मल्ल युद्ध करना Meaning in English
मल्ल युद्ध करना शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : battle
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
लड़ाई शुरू करनालड़ाई और शटलकॉक
लड़ाई भिड़ाई
लड़ाई की थकान
लड़ाई थकान
लड़ाई का मैदान
लड़ाई बेड़े
डट कर लड़ी लड़ाई
युद्धद्वार
लड़ाई का घोड़ा
लड़ाई जख्मी
युद्ध रेखा
लड़ाई की रेखा
अर्देंनेस उभाड़ की लड़ाई
ऐसन की लड़ाई
मल्ल-युद्ध-करना इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
There are several theories to the origins of this name, one being that the men were literally nicknamed "camp oven-bearers", due to the amount of armour they wore causing them to heat up very quickly in battle, or that the name is derived from Persian word griwbanwar or griva-pana-bara meaning "neck-guard wearer".
Hill died in a Pacific Palisades, California, nursing home, aged 84, after a long battle with Alzheimer's disease.
But the Kings, with their disciplined defensive style, and excellent goaltending tandem of Rogie Vachon and Gary Edwards, battled Montreal all year for first place.
The teams continued to battle, with the Canadiens finally clinching first place with three games to play.
In spring 1918, the regiment was involved in the fierce battle of Belleau Wood and was given the nickname Devil Dog.
Culbertson, documented in 13 Cent Killers: The 5th Marine Snipers in Vietnam, the stories of 5th Marine Regiment marksmen who, as the publisher describes, "fought with bolt rifles and bounties on their heads during the fiercest combat of the war, from 1967 through the Tet battle for Hue in early 1968.
RCT-5 was camped in Camp Fallujah under the command of I Marine Expeditionary Force(Fwd) until January 2007 when they were relieved in place by the 6th Marine Regiment (RCT 6), the first time in 94 years that the two regiments have been together on the battlefield.
The Abbey's expansive sloping grounds are a nationally protected Wars of the Roses battlefield, as a one-time site of the advance of the Yorkists during the Battle of Northampton (1460).
The grounds of Delapré are a Scheduled Ancient Monument due to their partial battlefield status.
The nuns tended the wounds of those injured at the battle.
Many of the battle-dead were buried in the nuns' graveyard (now the walled garden).
Gifford also was the first to name the Mermaid as the site of Jonson and Shakespeare's battle-of-wits debates in which they discussed politics, religion, and literature.
In the course of these operations, she took part in the battles at Calabria, Cape Spartivento, and First and Second Sirte.