enviously - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of enviously in Hindi

  • ईर्ष्या
  • ईर्ष्यापूर्वक
  • डाह से
  • स्पृहाशील रूप में

enviously Definition

Adjective

  • feeling or showing envy

enviously Example

  •  They look enviously at the success of their European counterparts. ( वे अपने यूरोपीय समकक्षों की सफलता को स्पष्ट रूप से देखते हैं। )
  • I was looking enviously at your plate, wishing I'd had the fish. ( मैं आपकी थाली को ईर्ष्या से देख रहा था, काश मेरे पास मछली होती। )
  • Although ever watchful of her enviously slim figure she was not obsessive, and loved to dine out. ( हालांकि हमेशा अपने स्लिम फिगर के प्रति चौकस रहने के बावजूद वह जुनूनी नहीं थी, और बाहर खाना पसंद करती थी।  )
  • What wouldn’t I give to be like him! he thought enviously. ( मैं उसके जैसा बनने के लिए क्या नहीं दूंगा! उसने ईर्ष्या से सोचा। )

More Sentence

  • Looking around, he saw some of the passers by glancing enviously at them.
  • Philemon said enviously: That – for a book of old women’s nostrums!.
  • She hugged him back and grinned at her cousins, who were looking enviously at her.
  • He looked down at Ellen who enviously had nodded off momentarily with her head on his chest.
  • I happened to be idly looking out my window, enviously eyeing up the copious foliage growing in my neighbours' flat.  
  • As the East Coast digs out from its latest snow dump, Californians can only look on enviously.  
  • As the days progressed, students looked enviously at the empty staff parking lots while they fumed in line, or cruised the designated student lots hoping for parking spots.  
  • Many in the neighbourhood look enviously at her, this girl whose future prospects look rosy thanks to a white lady.
  • They were supposed to look at her enviously, wishing they were her, or at least happy to see her.
  • I remember Advani once almost enviously confessing, ‘We used to be awestruck just listening to Atalji speak.
  • Vincent spoke almost enviously of the miners' darkness, and the chance it gave them to reclaim the light.
  • Neal Lawson refers provocatively but also enviously to the early Thatcherites' political and intellectual "brilliance".