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anan Meaning in Tamil ( anan வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)



Noun:

ஓர் அணா நாணயம்,



anan's Usage Examples:

The natives live very largely on vegetable food, among the most important plants which supply them being the taro, yam, banana, bread-fruit, arrow-root, pandanus and coco-nut.


jazzmanany other jazzmen have danced to playbacks of their solos to determine if they were good enough?jazzmanuld have been one of the leading jazzmen of the age.


Buchanan on the " Challenger " it has been usual for British investigators to calculate specific gravities for sea-water at 60° F.


"President Buchanan soon afterward made him secretary of state, and in this position he at last had the satisfaction of obtaining from the British government an acknowledgment of the correctness of the American attitude with regard to the right of search (or " visitation," as Great Britain euphemistically termed it).


and now!being (sat), thinking (chit), and bliss (ananda).


Arrange these and the bananas alternately in a glass dish, then put in a layer of broken ratafias and macaroons.


Russian concessionnaires were given the right to build roads from Tabriz to Teheran (1902) and from Tabriz to Kazvin (1903); and the Russian Bank opened new branches in Seistanan example followed in 1903 by the Bank of Persia.


The vegetable products comprise bananas, bread-fruit, yams, plantains, wild cotton, bamboos, sugar-cane, coco-nut and dwarf palms, and several kinds of timber trees.


There are many coco-nut palms, bread-fruit trees (Artocarpus incisa), various kinds of bananas, yams and taro, and pandanus, of which the natives eat the seeds.


Within the area thus defined tsetse-flies are not found continuously, however, but occur only in small tracts called" belts " or " patches," which, since cover and shade are necessities of life to these insects, are always situated in forest, bush or banana plantations, or among other shady vegetation.


In the vegetable kingdom glucose occurs, always in admixture with fructose, in many fruits, especially grapes, cherries, bananas, 'c.


See George Ticknor Curtis, The Life of James Buchanan (2 vols.





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