प्रजापीड़क Meaning in English
प्रजापीड़क शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : subjection
, progeny
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
सन्तान प्रसवसंतानीय धर्मपरायणता
संतति नियमन
संतृष्ट,तृप्त
राजसंतान व्यवस्था
प्रोोगेशन
क्रमादेश संग्रह नेमका
प्रोग्रम लिखने वाला
प्रोग्राम योग्य
कार्यक्रम
कार्यक्रम का
कार्यक्रम संबंधी
अनुवाद कार्यक्रम
कार्यक्रम निर्माण
प्रगति रिपोर्ट
प्रजापीड़क इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Tapit has become a successful breeding stallion with other progeny including Hansen, Stardom Bound, Tapitsfly (Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf), Tapizar (Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile) and Untapable (Kentucky Oaks).
A parent of each generation's progeny must be registered as a Limousin in the respective country's herd book.
1835) of Acton Scott; without progeny.
Since the pride can only provide support for a limited number of cubs to survive to adulthood, the killing of the cubs in competition with the new male's potential offspring increases the chances of his progeny surviving to maturity.
As most readers are aware, that series led to ASL, followed by its own progeny over the years.
The differences observed between the animals are then related principally to their genetics, which is of interest to breeders because this is what is transmitted to a bull's progeny.
None of her progeny were of particular note.
Marriage and progeny.
He married Frances Felton, a daughter of Humphry Felton of Woodhall in Shropshire, by whom he had progeny as follows:.
As he left no legitimate progeny he was succeeded in the earldom by his nephew George Francis Wyndham, 4th Earl of Egremont, who inherited the Somerset estates, and on whose death without progeny the Earldom of Egremont became extinct.
The Colorado ranchers used the horses purchased from Colby to improve their existing ranch stock, and the progeny of these crossings became the Colorado Ranger Horse.
This inhibitor reduces the disruption to the genome caused by the P elements, allowing fertile progeny.
The specimens seen in the Garden's collections are either the original specimens gathered from the forest, or progeny of those specimens which have been propagated.
The Southdown had always been remarkable for its power of transmitting its special characteristics to its progeny by other kinds of sheep, and hence it soon impressed its own characteristics on its progeny by the Hampshire.
प्रजापीड़क हिंदी उपयोग और उदाहरण
"" अधिकांश व्यक्तियों का ध्यान 1815 के प्रजापीड़क अनाज कानून को रद्द कराने और सस्ते अनाज की प्राप्ति के प्रयत्नों में लग गया।
प्रजापीड़क इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
The continued use of the word "Satrap" on their coin would suggest a recognized subjection to a higher ruler, possibly the Kushan emperor.
A last distinction is to be drawn between necessary jurisdiction and voluntary jurisdiction; the latter contemplates voluntary subjection on the part of those who seek in legal matters the co-operation of ecclesiastical agencies, e.
When Pyrrhus of Epirus landed in Italy in 281, they were among the first to declare in his favor, and after his abrupt departure they were reduced to subjection, in a ten-year campaign (272).
Having described a pattern—denouncing metaphysics while relying on it—in discourses about metaphysics, Derrida suggests consideration of the same pattern within the "human sciences", whose subjection to the "critique of ethnocentrism" parallels the "destruction of the history of metaphysics" in philosophy.
Her exceeding indolence, her more excessive love of privacy, and the subjection of being frequently with the Queen, whose higher rank was a never ceasing mortification, all concurred to make her resolve, at any rate, to deliver herself of her daughter.
Wehr addressed racial tensions in “Oppression” with its brutal juxtaposition of forms representing the subjection of African Americans in American society.
|protectio trahit subjectionem, et subjectio protectionem ||Protection draws allegiance, and allegiance draws protection||Legal maxim, indicating that reciprocity of fealty with protection.
the reference of discrimination is always to a process of splitting as the condition of subjection: a discrimination between the mother and its bastards, the self and its doubles, where the trace of what is disavowed is not repressed but repeated as something different—a mutation.
Dicey observed in 1885: "In England the idea of legal equality, or of the universal subjection of all classes to one law administered by the ordinary courts, has been pushed to its utmost limit.
Drawing from the writings of Dicey, Ritchie remarked that 'equality before the law' is described as an aspect of the rule of law that "carries the meaning of equal subjection of all classes to the ordinary law of the land as administered by the ordinary courts.
However, Hammond strongly disliked anything that seemed like subjection of him.