English to Gujarati Dictionary touchstone

touchstone

ટચસ્ટોન
definition
noun
Small black stones were used as touchstones to test the colour, and hence purity, of gold.
a piece of fine-grained dark schist or jasper formerly used for testing alloys of gold by observing the color of the mark that they made on it.
translation of 'touchstone'
સોનાની કસોટી (નો પથ્થર),
માપદંડ,
કસોટી
example
Such reference has been the 'touchstone' for an assessment of trade unions over the last two decades.
The same example can be cited: in spite of producing unlimited quantities of gold, the 'touchstone' remains the same.
they tend to regard grammar as the 'touchstone' of all language performance
That was his political 'touchstone' , his point of reference, the rock upon which he built everything else.
‘To touch’ in reference to fine metals such as gold refers to the 'touchstone' used to test the purity of the metal.
Smith endorsed capitalism as a means to his ultimate value - control of arbitrary rule, a premise that has remained a 'touchstone' of liberalism.
It is a 'touchstone' against which I measure my own political views.
His reference to the Cold War as his 'touchstone' gives him away.
I would have thought ID cards are a pretty fundamental issue if not a 'touchstone' of liberal credentials.
This attitude comes mostly from the idea that American middle-class values are the 'touchstone' from which all else should be judged.
Nor has he challenged the appellant's case that the requirements of the Convention provide a 'touchstone' for judging the rationality of his decision and the policy pursuant to which it was reached.
Ridley's treatment of the role of inheritance in the determination of intelligence and, more generally, of personality, will be for many readers the 'touchstone' by which his book is judged.
Considerations on the French Revolution would become a 'touchstone' for the liberals under the Bourbons.
they tend to regard grammar as the 'touchstone' of all language performance
We had no idea the film would become the 'touchstone' for special effects films that it is recognized to be today.
By the Second World War the toleration of COs had begun to be recognized as a 'touchstone' of mature liberalism.
An article in a foreign journal becomes a 'touchstone' and then a norm, unless it is torn asunder by some path-breaking discovery.
In a sense, an extensive vocabulary appears to have mistakenly become a 'touchstone' by which one's English proficiency is judged and assessed.
What, in short, is the 'touchstone' by which to recognise a special class of people from members of the general public?
But these terms, profoundly limiting as they are, are actually 'touchstones' that disputants in the periodical debate would recognize.
Small black stones were used as 'touchstones' to test the colour, and hence purity, of gold.
We see the standard 'touchstones' - the Wailing Wall, the Dome of the Rock - but we also see the streets, Jerusalem as a town, a city where Jews and Arabs both live.
Our writings serve as the academy's benchmarks, the ethical 'touchstones' for the noblest of professions.
There are Australianisms of language and tone, Australian 'touchstones' of reference, that should be consciously preserved.
We are, after all, introduced to him in the first stanza through his tastes, the 'touchstones' he cannot lay aside and by which he judges all else.
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