<< lethally lethargic encephalitis >>

lethargic Meaning in Tamil ( lethargic வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)



Adjective:

சோம்பலான, ஈடுபாடற்ற, மந்தமான,



lethargic தமிழ் அர்த்தத்தின் உதாரணம்:

இது பர்கரை உண்ண விரும்பும் சோம்பலான வீரமிகுந்த வங்காளப் புலி ஆகும்.

இந்து தத்துவத்தின் சாங்கியப் பள்ளியின் கூற்றுப்படி, மக்கள், செயல்பாடுகள் மற்றும் உணவுகள் உட்பட பிரபஞ்சத்தில் உள்ள அனைத்தையும் சத்துவ குணம் (அமைதியான / நல்ல குணம்), இராட்சத குணம் (உணர்ச்சிவசப்பட்ட / செயலில்), மற்றும் தாமச குணம் (மந்தமான / சோம்பலான) என்ற மூன்றையும் முக்குணங்களாக வரிசைப்படுத்தலாம்: .

பிளாக்ஏடரை ஒரு "சோம்பலான, பெரிய மூக்குடைய, ரப்பர்-முகத்தையுடைய பாஸ்டர்டாக" நகைச்சுவையாக குறிப்பிடுவதற்கு பிளாக்ஏடர் த தேர்டுடைய ஒரு எபிசோடை அமைத்திருந்தார்.

lethargic's Usage Examples:

Using the term "narcolepsy" to mean all disorders that caused daytime sleepiness, this included illnesses that were not actually sleep disorders such as lethargic encephalitis.


TCAs that cause less drowsiness, Eg imipramine and lofepramine, are useful for withdrawn and lethargic people.


Lana awoke lethargic and in pain.


They may feel lethargic and sleep for a long time.


Although depressed people may seem lethargic, samples of their blood show a raised level of stress hormones such as cortisol and noradrenaline.


"In 1836 he founded the Dublin Review, partly to infuse into the lethargic English Catholics higher ideals of their own religion and some enthusiasm for the papacy, and partly to enable him to deal with the progress of the Oxford Movement, in which he was keenly interested.


Moreau was notoriously lethargic in civil affairs.


From their extremely slow movements and lethargic habits in the daytime these weird little creatures are commonly called sloths by Anglo-Indians.


During the long Napoleonic wars, in which the house of Habsburg was almost continuously engaged, Bohemia continued in its previous lethargic state.


Some children with intussusception may appear lethargic or have altered mental status, believed by physicians to be related to ischemia of the bowel and a decreased level of consciousness.


His nature was timid, lethargic and melancholy, and his court was not marked by the scandals which had been seen under Henry IV.


In 1836 he founded the Dublin Review, partly to infuse into the lethargic English Catholics higher ideals of their own religion and some enthusiasm for the papacy, and partly to enable him to deal with the progress of the Oxford Movement, in which he was keenly interested.





Synonyms:

lackadaisical, foggy, languorous, inactive, groggy, logy, dazed, languid, listless, unenrgetic, stuporous, dreamy,



Antonyms:

clearheaded, spirited, attentive, energetic, active,

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