English to Hindi Dictionary cosmography

cosmography

जगद्विवरण
definition
noun
He entered the University of Leipzig where he studied mathematics, astronomy and cosmography .
the science that deals with the general features of the universe, including the earth. The branches of cosmography include astronomy, geography, and geology.
translation of 'cosmography'
जगद्विवरण,
विश्व का सचित्र विवरण,
भू-विवरण
example
He entered the University of Leipzig where he studied mathematics, astronomy and 'cosmography' .
Realising that Mercator wanted to learn mathematics to apply it to 'cosmography' , Gemma Frisius gave him advice on the best route into learning the mathematics he needed to know, giving him books to study at home.
While this nostalgia certainly informs and influences her vision, it is balanced within a fairly complex 'cosmography' that distinguishes between going ‘back’ and ‘going backward.’
Moore wrote the sections on arithmetic, geometry, trigonometry and 'cosmography' while the sections on algebra, Euclid and navigation were written by Perkins.
He instructed the crews on geometry and 'cosmography' before they left for voyages to North America in 1576.
Any similarities between the layouts likely derived from a shared spatial 'cosmography' .
For his part, Pacioli understood the mathematical disciplines to be arithmetic, geometry, astrology, music, perspective, architecture, and 'cosmography' .
he published a series of elementary textbooks on 'cosmography', trigonometry, and astronomy (1651)
He was to hold this appointment for 20 years and contribute not only to mathematics but also to astronomy and 'cosmography' .
He was interested in works on 'cosmography' and genealogy and, as a political man with a classical education, owned a substantial library of Greek, Latin, and Italian books.
For this reason, the principal tool of 'cosmography' has become the redshift survey.
But Kantor emerged from his explorations with a clearer understanding of barbecue and his own place in its 'cosmography' .
It was a new installment in his elaborate 'cosmography' in progress.
It was a German 'cosmographer' who suggested that the New World be designated ‘America.’
This boom in 'cosmographical' imagery in the 1650s seems to reflect a growing public awareness of the Copernican issue, which can also be attested from other sources.
In fact, the Mantegna 'cosmographic' series is not in any way an origin of Tarot cards.
Each chapter tackles one type of source - travelogues, maps and 'cosmographies' , grammars, histories and essays - and dissects them for evidence of Eurasian Exchange.
The subject also attracted numerous 'cosmographers' , geographers, encyclopedists and writers.
This sumptuous book provided a 'cosmographical' introduction similar to that in the Cosmographia but in a more elaborate and elegant way.
This seminar will examine the form, function, and meaning of calendrical, seasonal, and other 'cosmographic' programs in religious and secular contexts in the Roman through the Early Byzantine periods (2nd century A.C. through the 8th century).
This is the most scientific of the four 'cosmographies' , being a significant astronomical text.
Astronomers used and authored astrological tracts, astronomical tables and ephemerides, calendars and weather diaries, 'cosmographies' , defences and histories of their discipline, instrument-treatises, observations of celestial phenomena, studies on optics, theories of planetary motion, and works on geometry and trigonometry.
The book was largely based upon a translation of a work by Noel Duret, the French royal 'cosmographer' .
He was appointed 'cosmographer' to the king in 1596 and about the same time he moved to Lisbon where he taught mathematics to sailors and navigators.
It completed a circuit of cultural influence by stimulating the further publication of many forms of travel literature, particularly the 'cosmographies' , which invariably included a chapter on the Tartars.
In fact the exhibition brings together quite a number of manuscripts; in addition to Qurans, histories, 'cosmographies' and copies of the Shahnameh (Persian Book of Kings) are also displayed.
Dicuil, a 'cosmographer' who wrote a description of the world c. 825 in the court of Charles the Bald, probably came from Iona, and he describes other Iona monks ranging as far north as the Faroes and as far south as Egypt.
Such an atlas, called an isolario, emerges out of a 'cosmographical' tradition in which Thevet was steeped and which had its practical uses.
This research is about children's cosmologies and its associated 'cosmographies' .
Also included is an interesting 'cosmographical' miscellany that is unpublished but holds a great deal of interest for historians of cartography.
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