dyke - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of dyke in Hindi

  • बांध
  • डाइक
  • खंदक
  •  भित्ति

Noun

  • बांध
  • तटबंध
  • नाला
  • सेतु
  • नाली
  • खाई
  • बंद
  • स्र्कावट
  • आड़
  • रोक
  • ख़ंदक़

dyke Definition

Noun

  • variant spelling of dike1.

dyke Example

  • At Inverell in New South Wales a diamond (1906) has been found embedded in a hornblende diabase which is described as a dyke intersecting the granite. ( न्यू साउथ वेल्स के इनवेरेल में एक हीरा (1906) एक हॉर्नब्लेंड डायबेस में जड़ा हुआ पाया गया है जिसे ग्रेनाइट को काटते हुए एक डाइक के रूप में वर्णित किया गया है। )
  • A dyke called Blemund's Ditch, of unknown origin, bounded it on the south, where the land was marshy. ( अज्ञात मूल के ब्लेमुंड्स डिच नामक एक बांध ने इसे दक्षिण में बांध दिया, जहां भूमि दलदली थी। )
  • Shields (1825-1904), who afterwards entered the Protestant Episcopal Church, republished and urged the adoption of the Book of Common Prayer as amended by the Westminster Divines in the royal commission of 1661; and Henry Van Dyke was prominent in the latter stage of the movement for a liturgy. ( शील्ड्स (1825-1904), जिन्होंने बाद में प्रोटेस्टेंट एपिस्कोपल चर्च में प्रवेश किया, ने 1661 के शाही आयोग में वेस्टमिंस्टर डिवाइन्स द्वारा संशोधित सामान्य प्रार्थना की पुस्तक को फिर से प्रकाशित और अपनाने का आग्रह किया; और हेनरी वैन डाइक एक मुकदमे के लिए आंदोलन के बाद के चरण में प्रमुख थे। )
  • There have been discovered (1907) the remains of this ditch protected by a low wall or a stone dyke; some of the boundary stones which marked its course, and inscriptions mentioning it, have also been found. ( इस खाई के अवशेष खोजे गए हैं (1907) जो एक निचली दीवार या पत्थर के बांध से सुरक्षित है; कुछ सीमा पत्थर जो इसके मार्ग को चिह्नित करते थे, और इसका उल्लेख करने वाले शिलालेख भी पाए गए हैं। )

More Sentence

  • Another member to wit, from Delaware, Nicholas Van Dyke, appeared, and took his seat in the House.
  • He bought her a small beer and walked away to discuss the dyke at the end of the bar with his mates.
  • It was an area of the town that was formed around a man made dyke and looked more like a scene from Holland.
  • Listening to that dyke that’s up there, I’m not sure Kunae is far enough away, but Narrulla’s way too close.
  • My first encounter of his performance was a dub mix of just Roy’s voice and the Van Dyke Parks string arrangement.
  • The larger ocean always finds the path of least resistance and soon turns the slightest crack in your dyke into a raging torrent.
  • Dr. Van Dyke was an eloquent speaker.
  • The fate of Cambrai was sealed and only a part of the incompletely, constructed Masnieres-Beaurevoir line, already broken in its northern sector by the Third Army and in its southern sector by the Fourth Army, was left as a dyke to stem the further British advance.
  • It lay like a rag across the dyke that ran between the parsonage and the church.
  • Deane retraced his steps along the high dyke bank to the marshes which surrounded his tower.
  • They can watch the dyke path from the front, but few people ever come by this road.
  • A dyke had to be taken, some heavy fallows crossed, and the way was straight before him.
  • We reached the dyke in half an hour, tacking in that narrow channel with great celerity.
  • A "fail" dyke surrounded the spot, and two aged larch trees threw their shadows upon it.
  • The estate around Herons Dyke had long passed into the possession of strangers.
  • His hair was long and wavy and his blond beard was trimmed in Van Dyke fashion.
  • The silent sea was the water-trough of Apalachia, the western dyke of the deluge of Noah.
  • I had been at the Dyke all the afternoon with Tod and Hugh; they were there still.
  • They had fought to the death on the Kowenstyn dyke when Parma beleaguered Antwerp.
  • Mr. Van Dyke asserts that Nature is more solicitous about the species than about the individual.
  • The head was nearly bald, but the face carried a luxuriant, carelessly trimmed Van Dyke beard.
  • Not far off are the traces of an extensive British fort, and, about a mile east, the line of Offa's Dyke, forming the Shropshire boundary.
  • A western arm has been cut off from the lake by a dyke, and in this arm a thick crust of salt is formed each year after the evaporation of the flood water.
  • The 8th century saw a further curtailment of the Welsh territories under Offa, king of Mercia, who annexed Shrewsbury (Amwythig) and Hereford (Henfordd) with their surrounding districts, and constructed the artificial boundary known as Offa's Dyke running due N.