emaciation - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of emaciation in Hindi

  • दुर्बलता

Noun

  • दुर्बलता
  • निर्बलता
  • क्षीणता
  • दुबलापन
  • कृशता

emaciation Definition

Noun

  • the state of being abnormally thin or weak.

emaciation Example

  • thin to the point of emaciation ( क्षीणता के बिंदु तक पतला )
  • His eyes, prominent from the emaciation of his face, gazed inquiringly at his comrades who were paying no attention to him, and he moaned regularly and quietly. ( उसकी आँखें, उसके चेहरे की दुर्बलता से प्रमुख, अपने उन साथियों से पूछताछ कर रही थी जो उस पर ध्यान नहीं दे रहे थे, और वह नियमित रूप से और चुपचाप कराहता रहा। )
  • Death is due either to weakness and emaciation (in chronic cases), or to blocking of the cerebral capillaries by the parasites (where these are abundant), or to disorganization of the nervous system (paraplegic and sleepingsickness cases). ( मृत्यु या तो कमजोरी और क्षीणता (पुराने मामलों में), या परजीवियों (जहां ये प्रचुर मात्रा में हैं) द्वारा मस्तिष्क केशिकाओं को अवरुद्ध करने के कारण होती है, या तंत्रिका तंत्र के अव्यवस्था (लकवा और नींद की बीमारी के मामले) के कारण होती है। )
  • Terrible as his brother Nikolay had been before in his emaciation and sickliness, now he looked still more emaciated, still more wasted. ( अपने भाई निकोलाई के रूप में भयानक पहले उसकी दुर्बलता और बीमारी में था, अब वह और भी क्षीण, और भी अधिक बर्बाद लग रहा था। )

More Sentence

  • Life lasted till the emaciation had proceeded to six-tenths of the animal's weight, as in Chossat's experiments, extending to the fourteenth day, instead of ending on the tenth day, as was the case with other dogs which were not bled.
  • Any reductive over-simplification of life results in the emaciation of literature.
  • Emaciation and lowered growth rates may result from this.
  • Retroperitoneal tumors may present themselves with signs of weight loss and emaciation and abdominal pain.
  • Eventually these space occupying lesions obstruct the esophagus and trachea resulting in emaciation and asphyxiation.
  • She shunned the common practice of charity and showed her devotion through self-emaciation.
  • So was a bulimic princess _ whose emaciation seemed a direct result of the feeding frenzy.
  • It's difficult to see emaciation in a sentence .
  • The toxic actions produced in continued fevers, in certain chronic diseases, and by intestinal parasites largely aid in producing degeneration, emaciation and atrophy.
  • Nowak, however, found later that he could generate it where the turpentine failed to induce suppuration; he believes that it may arise quite apart from the influence of the organisms of suppuration, that it is not a biological product of the micro-organisms of disease, and also that it has nothing to do with emaciation.