disuse - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of disuse in Hindi

Noun

  • अप्रचार
  • अव्यवहार
  • अनुपयोग
  • अप्रयोग

disuse Definition

Noun

  • the state of not being used.

disuse Example

  • The machines fell into disuse with the advent of computers ( कंप्यूटर के आगमन के साथ मशीनें अनुपयोगी हो गईं )
  • Motives drawn from homoeopathic magic may thus explain the occasional disuse and prohibition of pictorial and plastic Xiv. ( इस प्रकार होम्योपैथिक जादू से निकाले गए उद्देश्य सचित्र और प्लास्टिक के सामयिक दुरुपयोग और निषेध की व्याख्या कर सकते हैं Xiv। )
  • Almost immediately after the Norman Conquest the word fell into disuse. ( नॉर्मन विजय के लगभग तुरंत बाद यह शब्द अनुपयोगी हो गया। )
  • This sport was allowed to fall into disuse, and was not again prevalent until it was introduced from Holland after the Restoration. ( इस खेल को अनुपयोगी होने दिया गया, और जब तक इसे हॉलैंड से बहाली के बाद पेश नहीं किया गया तब तक यह फिर से प्रचलित नहीं था। )

More Sentence

  • (February 26, 1538) and again in 1550 under Edward VI.; but it had fallen into complete disuse by the beginning of the r 7th century.
  • This is entirely owing to the disuse of those muscles, which corsets throw out of employ.
  • He does not mention Astronomy because this subject has fallen into disuse as XXVJ.
  • Use and disuse must have come into play and reduced the function to its present rudimentary condition.
  • Indeed, he holds that there is no explanation of evolution without the transmission of the effects of the use and disuse of parts.
  • The reason for my disuse of salt was a very strange one: for it was occasioned by the illness of somebody else!
  • The gradual disuse of open grates for roasting has led to a practice of first baking and then browning before the fire.
  • The process involved the disuse of inanimate objects; only the living could be fitly joined together.
  • A still more remarkable illustration of the effects of use and disuse is seen in the sense of touch in different parts of the body.
  • Such changes do years of disuse make in dwellings which, when inhabited, have been replete with human interest.
  • The disuse implied no doctrinal change; the main motive was that the stiff vestment, high in the neck, was incompatible with a full-bottomed wig.
  • The classic term "camelopard," probably introduced when these animals were brought from North Africa to the Roman amphitheatre, has fallen into complete disuse.
  • There seems but little doubt that Napier was the first to make use of a decimal separator, and it is curious that the separator which he used, the point, should be that which has been ultimately adopted, and after a long period of partial disuse.
  • Unlike the latter, they reproduced the institution of district conciliation boards in addition to the arbitration court; but these boards were a failure here as they were in New Zealand, and after 1903 they fell into disuse.
  • There are pleasant promenades and good golf links, also a small spa which has fallen into disuse.
  • They have been so long in disuse in England, that at present I know no English name for them.
  • This state of the eyes is probably due to gradual reduction from disuse, but aided perhaps by natural selection.
  • The stranger, upon seeing them, assumed the coins in that compartment were the last type that had met its disuse.
  • Hurd couldn’t understand why no one wanted to eat, but because of that the kitchen, more or less, fell into disuse.
  • In some cases we might easily put down to disuse modifications of structure which are wholly, or mainly due to natural selection.
  • The tongues and teeth and mouths of mammals are organs which have been steadily dwindling into disuse just like our appendix has.
  • They went up the back stairs to the second floor, long hallways with rooms on either side of flooring made black from years of disuse.
  • The general instinctive awareness I call the sense of pure wonder is used less and less and basically atrophies into almost complete disuse.
  • But in spite of statutes and proclamations, of occasional severities and of the patriotic example of Queen Elizabeth, the practice of fasting fell more and more into disuse.