माल गोदाम Meaning in English
माल गोदाम शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : warehouse
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
मालखानेगोदाम निरीक्षक
सामान का गोदाम
वेयरहाउसमैन
गोदामों
भांडागारण
माल भण्डारण
वारफरिन
वारफ़रिन
वारहेड
वरहोल
वारहोल
वारहॉर्स
वारिड
वारिगल
माल-गोदाम इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
The Large distillery eventually ceased operations and the property was sold to a developer who leased it to Westinghouse in the 1950s, and several of the warehouse buildings were adapted for developing and testing reactor plant components for the nuclear submarine development program underway at Bettis under the direction of Admiral Hyman G.
On the south side of this passage were most of the functional annexes of the palace, including kitchens, warehouses, the treasury, and stables.
A railway, complete with locomotives and some twenty miles (32 km) of track, was to be laid across the coastal plain, and at the landing place large piers, lighthouses and warehouses were to be built.
Later that month Phibun signed a mutual offensive-defensive alliance pact with Japan giving the Japanese full access to Thai railways, roads, airfields, naval bases, warehouses, communications systems, and barracks.
The distribution system included 110 regional feed mills, 26 warehouses, and 7 research farms.
Residences and warehouses of the wealthy merchant "tobacco lords" (who prospered in shipping and, amongst other things, tobacco, sugar and tea through slave workers) were built in the area.
As Glasgow expanded in the 19th century to become the second city of the United Kingdom and the British Empire, the area became a working district of warehouses and home to the city's central fruit, vegetable and cheese markets.
In 1808 a modern purpose-built depot was constructed at Weedon, alongside the Grand Union Canal, to serve as a safe repository for guns and ammunition; and in 1813 a new Grand Storehouse was opened in the Royal Arsenal, containing multiple warehouses for all kinds of military stores.
The depots at Woolwich, Weedon and Pimlico were supplemented by the wholesale takeover of warehouses throughout the country and in early 1915 a depot was established at Didcot to be the major focus for the receipt and distribution of RAOC stores.
The area was once lined with bluestone warehouses, some of which still exist to the present day.
During the 1980s many former warehouses at the southern end of King Street (and in nearby Flinders Street) were converted into night clubs.
In the centre of town, in what is now Ingram Street, he built a warehouse and small manufactory which produced linen strips or tapes known as ‘incles’ or Scotch Tape.
Inns, warehouses and a market followed the railway station.