egoist - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of egoist in Hindi

Noun

  • अहंवादी
  • अहंकार का पुतला
  • स्वार्थवादी
  • स्वहितवादी

egoist Definition

Noun

  • a self-centered or selfish person (opposed to altruist).
  • an arrogantly conceited person; egotist.
  • an adherent of the metaphysical principle of the ego, or self; solipsist.

egoist Example

  • The egoist and the altruist are both imperfect. ( अहंकारी और परोपकारी दोनों अपूर्ण हैं। )
  • A showman, supreme egoist and crowd-puller, he earned millions - then, in 2001, he lost his first fight. ( एक शोमैन, सर्वोच्च अहंकारी और भीड़ खींचने वाले, उन्होंने लाखों कमाए - फिर, 2001 में, वह अपनी पहली लड़ाई हार गए। )
  • Another form of the word, "Egotism," is really interchangeable, though in ordinary language it is often used specially (and similarly "egoism," as in George Meredith's Egoist) to describe the habit of magnifying one's self and one's achievements, or regarding all things from a selfish point of view. ( शब्द का एक अन्य रूप, "अहंकार", वास्तव में विनिमेय है, हालांकि सामान्य भाषा में इसे अक्सर विशेष रूप से उपयोग किया जाता है (और इसी तरह "अहंकार," जॉर्ज मेरेडिथ के अहंकार के रूप में) किसी के स्वयं और किसी की उपलब्धियों को बढ़ाने की आदत का वर्णन करने के लिए, या के बारे में स्वार्थ की दृष्टि से सब कुछ। )
  • This man is an egoist (egotist). ( यह आदमी एक अहंकारी (अहंकारी) है। )

More Sentence

  • It was an egoist who claimed to be a martyr that aroused his anger.
  • Meredith was an egoist in his life, an anti-egoist in his books.
  • Surely he can’t be an egoist, Dounia.
  • A self-promoter egoist candidate takes every possible advantage regardless of false.
  • Death before dishonor: the ultimate stupidity of the human ego; the ultimate intellectual egoist.
  • Did you know that, or not? Well, anyway, I know that I am a blackguard, a scoundrel, an egoist, a sluggard.
  • To purify the egoist attachments of the consciousness, we have to spin it around its axis in such intensity that all peripheral entanglements of the consciousness just drop off.
  • Walpole, however, was an egoist of an opposite kind to Montaigne.
  • Thus the man who seeks only or primarily his own moral perfection is an egoist par excellence.
  • For on the one hand unless the egoist's happiness is compatible to some extent with that of his fellows, their opposition will almost inevitably vitiate his perfect enjoyment; on the other hand, the altruist whose primary object is the good of others, must derive his own highest happiness - i.e.