coterie - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of coterie in Hindi

  • मंडली
  • अन्तर्गुट
  • अन्तरंग-मंडली
  • मण्डली
  • गुणीजन-मंडली

coterie Definition

Noun

  • a small group of people with shared interests or tastes, especially one that is exclusive of other people.

coterie Example

  • a coterie of friends and advisers ( मित्रों और सलाहकारों की एक मंडली )
  • The coterie of ice climbers was beginning to gather on the front porch. ( सामने के बरामदे पर बर्फ के पर्वतारोहियों की भीड़ जमा होने लगी थी। )
  • With his latest novel, James hopes to reach a whole new coterie of readers.  ( अपने नवीनतम उपन्यास के साथ, जेम्स पाठकों की एक पूरी नई मंडली तक पहुंचने की उम्मीद करता है। )
  • Our coterie of girls always sits at the best table in the school cafeteria. ( लड़कियों की हमारी मंडली हमेशा स्कूल कैफेटेरिया में सबसे अच्छी मेज पर बैठती है। )

More Sentence

  • The president’s coterie of advisers was unable to offer him a solution to the national problem.  
  • Because the coterie of rebellious teens refused to leave the store, the police were called.  
  • The coterie of physicians agreed it would be unwise to operate on the elderly patient.  
  • In this little coterie the ants are beyond question the models towards which the bug and the grasshopper have converged in appearance.
  • Between 1880 and 1890 an artistic coterie grew up here, the leaders of which were Edwin Harris, Walter Langley, Fred Hall, Frank Bramley, T.
  • Much of Holbach's fame is due to his intimate connexion with the brilliant coterie of bold thinkers and polished wits whose creed, the new philosophy, is concentrated in the famous Encyclopedie.
  • Upon Andrew Jackson's election to the presidency, the Telegraph became the principal mouthpiece of the administration, and received printing patronage estimated in value at $50,000 a year, while Green became one of the coterie of unofficial advisers of Jackson known as the "Kitchen Cabinet."
  • The less official picture of Marko is of a gangster with a coterie of gunrunners, tobacco smugglers and drug dealers.  
  • We haven't yet reached the point where the coterie begins to jump ship, but they have enough to worry about already.  
  • Nor was it particularly funny when he turned up for their first date accompanied by a coterie of managers, friends and hangers-on.  
  • No doubt the winner will be most gratified and a coterie of industry insiders will take great interest in the results.  
  • Consequently there are situations where even legitimate facts are negated by the scientific coterie.  
  • I put on an afternoon tea for my coterie of new international students, inviting former students to come along and share their wisdom.  
  • He has numerous houses in several countries and embraces a coterie of celebrity friends.  
  • This coterie, some ministers complain, has made an otherwise accessible chief minister elusive.
  • A tariff bill introduced in the House by William Lyne Wilson (1843-1900), of West Virginia, chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, was so amended in the Senate, through the instrumentality of Senator Arthur Pue Gorman and a coterie of anti-administration democratic senators, that when the bill eventually came before him, although unwilling to veto it, the president signified his dissatisfaction with its too high rates by allowing it to become a law without his signature.
  • Simpson's coterie of quotable defense attorneys consists of men.
  • Yeltsin has a coterie of unedifying, sometimes thuggish, cronies.
  • They are a coterie of top government people and business leaders.
  • He was considered for honorary membership of The Coterie for 2007.
  • There was a little coterie of balloon aces in Jasta 21.
  • A coterie of bankruptcy lawyers does get repeat business from the corporation.
  • But Kwan's coterie was having none of it.
  • The president and his hawkish coterie seem inherently opposed to international accords.
  • Both gangs have a coterie of allied clubs and hangers-on.
  • Thus in October 1862, after Garibaldi's attack on Rome, the clerical coterie of the Tuileries triumphed.
  • The Argus, founded in 1813 by Jesse Buel (1778-1839) and edited from 1824 to 1854 by Edwin Croswell (1797-1871), was long the organ of the coterie of New York politicians known as the "Albany Regency," and was one of the most influential Democratic papers in the United States.
  • Once we were approached by a small coterie of elders.
  • She stormed out of the shop closely followed by her coterie of.
  • In the learn'd coterie sitting constrain'd and still, for learning.
  • I must forestall Zax and his coterie, lest they further darken the spirit.
  • It was Pharan with a coterie of Egyptian workers trailing timidly along behind him.
  • Out of the darkness, stepped the wizard with a coterie of soldiers armed with devices I had not seen before.
  • This coterie, which is neither of diplomacy nor yet of old-time Washington, gives special attention to the Bennings track.
  • During President Grant's administration he was a member of the senatorial coterie that influenced most of the president's policies, and in 1873 Grant urged him to accept an appointment as chief justice of the Supreme Court, but he declined.
  • The election of Martin Van Buren as governor in 1828 marked the beginning of the long ascendancy in the state of the " Albany Regency," a political coterie in which Van Buren, W.