English to Hindi Dictionary popularly

popularly

लोकप्रिय
definition
adverb
advancing age is popularly associated with a declining capacity for work
by many or most people; generally.
translation of 'popularly'
लोक संचालिक रूप्‍ में,
सार्वजनिक रूप में
adverb
लोक-व्यापी रूप में,
प्रसिद्धि से,
लोकप्रियता से
example
As a ‘laughing gas’, it was widely abused and 'popularly' associated with ‘drunkenness’, in much the same way that aerosol-based nitrous oxide and ether-based glue are today.
a 'popularly' elected Parliament
In comparison to many sports that are widely and 'popularly' accepted in American culture, including football, cheerleading, hockey, boxing and basketball, mixed martial arts is relatively safe.
As Russell further notes, ‘Demons [among other things] were blacks, who were 'popularly' associated with shadow and the privation of light’.
Non-santri Javanese Muslims are 'popularly' termed abangan or Islam kejawen.
The company, although formally named Frink, Walker & Company, was 'popularly' known throughout the Midwest as simply Frink & Walker.
Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus, 'popularly' known simply as Tiberius, was the Roman emperor at the time of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.
While hotels, travel agencies and others are 'popularly' associated with the service sector economy, this arena also includes those services traditionally provided by the government.
As a first step, Tung should push for more directly elected legislature seats, less than half of which are 'popularly' chosen.
advancing age is 'popularly' associated with a declining capacity for work
The presence of this massive army of foreign soldiers cannot be justified in the presence of a 'popularly' elected government.
That time, part of an interval of Earth's history called the Devonian Period by scientists such as geologists and paleontologists, is known 'popularly' as the Age of Fishes.
Being 'popularly' elected, it would be accountable to voters and hence enjoy considerable legitimacy.
Built in 1650, it is attributed to a pir named Abdul Karim, who was more 'popularly' known as Sheikh Chehli among the local inhabitants.
On 12 June 1991 Yeltsin called a general election, in which he became the first 'popularly' elected President of Russia, with an overwhelming majority.
Known 'popularly' by her first name, here was a woman who knew how the excesses of beauty and charisma could buy the trust of millions in order to validate the divide between the rich and poor.
The U.S. Congress passed the trade policy, 'popularly' called the Byrd Amendment - named after U.S. Senator Robert Byrd - in 2000.
This temple is situated at Shastrinagar, a newly developed housing colony of Jammu city, named after a saint 'popularly' known as Dudadhari Baba, as he lived only on milk.
a governor who is 'popularly' elected
The guru-student relationship is 'popularly' characterised in terms of the student surrendering completely to the will of the preceptor.
The new, transitional Iraqi government will not be 'popularly' elected, and will inevitably itself be deeply divided on these issues.
However, it is still 'popularly' called by its old name.
The Benedictines (who, like the Carthusians, are now 'popularly' associated with a high-quality liqueur based on distilled wine) thus owned extensive vineyards.
Grieg's score is more extensive than is 'popularly' believed, and runs in its entirety to no fewer than 32 numbers, amounting to almost 90 minutes of music.
It was not until 1969 that the first transition between two 'popularly' elected democratic governments occurred.
The result is a framework for the governance of the continental economy that curtails domestic powers of 'popularly' elected government.
Arabs were 'popularly' associated with moneylending, land and property ownership and close relations with the Dutch in Indonesia.
‘Global warming’ is the term applied to increasing average global temperature, 'popularly' associated with the enhanced greenhouse effect.
Since then, the word has become 'popularly' associated with anti-colonial military activity.
The British forces in the Balkans are 'popularly' referred to in terms of ‘our boys’, in the spirit of the second world war.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one