havoc
પાયમાલી
definition
verb
The lack of participants is associated to a large storm that havocked Latvia in January 2005 and uprooted and destroyed large forest areas.
lay waste to; devastate.
noun
the hurricane ripped through Florida, causing havoc
widespread destruction.
translation of 'havoc'
બરબાદી,
વિધ્વંસ,
વિનાશ,
પાયમાલી
noun
ઉત્પાત
example
Since it was launched five weeks ago, several people have contacted the It's Your Call hotline to complain about teenage bikers wreaking 'havoc' .
Yesterday afternoon's heavy downpour and hail here caused 'havoc' and widespread powercuts across the province.
if they weren't at school they'd be wreaking 'havoc' in the streets
Her family work as daily labourers and a day off can wreak 'havoc' for the family's economy.
Sutton's police chief has pledged to make the borough the safest in London by waging war on career criminals and drug traders wreaking 'havoc' in our communities.
But the group insists that the size of the development is too large for the conservation area and would bring traffic 'havoc' to already congested lanes.
A series of lightning strikes in the North and the South-East have been wreaking 'havoc' with supply.
Man-made destruction seems easier to understand and explain than indiscriminate natural 'havoc' .
This division was also the site for catamaran carnage with the wind wreaking 'havoc' in the 12-boat fleet.
We need to help consumers leap-frog the illegal downloading issues that have wreaked 'havoc' on the music industry.
He said a gang of about 30 teenagers have been causing 'havoc' for the past six months.
On that fateful night a disastrous landslide wreaked 'havoc' on their scenic community.
Drought is wreaking 'havoc' in the Thanjavur belt of Tamil Nadu.
For the second time that morning the capricious wind was wreaking 'havoc' .
Windows have been smashed, paving pulled up, shop staff intimidated and telephone boxes destroyed as yobs caused 'havoc' in the Thornhill area of the city.
The novel deals with a small band of ‘radicals’ who try to stir up revolt in a small town and end up wreaking 'havoc' .
The AIDS epidemic is wreaking 'havoc' in sub-Saharan Africa.
A notorious pyramid selling scam, which caused 'havoc' among small communities on the Isle of Wight last year, has reared its ugly head in Scotland again.
He stared at me, his intensely blue eyes wreaking 'havoc' in my mind.
A tornado is a funnel-shaped cloud that descends on land, creating 'havoc' and destruction in its wake.
Heavy rains and rising water are wreaking 'havoc' across Europe.
the hurricane ripped through Florida, causing 'havoc'
My mother-in-law is mentally ill and wreaking 'havoc' on our marriage.
It appears that the beast has escaped, and is again wreaking 'havoc' on the unsuspecting residents of Bucharest.
the hurricane ripped through Florida causing 'havoc'
schoolchildren wreaking 'havoc' in the classroom
It is obvious that if foxes were a serious threat to agriculture, half a million of them would cause devastation and 'havoc' .
Ivan tore through Grenada last year, wreaking 'havoc' and taking with it lives, homes and livestock.
With that, the fight broke loose, along with pure 'havoc' and destruction.
Delta wreaked 'havoc' in popular holiday destination islands, killing seven people and leaving a trail of mass destruction.
Credits: Google Translate