तंबाकूफ़रोश Meaning in English
तंबाकूफ़रोश शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : tobacconist
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
तोबा करनेवालाटोबैगो
टोबैगोनियन
तोबडा
प्रयाश्चित्त करने योग्य
टोबोगगन
टोबोगन्ड
टोबोगैनिंग
टोबोगनिस्ट
टोबोगनिंग
टोबोट
टोब्रुक
टोबी
टोकैप्स
टोचरियन
तंबाकूफ़रोश इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
A fish and chip shop, Tansley's, was at the entrance to what was the access road into the Co-op Store; the current fish and chip shop on Bedford Road was previously occupied by Georges, a tobacconist and confectioner but in the early 1900s was a public house.
However, the pub was not a success and late in 1922 the couple returned to Melbourne, where he opened a tobacconist's shop in St Kilda.
The company states its history is traced to a London tobacconist, Philip Morris, opening a single shop on London's Bond Street in 1847 which sold tobacco and cigarettes.
A tobacconist with oak furnishings, a pen shop with glass cases, a shoe-shine stand, and other service establishments represented, in Donnell's words, "the kind of small-scale entrepreneurs who occupied those spaces at the turn of the century, the kind of people who bring vitality and life to a building because they have a stake in it.
While manager of Yiewsley, he ran a tobacconists and sweet shop in Byfleet.
The rink's ground level would consist of an entrance hall, general office, booking office, confectioners and tobacconist, cloakroom with provision for a large restaurant, and a milk bar.
In 1876 there were 12 hotels, 6 stores, 3 bakers, 3 tobacconists and stationers, Edwards the butcher, lemonade factory and a surgeon.
However, the village population recovered; by the beginnings of the First World War, Evanton had taken much of its current physical shape, and at this point in time contained businesses as diverse as a tobacconist and a bicycle shop, both of which have subsequently disappeared.
Typical subjects include food and beverage sellers, farmers and milkmaids at work, soldiers at rest and play, and beggars, or, as Salvator Rosa lamented in the mid-seventeenth century, "rogues, cheats, pickpockets, bands of drunks and gluttons, scabby tobacconists, barbers, and other 'sordid' subjects.
0002 The cigar store Indian or wooden Indian is an advertisement figure, in the likeness of a Native American, used to represent tobacconists.
As early as the 17th century, European tobacconists used figures of American Indians to advertise their shops.
It appears that the first man to introduce carved figures as tobacconists' signs was a certain Chichester.