English to Kannada Dictionary barricade

barricade

ತಡೆಗಟ್ಟು
definition
verb
he barricaded the door with a bureau
block or defend with an improvised barrier.
noun
Huge concrete and steel barricades were erected to prevent demonstrators from getting anywhere near the venue, while surrounding streets were completely blocked off.
an improvised barrier erected across a street or other thoroughfare to prevent or delay the movement of opposing forces.
translation of 'barricade'
ತಡೆಗಟ್ಟು,
ಅಡ್ಡಿ,
ಆತಂಕ
noun
ತಡೆ
example
Staff at Darwen's M65 services had to 'barricade' themselves behind closed doors during a ‘nightmare’ evening of trouble.
There was mayhem going on on the road outside as the road repair men did their best to 'barricade' us all in whilst they patched our holes.
‘Dude, we have to 'barricade' the door,’ I said while breathing heavily.
At Walthamstow High School for Girls the headmistress called in the police to 'barricade' the young women in the school with police vans.
On a major thoroughfare, a 'barricade' constructed of burning tyres sent a wall of thick, black smoke along the street.
Word got through the village that the guy had been taken, and the entire village went out into the street and erected a 'barricade' .
Soldiers used Humvees to 'barricade' the building.
They will definitely sign something saying that they will follow the law, and they will not 'barricade' the boy or take him away or anything of this nature.
We fought furiously, and managed to drive them outside, and were about to 'barricade' the door, when the entire building shook, and a loud explosion was heard.
Over time, all the couples move towards the same corner where the women 'barricade' their men.
Security forces intervened when youths threw burning tyres into the streets and tried to erect 'barricades' .
Huge concrete and steel 'barricades' were erected to prevent demonstrators from getting anywhere near the venue, while surrounding streets were completely blocked off.
Management had previously tried to remove its machinery during the night of July 15, but was prevented from doing so by 'barricades' erected by workers.
Startled, Tobias misfired, and the arrow struck one of the stalactites that were 'barricading' him in, rebounding off of it.
Impromptu 'barricades' were erected from urban junk in order to protect the crowd trying to evacuate the area.
As the block-long pens filled up, police 'barricaded' the blocks leading into the avenue, forcing those trying to join the protest to walk further and further north just to reach it.
And last year a 20-year-old remand prisoner was found hanged, while rioting prisoners 'barricaded' themselves into a cell in August.
They 'barricaded' her in with their trolleys so she couldn't escape.
I understand that she was almost 'barricaded' into her home based upon perceived fear by [the patient] that she would be victimised or harassed.
If their demands are not addressed the teachers plan to protest by 'barricading' streets and marching across the country.
The enemy evidently knew of the their arrival time and place, erected some kind of 'barricades' , and were in position to ambush the convoys.
When several protesters managed to scale 'barricades' and force their way into the lobby, police responded with a blanket of pepper-spray and quickly arrested nearly a dozen protesters.
Some time in 1891, police 'barricaded' a quiet street in Handsworth and raided the home of a Mr Cavargna, a soft-spoken insurance agent, aged 55.
There were similar protests across the world, including Berlin, where bonfires were lit on the streets and 'barricades' erected to fend off police.
Despite This Day withdrawing the article and apologising, protestors burned down their offices, 'barricaded' the streets with burning tyres, and began looting and burning homes and businesses.
The bill also grants the army authority to enter buildings without a warrant, cordon off areas, erect 'barricades' and stop vehicles to search them without a warrant.
I went back into the building and 'barricaded' the door with a vending machine.
Most of the 'barricades' erected by militant supporters of Aristide were removed and streets were empty.
The corridor leading to the underground rail system was heavily 'barricaded' and manned by starguards while others stood guard around the room.
Voters in Baghdad will have to reach the polls on foot because 'barricades' set up to prevent attacks on the polls and car-bombs also block peaceful traffic.
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