बहुत चालाक Meaning in English
बहुत चालाक शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : very clever
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
अत्यन्त घनिष्ठ सम्बन्धीबहुत करीब
बहुत ही नज़दीक
बहुत ही नज़दीक से
बहुत ही पास
बहुत घनिष्ठ व्यक्ति
के अत्यन्त निकट
के बहुत ही पास
अत्यन्त निकट से
बहुत क़रीब से
बहुत निकट से
बहुत बारीकी से
एकदम ठण्डा
बहुत ठंडा
बहुत ठंड़ा
बहुत-चालाक हिंदी उपयोग और उदाहरण
"" और वापिस उसी दूसरे अध्याय में, एक होटल में, मैं खुद को बहुत चालाक और स्मार्ट एवं शालिन तरीके से पेश करता तथा अन्य फ़िल्मानुसार ही अपने किरदार को जरा-जरा सा बदलने को अग्रसर रखता।
बहुत-चालाक इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Murray said "It's a very clever idea concerning the rape and murder of a young girl with a large knife, and continuing to rape the corpse until orgasm.
The game's review by Allen Greenberg of Computer Gaming World in 1994 called it "a very clever game that will easily offend the puritan-minded, just as it might offend the experienced gamer looking for a serious puzzle challenge.
He takes the officer's hiding place (a very cleverly-masked hole in the rock) while Bergman and his companion come to that same spot looking for Charlie.
Like the animal his character is enjoined to, he is very clever.
He helps his former partner, Rex Brandon, to arrest a killer; his old flame and good friend, Inez Stapleton, to win a will contest lawsuit (which involved a very clever case of perjury) against A.
Overall the Mini represents some very clever packaging which has often been imitated but has never been bettered.
Pauli especially ridiculed the idea of spin, saying that "it is indeed very clever but of course has nothing to do with reality".
According to a letter sent by Bishop Hilfrich of Limburg to the Reich Justice Minister in 1941, local children taunted each other with the words "You're not very clever; you will go to Hadamar and into the ovens".
Others used very clever screen changes to provide different degrees of visual input.
In a very clever process, João V got for his chapel the dignity of Patriarchal Basilica, by dividing the Lisbon archdioceses.
Crassus, which must have been a personal cognomen, means "thick" or "stout", and could apply equally to a large man or a dullard; although if the latter were intended, it was probably given ironically, for Claudius was by all accounts a very clever schemer.
In a 2001 interview with Mark Pitta, the album is brought up and Carlin remarks "I thought that was a very clever name for an album.
Also he's very clever with his mind games.