crises - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of crises in Hindi

  • संकट
  • संकटकाल

crises Definition

Noun

  • a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger.

crises Example

  • For every age consists of crises that seem intolerable to those who live through them. ( हर युग में ऐसे संकट होते हैं जो उन लोगों के लिए असहनीय लगते हैं जो उनके माध्यम से जीते हैं। )
  • liquidity crises will still occur from time to time. ( समय-समय पर तरलता का संकट बना रहेगा। )
  • This was one of the gravest crises in Moltke's career. ( यह मोल्टके के करियर के सबसे गंभीर संकटों में से एक था। )
  • He had no sympathy with political liberalism, but throughout his long reign of forty-two years, with a constant interchange of ministries and many ministerial crises, he never had a serious conflict with the states-general, and his ministers could always count upon his fair-mindedness and an earnest desire to help them to further the national welfare. ( राजनीतिक उदारवाद के साथ उनकी कोई सहानुभूति नहीं थी, लेकिन बयालीस वर्षों के अपने लंबे शासनकाल के दौरान, मंत्रालयों के निरंतर आदान-प्रदान और कई मंत्रिस्तरीय संकटों के साथ, उनका कभी भी राज्यों-जनरल के साथ गंभीर संघर्ष नहीं था, और उनके मंत्री हमेशा उनके ऊपर भरोसा कर सकते थे। निष्पक्षता और राष्ट्रीय कल्याण को आगे बढ़ाने में उनकी मदद करने की सच्ची इच्छा। )

More Sentence

  • Since the outbreak of the Reformation, however, extraordinary crises, calling for immediate decision, might arise at any moment.
  • With a hurricane and an earthquake occurring the same week, the state is facing many crises.  
  • Our country has faced many crises over the years, but we have always persevered in those dangerous times.  
  • When someone asks me to imagine the worst types of crises, what comes to mind is often war or an epidemic.  
  • This prevents indeed any continuity of policy, for the majority in congress is perpetually fluctuating, and ministerial crises rapidly follow one another.
  • In course of time the popes, under stress of financial crises, claimed the privilege for themselves, though at first only temporarily.
  • A levy of 300,000 men was ordered; a Committee of General Security was charged with the search for suspects; and thenceforward military occurrences called forth parliamentary crises and popular upheavals.
  • Strangely enough until the present moment she had escaped great crises with her children.
  • It is, therefore, the impossible that is fulfilled in many of the crises of life.
  • In such crises the great sacrificed the less great, the less great the small, without a scruple.
  • In such great crises it is necessary to call upon a Higher Power for strength and succor.
  • A series of delightful biographies of men who have been influential in great crises in the history of the church.
  • Only a few detached rules from our parents, to be blindly followed when particular crises supervene.
  • It brought him such pleasant sensations he decided it would be a good medicine to take in crises of hard work.
  • If hatred and its crises are causes of war, they do not fit into the moods in which warfare is generally conducted.
  • But here, as in all other important crises of his career, he was governed by the haughty and headstrong passion of the moment.
  • The comment was merely one of those matter-of-fact bits of philosophy which are most effective in the major crises of life.
  • Most banking crises can be attributed to negative macroeconomic shocks, including their amplification mechanisms.
  • From the Cambridge English Corpus
  • Potential crises will be postponed or mitigated as a result.
  • The state emerges to address these problems and regulate these crises.
  • Nearly half of the severe events involved marital or other relationship crises and 18 % of the depressed subjects had been recently bereaved.
  • Cognitive coping repsonse to crises and onset of depression.
  • During these crises, the financial center will have incentives to implement a policy of restricting flows of specie.
  • In conjunction with (8), this reasoning also demonstrates how the interest rate on discount window loans determines the potential severity of banking crises.
  • Efforts to hasten this development have created some serious financial and industrial crises, and have burdened the country with heavy debts and taxes.
  • Reactionary as the measure was it enabled the agricultural interest, on which the prosperity of Denmark mainly depended, to tide over one of the most dangerous crises in its history; but certainly the position of the Danish peasantry was never worse than during the reign of the religious and benevolent Christian VI.