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covet - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of covet in Hindi

  • लालच
  • लालच करना
  • ललचाना
  • लोभ करना

covet Definition

Verb

  • yearn to possess or have (something).

covet Example

  • When France had grown strong, under Philip Augustus, the house of Plantagenet still retained a broad territory in Gascony and Guienne, and the house of Capet could not but covet the possession of the largest surviving feudal appanage which marred the solidarity of their kingdom. ( जब फ्रांस मजबूत हो गया था, फिलिप ऑगस्टस के तहत, प्लांटैजेनेट के घर ने अभी भी गैसकोनी और गुएने में एक व्यापक क्षेत्र को बरकरार रखा था, और कैपेट का घर सबसे बड़े जीवित सामंती उपांग के कब्जे को नहीं ले सकता था, जिसने उनके राज्य की एकजुटता को प्रभावित किया था। )
  • I am not surprised my jealous sister has started to covet my boyfriend. ( मुझे आश्चर्य नहीं है कि मेरी ईर्ष्यालु बहन ने मेरे प्रेमी को चाहना शुरू कर दिया है। )
  • In the book by Dickens, the miser did nothing but covet money. ( डिकेंस की किताब में कंजूस ने पैसे के लालच के अलावा कुछ नहीं किया। )
  • I am not surprised my jealous sister has started to covet my boyfriend.  ( मुझे आश्चर्य नहीं है कि मेरी ईर्ष्यालु बहन ने मेरे प्रेमी को चाहना शुरू कर दिया है। )

More Sentence

  • As soon as the teen starlet wears an outfit in public, young girls around the world immediately covet the same outfit.  
  • The Bible says a man should not covet another man’s wife.  
  • Notwithstanding his frequent protests that he did not covet power, but longed for retirement, we find him again, so late as 1835, within three years of his death, in hopes of office under Peel.
  • I admit that I do covet it.
  • And creates the comfort I so covet.
  • I, too, covet that, but not as a necklace.
  • We covet no other property; we have no property.
  • And from what Sam had heard Gorbag would covet it.
  • We read, Thou shall not covet your neighbor’s slave.
  • Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s wife, servant, handmaid, and.
  • Heaven forbid that I should covet your riches; I will rather add to.
  • Do not covet what God has given to some of you in preference to others.
  • Covet: To long after; actively try to gain; related to lust and idolatry.
  • You shall not covet your neighbor’s house, nor your neighbor’s wife.
  • And so the promise attached to the fifth commandment was probably not on the tables, and the tenth commandment may have simply been, "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house," which includes all that is expressed in the following clauses.
  • To gain a clear distinction between the ninth and tenth commandments on this scheme it has usually been felt to be necessary to follow the Deuteronomic text, and make the ninth commandment, Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife.'
  • The commercial for Covet by Sarah Jessica Parker features the actress clad in a frothy Christian Lacroix gown, smashing a store window with her stiletto shoe in order to grab a bottle of Covet.
  • That's all well and good - it says something for a bag's quality when so many people covet it - but it certainly doesn't allow a woman to express herself as uniquely as she would like.
  • The result is something almost any woman would covet.
  • The company's wares are prestigious and elegant, and hold a certain allure for consumers who covet the famous logo as much as they covet the handbag itself.
  • We've all been there: in the stylist's chair ready to make a major change, only to be advised that the look we covet will result in damaged hair and split ends.
  • covet the things, or material possessions, of our neighbor.