English to Punjabi Dictionary cumulative

cumulative

ਸੰਚਤ
definition
adjective
the cumulative effect of two years of drought
increasing or increased in quantity, degree, or force by successive additions.
example
The 'cumulative' rewards can be lucrative, and the experience can change lives.
The game ends when either team's 'cumulative' score reaches 500 points or more.
How long would it be before both offers amounted to the same 'cumulative' total?
People of these races raised themselves under a system of 'cumulative' incentives to responsibility.
The effects are 'cumulative' so the more often you fight the more chance you have of being injured.
I wish they'd just give a little bit more so that you got the sense of a 'cumulative' awareness.
Data points are 'cumulative' and useful when you have a frame of reference to plug them into.
What has not been reported is that the amount is 'cumulative' over a number of years.
Like in real life, the effects are 'cumulative' and so combinations might result in different effects.
In the first seven months of the fiscal year the 'cumulative' figure was £24 billion.
Worst of all may be the 'cumulative' or snowball effects on future generations.
Quarter point increases sound harmless, but it is their 'cumulative' effect that causes the pain.
Although the journey times for most people are going to be short, this is a 'cumulative' damage.
Lead is a 'cumulative' poison: the body mistakes it for calcium and uses it to make bone, so that large amounts build up.
That said, there are problems that I believe stem from a 'cumulative' lack of confidence.
As you can see, it shows the 'cumulative' post totals of the three of us for the year thus far.
The trouble is, even taking cuttings is a theft - and the 'cumulative' damage can be considerable.
The winners were judged on the basis of the corporate goal of 'cumulative' profit after tax.
These effects can usually be avoided by estimating and controlling the 'cumulative' oxygen dose.
Inclusion of later years into the 'cumulative' lifespan measure diluted the effect.
From 2018 through 2041, the trust funds will redeem bonds worth, 'cumulatively' , $11.9 trillion.
In one such dubious case, the firm had to pony up $84 million - more money than the company had 'cumulatively' made in its history.
None of these things in themselves have government-changing significance, but 'cumulatively' it might be different provided that certain preconditions exist.
On the other hand, the tendency within the field that each tradition and even each researcher creates an idiosyncratic ‘artificial economic world’ is criticised; instead the advantages of some degree of 'cumulativeness' in evolutionary economic modelling is emphasised in different ways.
These statements, taken 'cumulatively' , leave no doubt that the founders contemplated judicial nullification of legislation enacted by the states and by Congress.
One of its main defects is the lack of 'cumulativeness' - the feature so natural for ‘normal’ scientific fields of research.
The methods of protesters have been simple, yet 'cumulatively' potent: lobbying, civil disobedience, peace demonstrations, rallies and prayer vigils.
Findings about an important society may be compared to findings from research in other world areas, thereby contributing to the quest for theoretical 'cumulativeness' .
The distinctness and 'cumulativeness' of the knowledge construct are not due to chance.
The matrix shows that the 'cumulativeness' of the scale is not perfect, however.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one