cosmopolitan - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of cosmopolitan in Hindi

  • कॉस्मोपॉलिटन
  • सर्वदेशीय
  • विश्ववादी
  • विश्वजनीन
  • विश्व नागरिक
  • सार्वलौकिक

cosmopolitan Definition

Adjective

  • including or containing people from many different countries.
  • (of a plant or animal) found all over the world.

Noun

  • a cosmopolitan person.
  • a plant or animal found all over the world.
  • a cocktail typically made with vodka, Cointreau, cranberry juice, and lime juice.

cosmopolitan Example

  • his knowledge of French, Italian, and Spanish made him genuinely cosmopolitan ( फ्रेंच, इतालवी और स्पेनिश के उनके ज्ञान ने उन्हें वास्तव में महानगरीय बना दिया )
  • The family is cosmopolitan, excepting Madagascar and the whole of the Australian region. ( मेडागास्कर और पूरे ऑस्ट्रेलियाई क्षेत्र को छोड़कर परिवार महानगरीय है। )
  • Picidae, woodpeckers, cosmopolitan, excepting Madagascar and Australian region. ( मेडागास्कर और ऑस्ट्रेलियाई क्षेत्र को छोड़कर Picidae, कठफोड़वा, महानगरीय। )
  • The third class of Magyar novelists comprises those cosmopolitan writers who take their method of work, their inspiration and even many of their subjects from foreign authors, chiefly French, German, Russian and also Norwegian. ( मग्यार उपन्यासकारों के तीसरे वर्ग में वे महानगरीय लेखक शामिल हैं जो अपने काम करने के तरीके, अपनी प्रेरणा और यहां तक ​​कि अपने कई विषयों को विदेशी लेखकों, मुख्यतः फ्रेंच, जर्मन, रूसी और नॉर्वेजियन से भी लेते हैं। )

More Sentence

  • Rallidae, cosmopolitan, since Oligocene.
  • Cosmopolitan as Erasmus was, to the French literati he was still the Teuton.
  • Mango Tango : Cosmopolitan restaurant under in a giant Polynesian hut.
  • As the polyglot name suggests, Fenjves is a cosmopolitan creature.
  • She's more cosmopolitan than most small-town lawyers.
  • Unlike this cosmopolitan couple, the Australians are tanned and robust.
  • She succeeds Bonnie Fuller who will join Cosmopolitan as deputy editor.
  • Bank of Tokyo is the most cosmopolitan face in Japanese finance.
  • Bank of Tokyo was the most cosmopolitan face in Japanese finance.
  • World Color's customers include " Cosmopolitan,"
  • While moving provided cosmopolitan vision, it robbed us of place.
  • It's difficult to see cosmopolitan in a sentence .
  • They don't like his background, altogether too cosmopolitan.
  • A year later, he moved his studio to cosmopolitan Singapore.
  • became not merely the "Protestant Rome" but also quite a cosmopolitan little city.
  • Falconidae, cosmopolitan, since the Eocene.
  • The geographical distribution is cosmopolitan, as is the case with Protozoa and Protophyta of similar habits.
  • Terence was by birth an African, and was thus perhaps a fitter medium of connexion between the genius of Greece and that of Italy than if he had been a pure Greek or a pure Italian; just as in modern times the Jewish type of genius is sometimes found more detached from national peculiarities, and thus more capable of reproducing a cosmopolitan type of character than the genius of men belonging to other races.
  • Hence, in any cosmopolitan treatment of vegetation, it is necessary to consider the groups of plant communities from the standpoint of the climatic or geographical district in which they occur; and this indeed is consistently done by Schimper.
  • Owing to the peculiarities of its situation, the population of Vienna is of a very cosmopolitan and heterogeneous character.
  • In the West armies were cosmopolitan and religious animosities relatively insignificant.
  • The cosmopolitan city of Cagliari is only 25 miles away.
  • Acapulco is a cosmopolitan city with a nightlife that puts Rio to shame.
  • With its vintage cable cars and cosmopolitan restaurants, the city is brimming with urbane sophistication.
  • Alexander, who speaks six languages, had a very cosmopolitan upbringing.
  • Barcelona feels a lot more cosmopolitan than other Spanish cities.
  • She laid down her Cosmopolitan magazine, open at fashions, loose flowing shirts in jewel colours.
  • Also cosmopolitan in outlook are a variety of traditional professions, particularly university lecturers.
  • More or less cosmopolitan groups like herons, Falconidae, Anseres, Columbae, &c., and circumtropical families like Parridae, Trogonidae,.
  • Columbidae, cosmopolitan, since Miocene.
  • Alcedinidae, kingfishers, cosmopolitan or (2) with long spina communis.
  • immigration transformed the city into a cosmopolitan metropolis
  • their designs became a byword for cosmopolitan chic