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charon Meaning in Hindi (शब्द के हिंदी अर्थ)


charon ka kya matlab hota hai


चैरोन


charon शब्द के हिंदी अर्थ का उदाहरण:

জজজ

प्लूटार्क का जन्म बोएवटिया के चैरोनिया गाव में एक धनवान परिवार में हुआ था।

चैरोनीआ की लड़ाई के लिये, फिलिप ने दाहिने पंक्ति और सिकंदर को फिलिप के विश्वसनीय जनरलों के एक समूह के साथ वाम पंक्ति संभालने का आदेश दिया।

फिलिप ने दक्षिण की ओर कूच की, जहाँ उसके विरोधियों ने उसे चैरोनीआ, बोएसिया के पास रोक लिया।

चैरोनीआ में जीत के बाद, फिलिप और सिकंदर निर्विरोध पेलोपोन्नीज़ की ओर बढ़ने लगे जहाँ उनका सभी शहरों द्वारा स्वागत किया गया; हालांकि, जब वे स्पार्टा पहुंचे, वहाँ उन्हें नकार दिया गया, लेकिन फिलिप ने युद्ध का सहारा नहीं लिया गया।

charon's Usage Examples:

At a somewhat earlier date commenced a long series of weekly and monthly periodicals of a more solid character, of which the following list indicates the more important in chronological order: Die Grenzboten (1862), weekly; the Deutsches Museum (1851-1857), of Prutz and Frenzel; Berliner Revue (1855-1873); Westermanns Monatshefte (1856), monthly; Unsere Zeit (1857-1891), beginning as a kind of supplement to Brockhaus's Conversationslexikon; Preussische Jahrbucher (1858), monthly; Deutsches Magazin (1861-1863); Die Gegenwart (1873), weekly; Konservative Monatsschrift (1873), preceded by the Volksblatt fur Stadt and Land (1843) Deutsche Rundschau (1874), fortnightly, conducted upon the method of the Revue des deux mondes; Deutsche Revue (1876), monthly; Nord and Sud (1877), monthly; Das Echo (1882), weekly; Die Zukunft (1882), weekly; Die neue Zeit (1883), weekly; Reclams Universum (1884), weekly; Velhagen and Klasings Monatshefte (1889), monthly; Die deutsche Rundschau (1890), monthly; Die Wahrheit (1893-1897); Kritik (1894-1902); Die Umschau (1897), weekly; Das literarische Echo (1898), fortnightly; Kynast (1898-1899), known later as Deutsche Zeitschrift (1899-1903) and Iduna (1903-1906); Der Turmer (1898), monthly; Die Warte (1900), weekly; Deutschland (1902-1907); Deutsche Monatsschrift (1902-1907); Hochland (1903), monthly; Charon (1904), monthly; Suddeutsche Monatshefte (1904); Der Deutsche (1905-1908); Deutsche Kultur (1905-1908); Arena (1906), monthly; Das Blaubuch (1906), weekly; Eckart (1906), monthly; Die Standarte (1906), weekly; Meirz (1907), fortnightly; Morgen (1907), weekly; Neue Revue (1907), weekly; Internationale Wochenschrift fur Wissenschaft, Kunst, and Technik (1907), weekly supplement to the Minchener allgemeine Zeitung; Wissen (1907), weekly; Unsere Zeit (1907), monthly; Hyperion (1908), bi-monthly; Xenien (1908), monthly; Das neue Jahrhundert (1909), monthly; Die Tat (1909), monthly.


Onward, Charon, ill-humoredly you pole my wooden bateau, let us float on the tide, westward to Texas sands.


Mention may also be made of the following: Hecataeus of Miletus (550-476); Acusilaus of Argos, 2 who paraphrased in prose (correcting the tradition where it seemed necessary) the genealogical works of Hesiod in the Ionic dialect; he confined his attention to the prehistoric period, and made no attempt at a real history; Charon of Lampsacus (c. 450), author of histories of Persia, Libya, and Ethiopia, of annals (a)pot) of his native town with lists of the prytaneis and archons, and of the chronicles of Lacedaemonian kings; Xanthus of Sardis in Lydia (c. 450), author of a history of Lydia, one of the chief authorities used by Nicolaus of Damascus (II.


As a punishment for supplying the Titans with water in their contest with Zeus, he was turned into a river of Hades, over which departed souls were ferried by Charon.


(1897), who considers Charon to be an old name for the sun-god Helios embarking during the night for the East.


Waser, Charon, Charun, Charos, mythologischarchdologische Monographie (1898); S.


CHARON, in Greek mythology, the son of E r ebus and Nyx (Night).


Charontidae (Charon, Sarax).


9 (from Charon of Lampsacus?), but given to his brother (called by Herodotus Patizeithes), who is said to have been the real promoter of the intrigue; the true name of the usurper is here given as Oropastes; by Ctesias as Sphendadates.


io (probably from Charon of Lampsacus) and in Aelian, Var.



Synonyms:

ferryman,



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