जूते बाँधने का फीता Meaning in English
जूते बाँधने का फीता शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : shoeshoe
, shoe lace
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
जूता पेड़जूता बांधने का तस्मा
जवाकुसुम
जूते का फीता कवक
शूलेस
चर्मकार
जूते,चप्पल
तसमा
तस्मा
शूस्ट्रिंग कैच
शोफोली
शोगल्स
शूक्रिया
शोला फ़ेंक
शोलाकुल
जूते-बाँधने-का-फीता इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Ambrus escaped from prison on July 10, 1999, using a rope made of shredded sheets, electric cords, and shoe laces.
जूते-बाँधने-का-फीता इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
The Napier Treaty, signed in 1843 between Moshoeshoe I and Adam Kok III - advised and assisted by the missionaries – Eugene Cassalis and John Philip on the one hand and the Cape governor Sir George Napier on the other hand – recognised the jurisdiction of Moshoeshoe I over his land between Orange River and Caledon River.
He took part in the Free State–Basotho Wars – which were a series of wars fought between Moshoeshoe I and the Orange Free State.
It was reported that Moshoeshoe ordered his warriors to cut out Wepener's heart out and eat it.
This is due to Moshoeshoe I being impressed with the bravery of Wepener and thus he believed that if each of his warriors ate a piece of his heart, they would gain his bravery.
King Moshoeshoe I's son – Tladi – took Dick to where his father was buried.
In 1864 he resisted the pressure of the Basuto on the Free State boundary, and after vainly endeavouring to induce Moshoeshoe, the Basuto chief, to keep his people within bounds, he took up arms against them in 1865.
As a gesture of good faith, Hoffman had given a present of a keg of gunpowder to the Basotho king Moshoeshoe I.
2004 American television episodes The Free State–Basotho Wars refers to a series of wars fought between King Moshoeshoe I, the ruler of the Basotho kingdom, and the white settlers, in what is now known as the Free State.
In 1818, Great King Moshoeshoe I, who was the son of Mokhachane, chief of the Ba-Mokoteli branch of the Koena/Kwena (Crocodile) clan, helped to gain power over small clans who had been displaced during the Difaqane.
In 1820, Great King Moshoeshoe became the king of a of Basotho Nation, who had fallen under his centralized authority due to competition for resources, which was intensified by a drought.
The Great Diplomatic King Moshoeshoe allowed the British, Boers and Nguni escapees to settle on his designated settlements with the notion of giving them land and food for survival.