English to Malayalam Dictionary constituent

constituent

ഘടകങ്ങളുടെ
definition
noun
They said the terms in office of legislators depended solely on the acceptance of their constituents who elected their representatives every five years.
a member of a constituency.
the essential constituents of the human diet
a component part of something.
adjective
the constituent minerals of the rock
being a part of a whole.
the constituent body has a right of veto
being a voting member of a community or organization and having the power to appoint or elect.
example
Thus, the lack of a word-level 'constituent' that matches the phrase in category indicates either (1) the head has been elided; or (2) the head has a more specific label than its general category label.
This is the first degree of its kind and is also unique in that it has been developed and produced in a joint collaboration by the four 'constituent' universities of the National University of Ireland.
He describes discourse as a technique used by the power elite to exert control over other 'constituent' groups.
As long as Labour relied for its finance on its own 'constituent' organisations, notably the unions, corruption was held at bay.
In all institutions the 'constituent' members are, at least notionally, united to achieve a common goal.
On Tuesday, the new German parliament met in 'constituent' session.
In the world we are imagining, then, there is a fourfold duty on the global community and its 'constituent' associations to act to prevent violations of the fundamental interests and four basic rights of human beings.
Exactly two years later, voters will return to the polls to elect an 88-member 'constituent' assembly to decide on a constitution and the future form of government.
I also predict that the package the Democrats propose will not be based on any discernible economic theory, but rather will be an assortment of goodies for various 'constituent' groups.
Your goal is to collect and evaluate ‘strategic data’ across divergent 'constituent' groups that directly shed light on strategic decision making.
If you grant that ‘tangibility’ is a 'constituent' property of physicality, or identical to it, the child seems to be making the same argument
The condition applies to the whole of the car parking accommodation and to its 'constituent' parts.
One of the new government's first steps was to turn the lower house of parliament into a 'constituent' assembly in order to adopt a new constitution strongly orientated in favour of Buddhism, and the Sinhala language.
What about the argument that the health and viability of the League as a whole is more important ultimately than any one of its 'constituent' parts, i.e. the clubs?
Her world resembles that of a child, where the 'constituent' objects are always surprising a not quite ‘developed’ mind.
It provides the glue to bind all of the application's 'constituent' Web services together into a single coordinated application whole.
Perhaps contrary to expectations, I'm quite a fan of red meat: it appears to have been a 'constituent' of the human diet for hundreds of thousands of years, and is therefore something we're likely to be well adapted to.
At the particle level binding energy is measured as the difference of the mass of the whole nucleus and the sum of the 'constituent' parts.
When I watch lawmakers do their calling, it is usually in between committee hearings, 'constituent' meetings and votes.
The presidency of the association is a one-year position elected by the 'constituent' members.
Meanwhile, the House of Representatives continues to be gridlocked with the Senate on the Charter change issue as congressmen continue to push for a resolution for a 'constituent' assembly.
Will 'constituent' pressure make some Senators think twice before voting against it?
The Governing Body, in its wisdom, devolved decision making for the trophy's route to its 'constituent' bodies, the counties.
Her role there was dealing with 'constituent' members.
It remains the case that they key 'constituent' audience can't go and see this film.
Directors need to take a step back once in a while and ask themselves: how well are they representing their 'constituent' members?
They have called on the other political parties to break with the palace and join a popular alliance of parliamentary and revolutionary forces to establish a 'constituent' assembly and a democratic republic.
Finally, we could move to a culture where public opinion is seen as an essential 'constituent' of progress - rather than as an impediment.
Dejection, on the other hand, is an essential 'constituent' of tennis.
A 'constituent' assembly was popularly elected in April 1980, and general elections were held in November 1981.
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