accost - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of accost in Hindi

Verb

  • संभाषण करना
  • बोलना

Noun

  • नमस्कार
  • सलाम
  • अभिवादन
  • नमसते
  • पहले बोलना
  • पहले टोकना

accost Definition

  • approach and address (someone) boldly or aggressively. ( दृष्टिकोण और पता (कोई) साहसपूर्वक या आक्रामक तरीके से। )
  • to go up and talk to a stranger in a way that is rude of frightening ( किसी अजनबी से इस तरह से बात करना और परेशान होना )

accost Example

  • man tried to accost the girl on her way to school ( आदमी ने लड़की को स्कूल जाने के लिए उकसाने की कोशिश की )
  • I am walking speedily along New York's Fifth Avenue when this elegant stranger accosts me, grabs my arm in a vice-like grip and hisses, ‘Where did you get that pin?’ ( मैं न्यूयॉर्क के पांचवें एवेन्यू के साथ तेजी से चल रहा हूं, जब यह खूबसूरत अजनबी मुझ पर आरोप लगाता है, मेरी बांहों को पकड़ लेता है, जैसे एक पकड़ और फुफकार, आपको वह पिन कहां से मिला? ' )

More Sentence

  • Making my way through the train I was accosted by a very angry woman.
  • I considering accosting a hapless victim in the produce department.
  • Earlier in the morning, jockey Walter Cullum accosted King while the latter spoke with reporters.
  • As he accosted parents outside a school in Rotherhithe with a final piece of canvassing yesterday afternoon, he predicted his party would get the most seats since 1923 and the biggest share of the vote since 1983.
  • There's (yet another) famous family story about the time my parents went to a neighbourhood party and a woman accosted my mother over the punchbowl, raving about what a good listener my father was.
  • Once aboard, to his fugitive embarrassment, he is accosted by a young girl he vaguely remembers.
  • More recently, we've seen six-foot koalas accosting political leaders and asking in depth questions on real issues.
  • I do, however, have a problem with people accosting me on the street and begging me in their particularly weird way to donate money to African babies.
  • I walk into a house in one of the towns and an old man accosts me ‘Hi there young man.’
  • A few minutes ago he was accosted by reporters after locking horns with the Prime Minister during question period.
  • But before she spoke Ms Morris was accosted by a placard-waving group of about 20 protesters demanding that they should be paid all year round, not just in term time.
  • I recall accosting some rowdy teenagers outside my house: my few cautionary words were met with a hail of stones, too small to injure but enough to frighten and humiliate.
  • It's not that I make a habit of accosting MPs in health food shops, it's just that I mistakenly believed I knew him.
  • The larger London department stores are moving away from your more traditional Grotto based lap-sitting experiences and towards a more drive-by Santa encounter where the failed beardy actor accosts you on the shop floor.
  • It won't be long now until it will be no longer safe to walk the streets, without hoards of mad students in tartan trousers and kaftans accosting you with home made fliers.
  • Examing the display outside of my chosen shop, I was accosted by some youths, of thirteen years or so, who desired that I bought some fireworks on their behalf, a transaction I declined.
  • Everybody can stop e-mailing, IMing, and accosting me on the street: I had absolutely nothing to do with this.
  • You're strolling absent-mindedly down Coney Street, minding your own business and glancing idly at the displays in shop windows, when an officious little man in a yellow reflective jacket pops out of nowhere and accosts you.
  • His story begins in 1972 when Douglas was accosted at a bus stop in Edinburgh by two bolshie 12-year-olds.
  • As she got off the plane in Belgium, she was accosted by reporters asking if she was taking anabolic steroids.