crowning - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of crowning in Hindi

  • ताजपोशी
  • प्रसव की वह अवस्‍था जिसमें भ्रूण के शिरोवल्‍क का अधिकतम भाग भग पर प्रकअ होने लगता है

crowning Definition

Adjective

  • forming the triumphant culmination of an effort or endeavor.

crowning Example

  • the crowning moment of a worthy career ( एक योग्य करियर का महत्वपूर्ण क्षण )
  • The crowning complication in the effect of Der fliegende Hollander, Tannhauser and Lohengrin on the musical thought of the 10th century was that the unprecedented fusion of their musical with their dramatic contents revealed some of the meaning of serious music to ears that had been deaf to the classics. ( १०वीं शताब्दी के संगीत विचार पर डेर फ्लिगेंडे हॉलैंडर, टैनहौसर और लोहेनग्रिन के प्रभाव में सबसे बड़ी जटिलता यह थी कि उनके संगीत और उनकी नाटकीय सामग्री के अभूतपूर्व संलयन ने कानों के लिए गंभीर संगीत के कुछ अर्थ प्रकट किए जो कि बहरे थे। क्लासिक्स )
  • Cardan or Cardano, who was at that time writing his great work, the Ars Magna, could not restrain the temptation of crowning his treatise with such important discoveries, and in 1 545 he broke his oath and gave to the world Tartalea's rules for solving cubic equations. ( कार्डन या कार्डानो, जो उस समय अपने महान काम, आर्स मैग्ना को लिख रहे थे, इस तरह की महत्वपूर्ण खोजों के साथ अपने ग्रंथ को ताज पहनाने के प्रलोभन को रोक नहीं सके, और 1 545 में उन्होंने अपनी शपथ तोड़ दी और दुनिया को तर्तलिया के नियमों को हल करने के लिए दिया। समीकरण )
  • in 1708, subsequently participating in the battle of Holowczyn, the reduction of Mazepa, and the crowning victory of Poltava (June 26, 1709), where he won his marshal's baton. ( १७०८ में, बाद में होलोक्ज़िन की लड़ाई, माज़ेपा की कमी, और पोल्टावा (२६ जून, १७०९) की ताजपोशी जीत में भाग लिया, जहां उन्होंने अपने मार्शल का बैटन जीता। )

More Sentence

  • And, as a crowning disaster, the death of Frederick in 1250 proved a mortal blow to the Italian Ghibelline cause.
  • There is no need to doubt the reality of Catherine's exaltation, but it should be remembered that she and her circle were Dominicans, and that the stigmata of St Francis of Assisi were considered the crowning glory of the saint, and hitherto the exclusive boast of the Franciscans.
  • It follows that the crowning science of the hierarchy, dealing with the phenomena of human society, will remain longest under the influence of theological dogmas and abstract figments, and will be the last to pass into the positive stage.
  • But Gerty's crowning glory was her wealth of wonderful hair.
  • The comm traffic that erupted with the attack was the crowning.
  • Something about the crowning of a new Overlord, said Tylin.
  • This is the crowning point of devotion when the worshipper is not.
  • He worked so hard for his crowning moment and it was robbed from him.
  • In the days that followed his crowning the King sat on his throne in.
  • But, the official crowning of King Louis the Fourteenth, of course.
  • Arjun in the mode of that ultimate achievement which is the crowning.
  • When Edward and my father finally arrived the head was just crowning.
  • The crowning moment came at the end of 1974 when Carter announced his.
  • The crowning piece was the mahogany desk that sat across from her bed.
  • Ajodhyâ is the crowning peak, on the south by the Singbhum hills, and on.
  • The crowning achievement of his career was probably his knockout of bantamweight champion, Lupe Pintor.  
  • The Saturn V, the crowning achievement of Wernher von Braun's rocketeers, was the most powerful rocket ever built.  
  • Several trailers, TV spots and radio spots round out the basics of the extras, but the crowning achievement in this area is clearly the commentary track.  
  • Freak Show, then, by its very name should be his crowning achievement.  
  • While winning the Open Championship is a crowning achievement for any golfer, a win at St Andrews is considered particularly important due to the course's long tradition.
  • His abb’s final betrayal of him, crowning Ikram as queen, sealed his fate.
  • In the accolades she received, he envisaged the crowning glory of his surname.
  • This second transference probably took place very much later; in spite of it, the custom of crowning Abyssinian kings at Axum continued, and King John was crowned there as late as 1871 or 1872.
  • There are also an ancient church crowning the eastern hill, and a curious fortified warehouse (called the New Works), dating probably from the 14th century, when a trading company was established here under a grant from Henry IV.
  • He then made what had hitherto been an elective a hereditary throne by crowning his infant son Emerich his successor.