धरहरा Meaning in English
धरहरा शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : the Tower
, turret
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
कंगूरेदारबुर्जन
टर्सेल्स
टर्टल हैड
कछुआ कछुआ
टर्व्स
टर्जेंट
टसॉक्स
टस्केड
तुषार नदी
टशन
टश्स
टूसिंग्स
गजदंत
टस्केगी
धरहरा इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Each turret was virtually identical to those of the s and consisted of eleven layers of plates.
However, Mikuma had suffered catastrophic damage from the detonation of her own Type 93 torpedo mounts, which were located immediately forward of the main battery turrets, on the main deck.
The numeral in the designation came from the number of guns in each turret.
The main gun turrets had sides thick with 125"nbsp;mm roofs.
In December 2010, the South Korean firm DoDAAM unveiled the Super aEgis II, an automated turret-based weapon platform that uses thermal imaging to lock onto vehicles or humans up to 3"nbsp;km away.
The turreted building is decorated with sculptures glorifying the October Revolution and incorporates a portico preserved from the original 1870 edifice.
Also added was a traversable turret with either a mountain gun or a large-calibre machine gun.
Its very complexity ensured it being produced too late to participate in World War I and in the very small number of just ten, but it was the first tank with a three-man turret; the heaviest to enter service until late in World War II and still the largest ever operational.
Armor: 80"nbsp;mm belt; 105"nbsp;mm turret; 50"nbsp;mm deck.
The KCA face-plates of the main gun turrets were intended to be 15"nbsp;inches thick and their roofs would have used non-cemented armour plates.
The Gurdwara is an example of typical Sikh architecture with a large dome tipped with a gold pinnacle - four cupolas echoing the main dome in shape and the ubiquitous facade of turrets, elliptical cornices and projected windows.
The short barreled 75"nbsp;mm Type 99 Gun was mounted in a fully rotating enlarged three-man gun turret used for the Type 97 Shinhoto Chi-Ha tank.
धरहरा हिंदी उपयोग और उदाहरण
18वीं सदी में निर्मित धरहरा मीनार पूरी तरह से नष्ट हो गयी, अकेले इस मीनार के मलबे से 200 से ज्यादा शव निकाले गये।
""नाम पर जो भी मतभेद हों, उसकी मौत बिहार के पूर्णिया जिले के बनमनखी प्रखंड के जानकीनगर के पास धरहरा में हुआ था।
गीता प्रेस, गोरखपुर के कल्याण के 31 वें साल के तीर्थांक विशेषांक में भी सिकलीगढ धरहरा का जिक्र किया गया है।
कुछ वर्षों के लिए इन्हें सिकलीगढ़ धरहरा तथा मनिहारी स्थित आश्रमों की व्यवस्था हेतु भेजा।
बिहार राज्य के पूर्णिया जिला के बनमनखी में सिकलीगढ़ धरहरा गांव हैं।
धरहरा (शाहकालीन मिनार)।
गाँव धरहरा औरंगाबाद में भारत के बिहार राज्य के अन्तर्गत मगध मण्डल के औरंगाबाद जिले का एक गाँव है।
धरहरा इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
William Gifford, Jonson's 19th-century editor, wrote that the society was founded by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1603, based on a note by John Aubrey, but Raleigh was imprisoned in the Tower of London from 19 July of that year until 1616, and it is hardly likely that someone of Raleigh's status and temperament would preside over tavern meetings.
A singing and dancing Reddy Kilowatt was featured in an animated show called “Holiday with Light” in the Tower of Light exhibit at the 1965 New York World's Fair (together with a lightbulb-shaped Benjamin Franklin).
Thomas rejoined the royalist army and fought at the Battle of Worcester in 1651, where he was taken prisoner and imprisoned in the Tower of London.
By the mid-eighteenth century, Woolwich Warren (the future Royal Arsenal) had outgrown the Tower of London as the main ordnance storage depot in the realm.
These small corps (235 officers in the MSD and 44 MSC) were based largely at the Tower of London, Woolwich Arsenal and Weedon Bec, but were also deployable on active service.
They were supplemented in 1865 by the establishment at Woolwich of a Military Store Staff Corps (MSSC) to provide soldiers: initially 200-strong, it had more than doubled in size by 1869, with units in Portsmouth, Devonport, Aldershot, Dublin and Chatham as well as at Woolwich and the Tower.
The earliest depot for military stores was the Tower of London, headquarters of the Ordnance Office, which for many centuries sufficed to hold the country's central stocks of artillery, gunpowder, small arms and ammunition albeit in unsatisfactory circumstances.
The Tower continued to be used for storage into the 19th century, but in 1671 the Board of Ordnance acquired a parcel of land at Woolwich which soon supplanted the Tower to become the Board's main ordnance storage depot; manufacture as well as storage of guns and ammunition took place on the site, which was later named the Royal Arsenal.
In 1760 the Royal Gunpowder Magazine was established at Purfleet, replacing the Tower as Britain's central repository of gunpowder.
Finally, by about 1887, large stocks of small arms were moved from the Tower of London to Weedon, leaving the Tower to serve as a repository of ancient arms and armour and as a small Ordnance centre for troops in London.
Later that year the RLC withdrew from the Tower of London, where the RAOC had continued to maintain a centuries-old link; and the following year the last vestige of the once-vast ordnance depot left Woolwich, with the closure of Royal Arsenal (West) and departure of the Ordnance QAD (Quality Assurance Directorate).