English to Punjabi Dictionary turbulent

turbulent

ਖ਼ਤਰਨਾਕ
definition
adjective
the country's turbulent 20-year history
characterized by conflict, disorder, or confusion; not controlled or calm.
example
Sorting is one result of the movement of sediment transported by 'turbulent' air or water.
Just after he returned to Spain, the country entered a new and 'turbulent' phase in its history.
Despite its 'turbulent' history, the Borders has managed to retain a number of fine period homes.
The North Sea is an enchanting voyage across alternately silky and 'turbulent' waters.
Only when they were finished did I discover that the wooden boats were barely buoyant enough to survive the 'turbulent' water.
On no occasion throughout that 'turbulent' history was an eventual withdrawal from the convertibility regime put under serious public discussion.
After the most 'turbulent' year in the history of the Olympic Games, Kevan Gosper has written an account of his life in sport, from being an athlete, through his years as a sports administrator.
The July Monarchy was a 'turbulent' time in French history.
I think that most other nationalities have had a 'turbulent' enough history to know that one can never relax, that nothing is forever, that society is constantly making and re-making itself.
Instabilities appear in the flow as Re increases, and all flows become 'turbulent' at sufficiently large Reynolds numbers.
He kicked and slapped the his way through the 'turbulent' water in a desperate attempt to break through to the surface and breathe.
Its structures, planes and buildings emit an emotional charge, rooted in the city's 'turbulent' history.
He dropped down below the boat and the 'turbulent' water.
The history of Romany gipsies and Irish travellers in Yorkshire is a long and 'turbulent' one - and conflict with locals and the authorities is nothing new.
Jimmy took off and flew all the way through 'turbulent' air to land at Newark at 3: 51 pm.
The paper has had a somewhat 'turbulent' history.
Looking down at the 'turbulent' waters below, she took a deep breath and prayed.
The book is a well-balanced account of both the baseball of the '30s and the larger social history of that 'turbulent' era.
Built by Edward Longshanks and destroyed by the Duke of Cumberland's army as it advanced towards Culloden, Linlithgow Palace stands at the heart of Scotland's 'turbulent' history.
He's observed the 'turbulent' history of the humble stage direction and has decided to take action.
In rougher, more 'turbulent' water, trout are much harder to see.
The 'turbulent' air is cooled, and this causes condensation and consequently an extensive stratus cloud is often formed.
It's intense and 'turbulent' and chaotic and calming and rhythmic all at the same time.
It was as if the 'turbulent' water of new relationship really had passed beneath the bridge, and now we were free to relax.
Suddenly, with a splash to wake the dead, it flipped over and he was tossed into the 'turbulent' waters near mid-stream.
Evidence of the region's 'turbulent' history is everywhere.
Needless to say he's in the 'turbulent' water for an awfully long time.
Ironically, wave power is produced not by water but by the air currents that are trapped and then pushed around by the 'turbulent' waters.
They can be viewed as a 'turbulent' flow of liquid in which the chaotic fluctuations get larger as one examines the fluid with a magnifying glass on a finer and finer scale.
Charlie could see 'turbulent' waters ahead, and prayed for wisdom.
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