नशीला पदर्थ Meaning in English
नशीला पदर्थ शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : intoxicating
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
मादकमादक का
मादक खा जानेवाला
अमादक
खूब नशीली
निर्मादक बीर
मादक मनोभ्रंश
मादक वस्तु जो नशीला बना दे.
नशा
अन्तर्हृद्कलाशोथ
इंट्रासेल्युलर
इंट्राक्रैनियल
प्रचण्ड
इंट्राडरमल
इंट्राडॉस
नशीला-पदर्थ इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Designed to be a family-friendly park, the Humphreys would not admit anyone who had consumed intoxicating beverages at a bar directly across the street from the entrance to the park.
Socrates instructs Dan to take up celibacy, consume only light food and avoid intoxicating substances.
He established a daily routine of cold baths, plain food, and total abstinence from intoxicating beverages.
Upon reaching the burial site, the children were given an intoxicating drink to minimize pain, fear, and resistance.
He deftly communicates with the masquerades - weaving soulful melodies and blending esoteric messages into the intoxicating rhythm of the drums.
The importance of the flutist during Ikeji festival is very vital, for he communicates things hidden from the ordinary eyes to the masquerades, combined with soulful melodies, steps and gestures, “blending esoteric messages into the intoxicating rhythm of the drums” to the admiration of the crowd.
Diana Valois of The Morning Call considered the song "joyfully proud, creating exhilarating and intoxicating rushes not unlike Springsteen's 'Night'".
He later authored the 21st Amendment (Blaine Act), which repealed the 18th Amendment (Volstead Act), which had prohibited intoxicating liquors.
so much intoxicating transience: Letters 1926-1950).
Bhang lassi – an intoxicating drink prepared from the leaves and flowers (buds) of the female cannabis plant, consumed as a drink in the Indian subcontinent.
Like others of her race, she uses alcohol as a non-intoxicating foodstuff, although drinking large amounts will induce intoxication as in humans.
, once used (by 19th century brewers) to impart a more intoxicating quality ("giddiness") to beer than provided by the alcoholic content alone.
NME editors Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray remarked that its "jarring, threatening edge (and it was one of the most menacing singles of a menacing year) obviously put off a great many of the floating singles buyers attracted by the intoxicating romanticism of its immediate predecessor".