English to Punjabi Dictionary embodiment

embodiment

ਸਰੂਪ
definition
noun
she seemed to be a living embodiment of vitality
a tangible or visible form of an idea, quality, or feeling.
example
it was in Germany alone that his hope seemed capable of 'embodiment'
That's why in so many different cultures spirit 'embodiment' is so prevalent.
It is the beginnings of an organisational and political 'embodiment' of a mood previously visible only in opinion polls.
This concept of 'embodiment' doesn't apply just to times of exertion, of course.
Central to much recent work on 'embodiment' is the metaphor of the body as a text or surface upon which our cultural and personal identity is written.
As with intimacy, it may be best framed in terms of performativity and performance, 'embodiment' and duration.
He thus constructs an aesthetic that questions the terms of cinematic 'embodiment' .
Other starting points would have given Gowing very different types of 'embodiment' .
He proposes ways of going beyond this toward a conception of dynamic 'embodiment' .
it was in Germany alone that his hope seemed capable of 'embodiment'
I prefer the magic of ghosts I think, they at least hold out the promise of the escape from 'embodiment' and hitting the singularity.
she seemed to be a living 'embodiment' of vitality
This answer is a testament to Helen's sense of distance from human 'embodiment' .
The importance of 'embodiment' might have significant implications for rights as well.
Categorization of the life-world is a manifest function of this active 'embodiment' .
Biological survival was thus synonymous with the triumph of divine 'embodiment' .
she seemed to be a living 'embodiment' of vitality
Sampson contends that social constructionism has failed to take seriously the notion of 'embodiment' .
I will attempt to stay as close as possible to the way that we as embodied beings experience 'embodiment' .
Fuentes has the ability to turn ideas almost into characters and characters into the 'embodiments' of historical process.
The characters who populate Blake's prophetic books are not people so much as 'embodiments' of the principles that shape the universe he believed he was reshaping with his art.
In the icebergs and the blue heart of the glacier, Muldrow glimpses cold inhuman 'embodiments' of the natural world that promise another reality.
The large engineering and construction projects of the 1950s, such as the Damodar Valley dams, were celebrated by a number of observers as 'embodiments' of the vibrant spirit of the new nation.
These animals are 'embodiments' of what the world and its people should be like.
The more peaceful 'embodiments' of the World Hindu Council's ideas are in the practicalities of the preparations for the building of a new Hindu temple on the site of the destroyed Muslim mosque.
If the characters intermittently come across as 'embodiments' of ideas and author mouthpieces, the performances go far towards humanizing them.
Her idea was that elephants were machines of destruction and 'embodiments' of terror.
In other words, it bears witness to the laudable belief that it is evil to speak of nations or persons as though they were 'embodiments' of evil.
The firm position of Church of England, one of the oldest 'embodiments' of Christianity, shows that the country still stands tall on the framework of religion.
Reverting to conventional photography, the artist insists we look at these people as 'embodiments' of the limitations of science and technology.
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