English to Telugu Dictionary voluminous

voluminous

భారీ
definition
adjective
As the first notes sounded, that cramped little room metamorphosed into a voluminous space.
occupying or containing much space; large in volume, in particular.
example
Men often dressed in baggy black pants and colorful, wide-brimmed hats, while women wore 'voluminous' black dresses, colorfully embroidered bodices, and lace bonnets.
An invariable theme at prayer meetings and in Gandhi's 'voluminous' writings was the urgency to bring devotion in accord with conduct.
The 'voluminous' records we have for the constitutional debates of the late 1780s contain no significant references to the Iroquois.
In their 'voluminous' public pronouncements they are both, in the clearest sense of the word, advocates.
His 'voluminous' writings became scripture defining the party line and the correct view of history.
Across the street, young girls stared transfixed at the 'voluminous' white dresses in the bridal-shop windows.
A careful examination of the 'voluminous' collection of works on civil society reveals significant differences in Eastern European and Western traditions of conceptualizing civil society.
She put her own book beside her in the chair and pulled her feet underneath her, wrapping the 'voluminous' robe a little tighter.
Inevitably, a selection of subjects from Augustine's 'voluminous' writings reflects the particular interests and views of the author.
Epicurus was a 'voluminous' writer, but almost none of his own work survives.
In adults, the gland is composed of a central coelomosac surrounded ventrally by a labyrinth divided in two (I and II), dorsally by a 'voluminous' bladder.
A servant in 'voluminous' green robes ducked her head in an abbreviated bow and gestured them into the house.
She was stumbling down the side of the road towards him, dressed in something quite 'voluminous' .
This, and the 'voluminous' correspondence that passed between the parties, demonstrated that it has more than adequately filled its statutory duties.
To achieve efficient fermentation and maximum utilization of dietary fiber, the horse has developed a 'voluminous' hindgut that can hold as much as 70 L of undigested feed for a prolonged period of time.
His 'voluminous' writings on biblical criticism show him to have been the first liberal textual critic.
The letter to Gevaerts cited above exemplifies the tenor of his 'voluminous' correspondence, which is filled with references to an encyclopedic body of ancient texts.
In court today, the defense said they received 'voluminous' amounts of information on Friday, too much to be able to go through.
Of course, we did not expect that voters would read through this 'voluminous' compilation from beginning to end.
Verbatim notetakers can get by thinking I'll figure out what this means later, but later, you've got those horrendously 'voluminous' notes to deal with.
There has already been 'voluminous' research into sensory deprivation, and it seems this is another good opportunity for more.
Her sleeves were puffed at her shoulders, then tapered to a shimmering fabric that exactly fit the curve of Violet's arms and the skirt, intricately stitched with vines, fell in 'voluminous' folds from her waist.
One theme treated several times in his 'voluminous' writings was whether laymen and women should be allowed to dance in churchyards on feast days.
You couldn't tell what they were like, for they were draped in 'voluminous' layers of fabric-bright pinks and dark blues.
But in the nineteenth century women were difficult to save: their 'voluminous' clothing was a dead weight in water, and modesty usually prevented their shedding their apparel, even when in danger of drowning.
I'd gone from a writer like Lowell who was 'voluminous' in his personal testimony to a writer about whom nothing at all was known.
Five years older than Voltaire, he died in 1755, leaving a much less 'voluminous' body of writings.
The other kept herself hidden in a 'voluminous' cloak that rippled despite the lack of wind.
Hospital case notes are more 'voluminous' than traditional British general practice paper records, which are normally maintained on small cards, named after the politician who introduced them more than 90 years ago.
Her back is to us as she faces a cardinal with 'voluminous' robes and a malevolent expression.
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