fervour - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of fervour in Hindi

  • जोश
  • उत्साह
  • जोश
  • चाव
  • तीव्रता
  • गर्मी
  • व्यग्रता

fervour Definition

noun

  • intense and passionate feeling.

fervour Example

  • he talked with all the fervor of a new convert. ( उन्होंने एक नए धर्म परिवर्तन के पूरे उत्साह के साथ बात की। )
  • Doyle talked with the fervour of a preacher and generated enough enthusiasm to fuel 10 teams. ( डॉयल ने एक उपदेशक के उत्साह के साथ बात की और 10 टीमों को ईंधन देने के लिए पर्याप्त उत्साह पैदा किया। )
  • The use of the term for religious fervour in speech has degenerated into its common meaning of exaggerated sentiment.  ( भाषण में धार्मिक उत्साह के लिए शब्द का उपयोग अतिरंजित भावना के अपने सामान्य अर्थ में पतित हो गया है। )
  • The prime minister's final speech had the desired effect, whipping his party into a patriotic fervour. ( प्रधानमंत्री के अंतिम भाषण का वांछित प्रभाव पड़ा, जिससे उनकी पार्टी में देशभक्ति का जोश भर गया। )
  • The fervour of his political convictions effected a change in the style and tenor of his verse. ( उनके राजनीतिक विश्वासों के उत्साह ने उनकी कविता की शैली और अवधि में परिवर्तन किया। )
  • Deidre took his face in her hands, hungrily trying to taste more of him as she explored his mouth with fervor. ( डिड्रे ने उसका चेहरा अपने हाथों में ले लिया, भूख से उसका और अधिक स्वाद लेने की कोशिश कर रही थी क्योंकि उसने उत्साह के साथ उसका मुंह तलाशा। )
  • It was an idealistic assertion in many ways but it was one he clung to with fervour and which produced striking results.  ( यह कई मायनों में एक आदर्शवादी दावा था, लेकिन यह वह था जिसे उन्होंने पूरे जोश के साथ रखा और जिसके आश्चर्यजनक परिणाम सामने आए। )

More Sentence

  • They should wear gloves and soft shoes, avoid physical contact and use whistles to express their fervour.
  • But the wealth to which they attained in the Caucasus weakened for a time their moral fervour, and little by little they began to depart somewhat from the requirements of their belief.
  • How does their worship proceed today, beyond its evident (and widely shared) reliance on the oral fervour of praying, preaching and hymn-singing?
  • After his body was returned to Kinshasa, carefully planned scenes of public grief turned into a mass demonstration of patriotic fervour.
  • The chief charge against Melville is that his fervour often led him to forget the reverence due to an "anointed monarch."
  • Part of the aim here is to unveil the reasons behind this clear upsurge in ecclesial fervour.
  • When he raised his gaze to inspect his face, Lat found his eyes agleam with the intensity of his fervour.
  • At about the age of twenty-five he is said to have disappeared into the veldt, where he remained alone for several days, under the influence of deep religious fervour.
  • There was not one corner of the land, in the north or the south, which was without signs of revivalist fervour.
  • Whether such brave ideas can thrive in the rough tide of freedom alongside economic want and nationalist fervour remains to be seen.
  • It was fashionable and it was passionate, pervading all society with the fervour of romance.
  • This musical behaviour imitates actual bhajan performance practice in which growing religious and emotional fervour often produce these musical results.
  • From him even the most intractable pages stir with revolutionary fervour.
  • However, his insistence that abolitionist fervour arose for the most part from a bourgeois world view limits the scope of his argument.
  • He was considerably influenced by his tutor, the celebrated William Perkins, and by his successor, a man of kindred intellect and fervour, Paul Bayne.
  • The fervor surrounding her campaign continued right through election day.
  • At one point, fans crowded an area by the diner installation with a fervor that could only mean Rodrigo herself had made an appearance.
  • The novel captures the revolutionary fervor of the period.
  • Given the persistence of the thesis during periods of popular religious fervour, however, it is quite possible that secular scholars made a secular paradigm in their own image.