दर्द से करते हुए Meaning in English
दर्द से करते हुए शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : painfully
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
दु:खदायी रूप सेपीड़ादायक ढंग से
दर्द निवारक
दर्द निवारक तेल
दर्द रहित
दर्दरहित
पीड़ारहित
पीड़ा सुखभोगी
श्रमसाध्यता से
राजनीतिक रंग देना
रंग लगाना
पेंट
पेंट करना
रंग कर देना
रंग करना
दर्द-से-करते-हुए इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Kyra still regards Dev as her closest and dearest friend, but these days she feels painfully distanced from him, and more and more she fears where his inner anger will lead him.
" Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times said "All of this would be good silly fun if the movie weren't so painfully dull.
John Sweeney in The Literary Review called the book "a well-considered and painfully fair epitaph" but said it was encumbered with respect for chavistas' aspirations.
com's Jeremy Parish said the graphics are "almost painfully cute".
In Rolling Stone, Peter Travers opined, "In this painfully funny and touching look at the vanities and insecurities that a mother can pass on to her daughters in the name of love, writer-director Nicole Holofcener does a chick flick right .
and painfully average" finding the level design to be "decent (if not a little dull)" and visuals that didn't push the limits of the handheld.
As carpenters in London routinely worked 12 to 14 hours per day, the problems with such long working days would have been painfully clear to him.
A case of painfully bad timing affected the group's lead singer.
He then painfully destroys the device, despite previous warnings.
A man whose painfully restless mind thrashes about uncontrollably between paranoia, sociopathic lying and delusion is summed up in such character revealing comments as "I'm too vulnerable for a world full of pain and lies" and "Everyone is cracked and broken.
Although he feels "painfully" that he is "doing something unusual" in taking on the watch himself, he does so to learn more about the ship and what he calls "the novel responsibility of command.
To them the disconfirmation was "painfully obvious", and researchers used them as a case study in cognitive dissonance.
Nathan's second novel, Losing Graceland, (Broadway) published in 2011, was called "a blend of the ironic and the painfully sincere" by the Washington Post, while the Boston Globe referred to its "low-rent variations on a Homeric theme, antic originality, and the near-magic realism of Elvis as a geriatric Ulysses.