पुनः अधिनियमित Meaning in English
पुनः अधिनियमित शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : re-enacted
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
पुनः प्रवर्तनवादपुनर्अभिलन
पुनःप्रवेश करना
फिर से प्रवेश करना
फिर से प्रवेश द्वार
पुन: प्रवेश
पुनः प्रवेश
नए रूप से सुसज्जित करना
फिर से शस्रसज्जित हो जाना
फिर से शस्रसज्जित होना
फिर से कायम कर देना
फिर से कायम करना
पुनः प्रतिष्ठित करना
बात को फिर क़ायम करना
रीठा
पुनः-अधिनियमित इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Scenes are often re-enacted twice, with different accounts contradicting each other for comedic effect.
Crime Investigation Australia Season 1 episode "The Mornington Monster" (aired 2005) in which the crimes and Sharpe's actions were re-enacted.
It featured several re-enacted scenes including a brief meeting with Hitler and an interview with former German emperor Kaiser Wilhelm, which was necessary as the original encounters were not filmed.
In the 1977 made-for-television film Tail Gunner Joe, the scene was re-enacted with Burgess Meredith portraying Welch and Peter Boyle as McCarthy.
In 1331, these proclamations were again re-enacted.
Her life story is also re-enacted in the 2004 TVB drama Painting Soul where her role was played by Michelle Reis.
Different scenarios were re-enacted to simulate a destructive earthquake that is expected to happen when the 100-kilometer West Valley Fault moves.
Archimedes and the Siege of Syracuse are dramatically re-enacted in the classic early Italian silent film Cabiria (1914).
When the single reached number three in the United Kingdom, the band were invited to perform "Sing" on Top of the Pops, where they re-enacted the food fight during their live performance.
This is re-enacted during the festival.
As he reads Mary the New Testament story of Jesus healing the lepers (re-enacted on screen, with Jesus shown only from behind), a light shows Mary's hands not to be scarred at all, and that her perceived scars had disappeared in the light—a metaphor for the healing salvation of Christ.
The Commonwealth re-enacted the scheme after the war, and there was a second constitutional challenge.
By the Militia Act of 1795, Congress re-enacted the provisions of the 1792 Act, except that the President’s authority to call out militias was made permanent.