monolith

একপ্র্রস্তরস্তম্ভ
definition
noun
The ancient monoliths , pyramids, stone circles and grand statues were not just art or architecture.
a large single upright block of stone, especially one shaped into or serving as a pillar or monument.
the dominance of broadcasting monoliths limits local programming
a large and impersonal political, corporate, or social structure regarded as intractably indivisible and uniform.
translation of 'monolith'
একটি গোটা প্রস্তরের স্তম্ভ
noun
একপ্র্রস্তরস্তম্ভ
example
Government is no 'monolith' , he explains, and its competing interests and agencies are always at war with one another.
It was only when she found herself standing before a massive pile of weathered stones, a huge, natural 'monolith' , that she stopped.
The organiser of the concerts took me outside the hotel one day, it is a huge 'monolith' , and asked me if I noticed anything unusual about the design.
The giant sandstone 'monolith' reaches a height of 335 metres and measures 8.8 kilometres in circumference.
Upon the first day of his eighteenth year the ancients called him to the stone 'monolith' .
The food 'monolith' , with its chicken mills and slaughterhouses, wasn't created because its owners are cruel.
The result is that the Roman family has been treated as an undifferentiated 'monolith' .
If the Constitution becomes the basis for the enforceable spread of one sect's values, then evangelism really will have become a political 'monolith' .
Aerial photography has revealed four later Neolithic cursus monuments converging on the hillock with the 'monolith' , effectively boxing it in.
What better way to attack the 'monolith' of social repression than by attacking the ‘sanctity’ of the linear narrative?
The skyline is dominated by the nearby Palace of Culture, a 'monolith' which Stalin constructed as a symbol of his power and as an answer to the skyscrapers of capitalism.
We explored his hideout en route to the southern hemisphere's second-largest single 'monolith' , Bald Rock.
Moreover, the army was not a 'monolith' , and military leadership not of one mind.
But perhaps a more serious issue is that most prior studies have examined the opinions of the public as a 'monolith' .
The shopping chain head office can be seen as a black 'monolith' to the left.
In reality, such identity typically reflects the control mechanism that cements the corporate body into a virtual 'monolith' .
A 'monolith' in glass and concrete stands today in the place of the old colonial structure.
New movements or schools of film-making in other countries tended to see Hollywood as a 'monolith' against which one could productively bang one's head.
Glass, glass and more glass are the building materials for this 'monolith' .
With a few simple words, official honesty was once again the order of business inside the glass-fronted 'monolith' overlooking the East River.
The experience suggests that the 'monolith' of corporate culture is only a partial reality.
the 72-story 'monolith' overlooking the waterfront
The original buildings were demolished in 1929 to make way for the Empire State Building, and were replaced with a 2,200-room, 42-storey art-deco 'monolith' .
‘The psychological establishment is not a 'monolith' ; it is more like a parliament made up of small fractious parties,’ Garcia writes.
Within the dark urban 'monolith' that is the Tower building lies an organisation at the cutting edge of eco-tourism.
There's no sign outside the concrete-and-glass 'monolith' .
The meeting is symbolic of Coleman's transition from a top executive at a corporate 'monolith' to founder of a bootstrapping software company.
With the collapse of the Soviet economy, prisons could no longer function as an industrial 'monolith' .
Made from a single slab of andesite weighing at least 10 tons, this 'monolith' is carved in the form of a doorway with niches on either side.
Eschewing the model of the totalitarian 'monolith' , Neumann's was the first influential attempt to analyse the structures of the regime in terms of a multitude of power blocs.
Credits: Google Translate