English to Telugu Dictionary spur

spur

స్పర్
definition
verb
she spurred her horse toward the hedge
urge (a horse) forward by digging one's spurs into its sides.
noun
Jacobs said he used the spurs to control the horse and that any force he used was to control the horse and keep himself out of danger.
a device with a small spike or a spiked wheel that is worn on a rider's heel and used for urging a horse forward.
profit was both the spur and the reward of enterprise
a thing that prompts or encourages someone; an incentive.
translation of 'spur'
ప్రోత్సహించేది,
పందెపు కోడి కాలికి కట్టే కత్తి
example
It provides a lot of very smart and/or politically important people with a 'spur' to help the campaign as much as possible.
‘The new rules are designed to 'spur' people into putting more into their pension pot,’ Holt adds.
Once that happens, their spending could help 'spur' reasonable growth in the economy.
wars act as a 'spur' to practical invention
The gallery formed a 'spur' jutting off the main building and was entered at its eastern end through the door that had not been walled up after Elizabeth's visit.
Built on a wooded 'spur' above the town, the chapel is visible from almost six miles (ten kilometers) away.
The company hopes new discounts and promotions will 'spur' demand in the second and third quarters.
However, the reward of seeing the mighty Everest from Kala Pattar - a 5,545 metre adjacent peak - was incentive enough to 'spur' us on.
governments cut interest rates to 'spur' demand
Her experience on the show acted as a 'spur' to her ambition and she flew to California with £750 in her pocket.
To some extent, this has undoubtedly acted as a 'spur' to research, but I believe that it distorts more than it reveals, and that all ultimately lose by the process.
The government says the tax cuts are needed to 'spur' a stagnant economy.
Robert Koch was getting a great deal of attention throughout Europe for his discoveries and the French versus German rivalry that occurred provided a great 'spur' to medical advances.
it's an easy walk up the 'spur' that leads to the summit
profit was both the 'spur' and the reward of enterprise
Anger can be channeled as a 'spur' to action rather than being destructive. But Mars at its best is purposeful, an achiever and self-starter, and a force to be reckoned with.
The effects of the steroid was to quadruple testosterone levels in the body which helped 'spur' dramatic muscle growth, essential for swimming.
During visits to flowers in which the corolla 'spur' was removed, males directed their glossa to the tips of the connective appendages, making it clear that their search was for nectar.
'spur' back the lateral shoots
It took them a week to reach the eastern 'spur' of the Waiongona Gorge, near the present Mountain House, the last camp before the summit attempt.
They have been cited as a 'spur' to a recovery in business confidence, though the evidence of this is not clear-cut and, in the case of Japan, flatly contradictory.
‘I hope this report is not put back on a shelf but acts as a 'spur' to provide treatment facilities and resources to tackle the issue,’ he said.
Everyone knows that competition can be both healthy (acting as a 'spur' to progress) or negative, which is hurtful as well as wasteful.
We hope the Yorkshire Bank-sponsored grants of up to £1,000 per school will 'spur' people on to continue what we have started - because there is no room for complacency.
A rise in gas prices will 'spur' development of alternative energy sources.
However, planners were reluctant to commit to having a rail 'spur' open by late 2010.
The terrain between the 'spur' of the mountain range and the sea is flat and thickly forested.
Perhaps genius - even the illusion of genius - is a 'spur' that throws us forward.
governments cut interest rates to 'spur' demand
Inequality is natural, inevitable and may even be a good thing - a 'spur' to ambition, competition and achievement.
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