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depth

  • 1 depth

    N
    1. गहराई
    The depth of the water of sea can't be imagined by man.
    He had sunk to the depths of addiction
    2. मध्य
    In the depth of winter the people living in the higher altitude of Himalayas are cut off from the mainland.

    English-Hindi dictionary > depth

  • 2 depth

    n.
    गहराई, गहराई का नाप; गहरा स्थान; बुध्दि, चातुर्य, पहुंच; बीच, मध्य

    English-Hindi new dictionary > depth

  • 3 depth

    English-Hindi Amateurish dictionary > depth

  • 4 in-depth

    N
    1. गहराई
    He has done an in-depth study of the subject.

    English-Hindi dictionary > in-depth

  • 5 anaerobic

    Adj
    1. वात निरपेक्ष जीवाणु
    You can find anaerobic creatures in the depth of the sea.

    English-Hindi dictionary > anaerobic

  • 6 establish

    VT
    1. स्थापित\establishकरना
    Establish a new department
    2. प्रमाणित\establishकरना
    The trompe l'oeil-illusion establishes depth

    English-Hindi dictionary > establish

  • 7 fathom

    N
    1. गहराई
    The fathom of the river was tried to be measured.
    --------
    VT
    1. थाह\fathomलेना
    They tried to fathom the depth of the river.

    English-Hindi dictionary > fathom

  • 8 sound

    Adj
    1. युक्तियुक्त
    His views on morality are very sound.
    --------
    Adv
    1. गहराई के साथ/अच्छी तरह
    He was sound awake.
    --------
    N
    1. ध्वनि/आवाज़
    He could hear a faint sound from the bushes.
    --------
    V
    1. बजाना
    The bell is sounded every hour.
    2. उच्चारित करना
    The 'b' in " dumb" is not sounded.
    3. लगना
    It sounds to me like you need a holiday.
    4. समुद्र की गहराई को उपकरणौं से निकालना
    We can sound the depth of thw sea with the help of an echo-sounder.

    English-Hindi dictionary > sound

См. также в других словарях:

  • depth — [ depθ ] noun *** ▸ 1 distance through something ▸ 2 hidden qualities/ideas ▸ 3 information/importance ▸ 4 bright quality of color ▸ 5 not looking flat ▸ 6 when sound is low ▸ 7 deepest parts of ocean ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) count or uncount the… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • depth — W3S3 [depθ] n [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: deep] 1.) [C usually singular, U] a) the distance from the top surface of something such as a river or hole to the bottom of it →↑deep ▪ a sea with an average depth of 35 metres to/at a depth of sth ▪ The… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Depth — (s[e^]pth), n. [From {Deep}; akin to D. diepte, Icel. d[=y]pt, d[=y]p[eth], Goth. diupi[thorn]a.] 1. The quality of being deep; deepness; perpendicular measurement downward from the surface, or horizontal measurement backward from the front; as,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Depth — Depth(s) may refer to: Depth (ring theory), an important invariant of rings and modules in commutative and homological algebra Depth in a well, the measurement between two points in an oil well Color depth (or number of bits or bit depth ) in… …   Wikipedia

  • depth — [depth] n. [ME depthe < dep: see DEEP & TH1] 1. a) the distance from the top downward, from the surface inward, or from front to back b) perspective, as in a painting 2. the quality or condition of being deep; deepness; specif …   English World dictionary

  • depth — depth; depth·ing; depth·less; depth·om·e·ter; …   English syllables

  • depth — ► NOUN 1) the distance from the top down, from the surface inwards, or from front to back. 2) complexity and profundity of thought: the book has unexpected depth. 3) comprehensiveness of study or detail. 4) creditable intensity of emotion. 5)… …   English terms dictionary

  • depth — [n1] distance down or across base, bottom, declination, deepness, draft, drop, expanse, extent, fathomage, intensity, lower register, lowness, measure, measurement, pit, pitch, profoundness, profundity, remoteness, sounding; concepts 737,790 Ant …   New thesaurus

  • depth — index caliber (mental capacity), sense (intelligence) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • depth — late 14c., apparently formed in M.E. on model of length, breadth; from O.E. deop deep (see DEEP (Cf. deep)) + TH (Cf. th). Replaced older deopnes deepness. Though the English word is relatively recent, the formation is in P.Gmc., *deupitho , and… …   Etymology dictionary

  • depth — noun 1 distance from top to bottom or from back to front; deep part of sth ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, great ▪ species that live at considerable depth ▪ They go down to great depths below the surface. ▪ maximum …   Collocations dictionary

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