English to Telugu Dictionary affinity

affinity

సామ్యాన్ని
definition
noun
he has an affinity for the music of Berlioz
a spontaneous or natural liking or sympathy for someone or something.
translation of 'affinity'
అనుబంధం
example
the bacterial proteins bind to these molecules with high 'affinity'
a building with no 'affinity' to contemporary architectural styles
Croats also began to look to Serbs and other southern Slavs as people with whom they shared a linguistic and cultural 'affinity' .
Yet she is also conscious of her own gypsy blood, of her 'affinity' with these creatures.
He also suggested that Polyzoniida may have a closer 'affinity' to Glomeridesmida than to the other colobognath taxa.
In its scale and some of its details Smith's building has an 'affinity' to Richardson's 1875-1876 Hayden Building in Boston.
They generally feel a kinship and 'affinity' with other types.
he has an 'affinity' for the music of Berlioz
In the context of the 'affinity' of hemoglobin for oxygen there are four primary regulators, each of which has a negative impact.
She had a natural 'affinity' with the country way of life and she relished the various tasks synonymous with the changing seasons.
Dresser's style was never dictated by dogmatic theories, but had a general 'affinity' to the art of the early English Middle Ages and also suggested his admiration for Asian art.
Related to this notion of communal 'affinity' is ‘social closure’.
The provenance signature instead suggests that the Sta Series has a closer 'affinity' to the Northern Gneisses and may in a general sense represent a deformed cover sequence.
All investigated specimens show a remarkable 'affinity' to D. (A.) tyrolensis.
Not surprisingly, we can see an 'affinity' to Warhol's early films in this series of paintings.
There are hints of 'affinity' in the terms used for these partnerships: baere is also romantic partner and kale is a term for spouse.
When the divalent cation dissociates from actin, the 'affinity' of actin for nucleotide is greatly reduced.
a semantic 'affinity' between two words
However, many states only punished relationships between first cousins and closer, and others only punished relationships of consanguinity, but not 'affinity' .
Relational proximity is shaped by cultural 'affinity' and facilitated by spatial and institutional proximity.
Shaped by the fastidious Harnoncourt, the central andante movement opens with a horn theme that whispers an 'affinity' to the Largo from the New World symphony.
The bulk of local people were from the same Pashtun tribal stock as the Afghans of Kandahar and Jalalabad, and they felt close cultural and tribal 'affinity' with those over the border.
This dolphin later turned up in Grace Bay in 1980 and demonstrated a natural 'affinity' with people.
Ten years later, the two women meet at their children's school and find that they have a natural 'affinity' for one another.
the distinction between kinship and 'affinity' is not always clear-cut
He showed a special 'affinity' for the understanding and performance of the music of Rachmaninoff.
This time round, her verse resonates with her strokes on canvas and though this has not been deliberate, there is, as she admits, a natural 'affinity' between the two.
They have a natural 'affinity' with traditional country music which is the kind I do in my show.
Dolphins have a natural 'affinity' with humans and just being with them, playing with them and touching them, is credited with bringing about wondrous results for sick people.
Across the continent there were marked continuities in physical characteristics and cultural features, and many linkages based on relations of kinship, 'affinity' , exchange, and religion.
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