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commote Meaning in kannada ( commote ಅದರರ್ಥ ಏನು?)



Noun:

ಹಣ್ಣುಗಳನ್ನು ಸಿರಪ್ನಲ್ಲಿ ಸಂರಕ್ಷಿಸಲಾಗಿದೆ,

commote ಕನ್ನಡದಲ್ಲಿ ಉದಾಹರಣೆ:

World Heritage Sites in Maldives: .

Glaciers of Maldives: .

theless, the cultural influence of Buddhism remains, a reality directly experienced by Ibn Battuta during his nine months there sometime between 1341 and 1345, serving as a chief judge and marrying into the royal family of Omar I.

Mountains of Maldives: .

of these names are mentioned in any literature, but classical Sanskrit texts dating back to the Vedic period mention the "Hundred Thousand Islands" (Lakshadweepa), a generic name which would include not only the Maldives, but also the Laccadives, Aminidivi Islands, Minicoy, and the Chagos island groups.

(1976) "Humour, Laughter, and Comedy: A Bibliography of Empirical and mpirical Analyses in the English Language.

commote's Usage Examples:

tithings, not least as rural deaneries originally corresponded with the hundreds or commotes or cantrefi in Wales.


Einion) was a medieval cantref in the Kingdom of Powys, or possibly it was a commote (cwmwd) within a cantref called Llŷs Wynaf.


first a division of the sub kingdom (cantref) of Dunoding and later a commote in its own right.


The Red Book of Hergest mentions Hwlffordd (Haverfordwest) commote and Castell Gwalchmei (Walwyn"s Castle) commote.


In the Middle Ages Llanfwrog parish lay in the commote Talybolion in the Hundred of Cemaes.


A commote (Welsh cwmwd, sometimes spelt in older documents as cymwd, plural cymydau, less frequently cymydoedd) was a secular division of land in Medieval.


perhaps three commotes.


Cynllaith or Cynllaeth (English: Early Milk) was a cwmwd (commote) of north east Wales in the cantref of Swydd y Waun which was once part of the Kingdom.


Llangadog was the administrative centre of the commote of Perfedd and had a castle, destroyed in 1204.


the commote of Menai (the other commote of Rhosyr) to the west, and the commote of Twrcelyn in the cantref of Cemais, to the north.


It was part of the medieval commote (Welsh: cwmwd) of Tir Iarll.


130 Dindaethwy was in medieval times one of two commotes of the cantref of Rhosyr, in the south-east of the Isle of Anglesey.


It was formed by the Act of Union of 1536 from the commote of the pre-Norman cantref of Emlyn included by the Act in Pembrokeshire.



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