badger

बिजू
definition
verb
journalists badgered him about the deals
ask (someone) repeatedly and annoyingly for something; pester.
noun
They do, however, both belong to the same Mustelidae family which also encompasses badgers , skunks and otters, and that's close enough for us.
a heavily built omnivorous nocturnal mammal of the weasel family, typically having a gray and black coat.
a native of Wisconsin.
translation of 'badger'
टुमणे लावणे,
सतावणे,
छळणे,
जमिनीत बीळ करून राहणारा एक चतुष्पाद प्राणी
example
This is certainly the case with one of my favourite mammals - the 'badger' .
They are carnivores like the stoat, weasel, otter and 'badger' .
The 'badger' , by contrast, is of the weasel family Mustelidae, order Carnivora.
A 'badger' 's coat looks grey, but the individual hairs are black and white.
He's been 'badgering' us for about five minutes now with his wretched droning, and if I'm exposed to much more of it I'm going to bite someone.
Foxes, red squirrels, 'badgers' , hares, otters, Scottish wild cats, seals and bottle-nose dolphins can be seen if you have the dedication to find them.
On the night of the shooting, Jaw had been 'badgering' her about her past relationships and insisted on seeing copies of recent e-mails.
He says he was only cajoled into being a public figure by his wife and son 'badgering' him to avoid the silent comforts of the library.
I thought they were skinny 'badgers' or fat weasels.
You can almost see the foam dripping from their mouths as they behave like lawyers 'badgering' a witness.
There is no mind-jarring pop music to shred your thoughts and, more importantly, no irksome rash of timeshare touts 'badgering' you to buy a dream in the sun.
Not long after Thompson scored, O'Neill started 'badgering' his team from the sideline, a process that never really relented until the end.
Both animals are related species and are members of the Mustelid family, which also includes mink, 'badgers' and weasels.
A little higher off the forest floor, they can tick red squirrels, 'badgers' , otters and foxes off their nature checklist, and if they are lucky, spot herds of red deer bounding over the hillside.
Raccoons, civets, jackals, 'badgers' , skunks, and bears also eat fruit, honey, seeds, roots, and other plant foods.
How many nine-year-olds can be bothered to empathise with the serving staff in the local mall, when their time could be much more profitably filled by 'badgering' their parents for junk food?
Dad's been 'badgering' me to get a webcam for ages - since I arrived in Japan, actually - so we could videoconference with each other.
I was born in this house and as a boy, I remember often seeing foxes, 'badgers' and weasels around the place.
Prairie dogs also provide food for the swift fox, the coyote, weasels, snakes, 'badgers' , hawks and golden eagles as well as crucial habitat for many other native plants and animals.
This is merely 'badgering' the witness and editorialising, so you know, Senator, on both grounds your propositions are out of order.
My guess is, that clerk didn't feel stupid about it at all, until the Times reporter started 'badgering' him.
When a grade six friend wrote an essay about the computer work his brother was doing down the road at the University of Waterloo, Stumpf 'badgered' the friend's brother into taking him along to the university.
He hated his mother for physically and mentally 'badgering' him to fulfil her wishes.
But I have, for a long time, called him Badger, for his propensity of 'badgering' and harassing young women with whom he fancies himself in love.
Is the News of the World suggesting that the BBC should have released his name sooner so that other journalists could start 'badgering' him earlier over the affair?
Over the years, game species, such as moose and bighorn sheep, and other creatures, such as 'badgers' and river otters, were killed in appalling numbers.
But magistrates also heard no licence was applied for by Barratts to protect the 'badgers' under the 1992 Badgers Act.
To those press people and television reporters 'badgering' me, it was easy for them to talk about George in the past tense even as he lay on a hospital bed.
Wrens, ferrets, weasels, 'badgers' , birds of prey, horses' heads and stoats are just a few of the creatures that populate the workshop at the back of his home in Delavale Road, Winchcombe.
Every Friday, the Boy tried to start his homework right when he got back, since the Twin always 'badgered' him to, but it never worked.
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