English to Gujarati Dictionary festivity

festivity

ઉત્સવ
definition
noun
the season of festivity and goodwill
the celebration of something in a joyful and exuberant way.
example
That all changed when I saw an advertisement in the newspaper for a grand 'festivity' sure to be remembered forever in the annals of history.
After almost two years of gasping for anything that seems to work, Washington and London could not wait to begin the 'festivity' on the basis of pure symbolism.
The bunting still flying after the Tinnahinch v Castletown for the county final gave the village an atmosphere of 'festivity' with plenty to celebrate.
Her going to the 'festivity' could have saved her sister's life, but she had been selfish, thinking only of her popularity and of her new friends.
For someone is about to find the Bean in his cake and thereby become King of the 'festivity' .
They all dismounted and were taken into a great hall, where a glowing fire already was lit to provide warmth during the night and to give light for the 'festivity' that was about to take place.
At our Queen's golden jubilee nothing was done; no decorations or any public 'festivity' by the council to celebrate what was a great achievement.
The Carnival in Rio is a 'festivity' that unites enthusiasts of all classes on the streets.
Monsters HD-Halloween may be a one-month 'festivity' , but Voom celebrates spooky entertainment with Monsters HD all year around.
The anti-Valentine zealots of Shiv Sena are not just grouching about a harmless 'festivity' .
The newspaper warned its readers not ‘to wink at such excesses, merely because they occur at a season of 'festivity' .’
It is the season for 'festivity' , and Carnatica has learnt from past experience that many youngsters are keen to devote time to learn a song that can come in handy for a community performance.
This year I'm getting three times as much 'festivity' by celebrating Canadian Thanksgiving, US Thanksgiving and Christmas.
For the harvester living and working where the land is not that fertile, ‘there is a feeling of 'festivity' at the start of every harvest season’.
Originally Olympics took the form of a local 'festivity' , designed to provide a forum for friendly competition.
In fact, during the 'festivity' , the whole market will be illuminated for the event.
a time of great rejoicing and 'festivity'
Weddings are an important 'festivity' in the islands and are influenced by Cape Verdeans' African roots.
The championship hosted a Bulgarian 'festivity' marking the 75th birthday of the president of the European Boxing Federation and vice president, Emil Zhechev.
The 'festivity' of the season brought joy to Sheenara.
It's one of the city's oldest and best-known zine conventions, a semiannual 'festivity' in Hogtown since poet and indie eminence Stuart Ross molded the first show nearly 20 years ago.
Many passengers had been preparing for the 'festivity' all day.
Beyond the night itself they have made tremendous efforts to maintain a sense of 'festivity' with their Winter Festival programmes of mulled wine and international market stalls.
In an age when every moment of 'festivity' is celebrated only by being swallowed by the endless advertising of Multi-National Corporations, it's easy to forget what life truly is about.
This most important fundraising event in aid of the Helvick Head Lifeboat, has become a day of 'festivity' and celebration for people of all ages, and was recently featured in the TG4 TV programme Abair Amhran.
The treasure of the piece has to be Donner and Blitzen, an archetypal Christmas track complete with sleighbells; full of enough good will to summon up the spirit of 'festivity' in May.
Even though the appearance put in by the celebrity was all too brief (her name did not figure in the invitation card), the dose of glamour proved to be just the kind of kick start desired by the organisers, in this season of 'festivity' .
A son's birth involves a circumcision 'festivity' during which the mother gets presents.
Over the years, other temples in the city too have begun celebrating Pongala in varying degrees of 'festivity' and all of them have turned out to be occasions exclusively for women.
The New Year celebrations go on for longer, meaning that Scots tend to think of the period as a single time of celebration and 'festivity' .
Credits: Google Translate
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