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bookish - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of bookish in Hindi

  • किताबी

adjective

  • किताबी
  • अव्यवहारिक
  • पढ़क्रकू

bookish Definition

  • (of a person or way of life) devoted to reading and studying rather than worldly interests. ( (एक व्यक्ति या जीवन के तरीके) सांसारिक हितों के बजाय पढ़ने और अध्ययन के लिए समर्पित। )

bookish Example

  • Because of a tradition of teaching English formally through grammar, translation, and literature, spoken usage is often stilted and bookish . ( व्याकरण, अनुवाद, और साहित्य के माध्यम से औपचारिक रूप से अंग्रेजी सिखाने की परंपरा के कारण, बोले जाने वाले उपयोग अक्सर रुके हुए और किताबी होते हैं। )
  • By the 1941 Christmas season, the bookish technician got wind of an outlandish project to determine if ethnicity was a factor in the flying business. ( 1941 के क्रिसमस के मौसम तक, बुकिश तकनीशियन को यह निर्धारित करने के लिए एक बाहरी परियोजना की हवा मिली कि क्या जातीयता उड़ान व्यवसाय का कारक है। )
  • Annalise whose zest for life and whose loud raucous ways had been both shocking and enticing to the bookish Emily. ( जीवन के लिए जिसका उत्साह और जिसके तेज़ कर्कश तरीके दोनों को चौंकाने वाला था और एमिली किताब के लिए मोहक था। )
  • It's movie dialogue, to be sure - no one, especially the sort of low-life characters they tend to write, speaks with such mellifluous, bookish vocabulary. ( यह फिल्म संवाद है, यह सुनिश्चित करने के लिए - कोई नहीं, विशेष रूप से निम्न-जीवन के पात्रों के प्रकार जो वे लिखना चाहते हैं, इस तरह के मधुर, किताबी शब्दावली के साथ बोलते हैं। )
  • She's bookish , bespectacled, redheaded, and stubborn! ( वह किताबी है, बेहूदा, लाल सिर वाली और जिद्दी है! )
  • Not surprisingly, given this background, the stories nearly all involve bookish men; old churches, libraries and cathedrals feature heavily. ( आश्चर्य की बात नहीं, इस पृष्ठभूमि को देखते हुए, कहानियों में लगभग सभी किताबी पुरुष शामिल हैं; पुराने चर्च, पुस्तकालय और कैथेड्रल में भारी सुविधा है। )
  • It sounded like the daydream of a lonely and bookish boy. ( यह एक अकेला और किताबी लड़के के सपने की तरह लग रहा था। )

More Sentence

  • My parents have always been bookish people and obviously my father went to Cambridge and I grew up feeling that I must do the same.
  • I was a bookish kid, largely because of coordination problems that didn't really get sorted out until 1987-8.
  • Jenny was bookish ; the only young man capable to follow her train of thought was Michael - with whom Jenny often engaged in heated debates about philosophy and boring books.
  • I have recently realized that sometimes my writing is too bookish and sometimes it isn't bookish enough, all depending on who happens to be reading it.
  • They employ scientific, or philosophical, or literary, or bookish terms that go over their congregations' heads.
  • In this sanctuary he is to be found, his punishing day's tally of work completed, sitting content, smoking endless pipes and gossiping with bookish friends the moon down the sky.
  • Sayid does use a lot of bookish language.
  • Almost all the topics of conversation were foreign to me, but then I came from a bookish family and was studying philosophy, French, and classics at university.
  • I wanted to be admired by pretty, bookish women.
  • A highly sensitive and bookish boy, he felt he had largely educated himself by his reading in great authors.
  • Having successfully dodged active service, he spent most of the war in Berkshire, writing radio talks for the BBC and bookish articles for the Statesman.
  • Soon these two bookish characters fall in love.
  • Sealed in their Gaelic oral tradition, the Highlanders themselves had little need of a bookish literature, but two great writers were to make them a topic of universal human interest.
  • Actually, I find the candidates a bit adorably nerdy when they lapse into this kind of bookish vocabulary.
  • I thought, when I first opened the package, that I was going to have to write a carefully worded piece saying only that, if you're looking for a Christmas present for a bookish friend, this might do.
  • For such speakers, Latin had always been a strange, alien, and bookish tongue.
  • Nothing seems to me so inane as bookish language in conversation.
  • She was not a bookish person, but she loved to read as well as do things like fishing and gardening; she also loved doing things with me.
  • I don't see anything wrong with writing bookish English, though it lacks a tad of fluency, it's certainly elegant and exquisite.
  • They were readers of newspapers and periodicals, they were eternal students in the best sense, they were bookish people.
  • But to concentrate on the theory means that you are bookish , weedy, un-masculine and alien.
  • Almost six in ten women think men who read books are more interesting and intelligent while almost half think bookish blokes are more sensitive.
  • Even the most bookish work that seems esoteric on the written page can be transformed by actors into the cadences of characters and themes.