमिलित
सम्मिलित काररवाई
संयुक्त जीवाणु
संयोजित अंश
संयुक्त मंजरी
संयुक्त संभावना
संयुक्त संभाव्यता
जुझारूपन-से इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
” Thus it could be argued that the Renaissance ideal city form was tensioned between the perceived need for a centralized power and the potential reality of tyranny.
Recognizing that the terms "tyranny" and "monarchy" had too many negative connotations at the time, Nicola advised using an alternative title in the near future, "[.
Nicola's proposal, while never fully formed, would not be suggesting tyranny (he rejected how others equated monarchy and tyranny) but instead a constitutional monarchy.
Sinha maintained good working relations with the secretariat officials and protected police from demoralization because police, having done away with pre-independence legacy no longer symbolised tyranny, domination, intimidation and oppression.
The people, however, were unconcerned about vague abstractions of tyranny.
The Revolution was perceived as the incarnation of the Enlightenment Spirit against the "English tyranny.
Accustomed to self-government, the citizens chafed under the tyranny of their new feudal lords.
The proceedings against him were not carried further, but the incident is an example of the vexatious tyranny exercised by the Holy Office, and the effect it must have had even in its decadence in damping all intellectual activity.
Cuisine of the Americas Fictional resistance movements and groups commonly appear in dystopian fiction, opposing the tyranny which dominates the setting.
In Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club, the tyranny is the soul-destroying life of modern western society.
Its commercial success was made possible thanks to the decline of the tyranny of the Deinomenids in Syracuse (466 BC) and the abandonment of Pithecusae (Ischia) by the Syracusan garrison, due to a violent earthquake (or more likely a volcanic eruption of Mount Epomeo).
In a sermon preached in his parish church of Aldgate on 31 January 1703–4, the fast day for the martyrdom of Charles I, Kennett acknowledged that there had been some errors in his reign, owing to a 'popish' queen and a corrupt ministry, whose policy tended in the direction of an absolute tyranny.