English to Telugu Dictionary slum

slum

మురికివాడల
definition
verb
rich tourists slumming among the quaintly dangerous natives
spend time at a lower social level than one's own through curiosity or for charitable purposes.
noun
However, there is still a large segment of the population which lives in urban slums and poor rural areas without electricity or running water.
a squalid and overcrowded urban street or district inhabited by very poor people.
translation of 'slum'
మురికివాడ,
మానవులు నివసించటానికి ఏ మాత్రం అనుకూలం కాని ఇల్లు లేక కట్టడము
example
I think that we will live here for maybe 12 months and then move elsewhere leaving the house as a 'slum' and make a start again a little further down the road.
As you can see, the Red Party has a lot of natural support in inner city 'slum' areas like this.
Begun in April 2003, it is a non-profit organisation with a mission to unleash the potential of the 'slum' , street and orphaned children of urban India.
the area was fast becoming a 'slum' for the destitute
Blunkett's conclusion was that ‘if you live in a 'slum' in a high-rise building and you are on your own with three children, the idea of liberty and freedom means nothing’.
The appalling social situation in Iran has been highlighted by recent reports of protest marches in working class urban areas and 'slum' districts.
There is also a primary school at the premises run by the committee for the poor and 'slum' dwellers in the locality.
he moved from a two-room 'slum' into a local authority house
businessmen are having to 'slum' it in aircraft economy class seats
As part of the activities of the trust we have started free classes for girl students from local government schools from a nearby 'slum' who come from poor families.
Its control of poor 'slum' areas and inner cities resulted from the chaos that was brought about by the occupation; it was not itself the cause of the chaos.
The best home the family of seven can afford is this wood shack in a 'slum' .
businessmen are having to 'slum' it in aircraft economy class seats
But ironically the former 'slum' houses are now sought-after properties following regeneration and the flats have become increasingly unpopular with residents.
'slum' areas
It made my dorm building look like a 'slum' , that was for sure.
She ended up living and working with Hong Kong's most despised and poorest inhabitants in a 'slum' known as the Walled City.
It is like an inner-city 'slum' and the street cleaning leaves a lot to be desired.
'slum' dwellers
Vanessa ran in circles far more elevated than ours and she was always telling us that when she hung out with us she was 'slumming' .
Doing that among the Madison Square Garden crowd where ritzy ladies sported rhinestone and diamanté ‘W’ pins would be like forcing the country club to go 'slumming' on a nice summer's day.
Most poor Hindu women had no inhibitions about working, whether they lived in 'slums' or tenements.
The plague was only finally brought under control in 1666 when the Great Fire of London burned down the areas most affected by plague - the city 'slums' inhabited by the poor.
It seems like Pattaya to Thais is like New Orleans is to Americans, great place to visit and go 'slumming' , but you really don't want to live there.
Obviously the lady was 'slumming' , and more importantly she didn't want anyone to know about it.
As recent experience has shown, what it does do is increase the gap between rich and poor, pulling vast numbers of people away from the land into squalid urban 'slums' .
Livingston will be 'slumming it' again in the first division next season.
Too many buses are 'slums' on wheels - services provided by people who do not use them for people that they do not care about.
You only need to look at the gap sites on Edinburgh's Princes Street or the 'slummy' conditions on Oxford Street in London to realise that.
Do wealthy Americans simply feel it's more acceptable to go 'slumming' out of sight at the website rather than inside the store?
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