English to Punjabi Dictionary outpost

outpost

ਚੌਕੀ
definition
noun
After the attack on the outpost , he kept the battalion moving.
a small military camp or position at some distance from the main force, used especially as a guard against surprise attack.
You do not need to be reminded that it is no longer an English organization with headquarters on the banks of the Thames and outposts scattered about the Empire on which the sun was said never to set.
a remote part of a country or empire.
example
Another enemy attack captures an 'outpost' on the approaches to Hill 1220.
There had been nothing in the clearing, so I returned to the military 'outpost' , already knowing what I would find there.
Plus, each base has its own set of resources, and so if you want to keep troops at an 'outpost' or stronghold, you have to continually ferry food to them so they don't starve.
the community is the last 'outpost' of civilization in the far north
Through a volatile century of international relations beginning in the 1870s, the coastal area of this land was a military 'outpost' dedicated to the protection of the bay.
To get this gun to the military 'outpost' , we'll need to drive.
In the north, they razed a military 'outpost' to the ground.
the community is the last 'outpost' of civilization in the far north
The countdown has begun to a celebration of York's past as a vital 'outpost' of a multi-national empire, with the city's second annual Roman Festival.
Police said the guerrillas disarmed paramilitary troops manning the 'outpost' after a brief fire-fight.
After the attack on the 'outpost' , he kept the battalion moving.
An 'outpost' of the Inca empire, thought to have been inhabited by the Chachapoyas, has been discovered in Peru's Amazon jungle.
It has long been known that Eboracum was an important 'outpost' of the Roman empire.
In its heyday, Visegrad was a major 'outpost' for the Roman Empire.
The restaurant is an 'outpost' of Arts and Crafts-style elegance.
Even at that time, there was a bit of unrest in the area, so an army 'outpost' had been set up on the island with 14 soldiers and two of their wives.
Once in the Arctic, the eight-man team will begin a thirty-day 300-mile ski trek to the Pole from Resolute Bay, a remote 'outpost' off mainland Canada.
The Scottish Office, after all, was never intended to do anything other than administer a regional 'outpost' of central government.
The foursome decide to beat it out of London using Frank's taxi, in search of an army 'outpost' broadcasting the lone radio signal.
The blast occurred about 30 minutes ago near a military 'outpost' and appeared to have come either from a car bomb or a tunnel.
The land he first visited in 1809-11 was a rugged 'outpost' of the Ottoman Empire, which had ruled the Greeks since the fifteenth century.
The island becomes an 'outpost' of civilization in the midst of a strange culture.
Not bad for a city that started out as a military 'outpost' of Auckland.
She also acted as a radar picket and re-supplied Army 'outposts' and British Antarctic Scientists on South Georgia, 800 miles from the Falklands.
They were 'outposts' of Europe, transplanted bits of London or Manchester, or more recently of Athens or Rome.
He is a product of the mass movement of subjects within the colonial 'outposts' of the British Empire.
Several British companies joined to form Imperial Airways in 1924 and the network for both mail and passenger transport was gradually extended beyond Europe to 'outposts' of the empire in Africa and Asia.
Duff House, billed as Scotland's premier country house gallery, is one of only two regional 'outposts' of the National Galleries, along with Paxton House in Berwick upon Tweed.
We have always said that our story is like the story of the frontier towns and the hinterland 'outposts' .
Only weeks after Lincoln's inauguration, the Confederacy consummated its break with the union by firing on Fort Sumter in South Carolina, one of the last federal military 'outposts' in the South.
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