English to Urdu Dictionary immemorial

immemorial

انتہائی قدیم
definition
adjective
an immemorial custom
originating in the distant past; very old.
example
Storytelling and religion are depicted as legitimizing existing power relations by appealing to the sanctity of 'immemorial' traditions.
Carefully placed to capture and reflect light, water softens and cools the interior in the 'immemorial' Hispanic tradition.
Paradoxically, this 'immemorial' and ubiquitous trauma is perpetuating the dream of an eternal and perfectly just, that is, paradisical life.
This isn't to say that the artists who broke with their 'immemorial' tradition did so all at once, or that, having done so, they created nothing beautiful.
But my London love - just like my London hate - is no mere catalogue of pursuits: it's a sense of belonging to a vast agglomeration of almost 'immemorial' human desire, ambition and endeavour.
On the one hand, he conceded that the old rites had the weight of 'immemorial' tradition behind them, and no doubt propitiated malevolent spirits.
Because they will be part of that 'immemorial' conversation of humankind about how we shall live.
Zola's cheese shop was aptly set in the new market halls, built in the 1850s, for it depicted modern commerce and not 'immemorial' rural custom.
Our ancestors from times 'immemorial' used this prehistory track as they travelled with their flocks and it is thought to have been the route taken by the early travellers to Stonehenge.
The more you experience this contrast and this distance, the more you will feel the importance, for us, of an 'immemorial' past and a distant future.
Now add the many sayings of 'immemorial' antiquity, although the early bird getting a worm for his punctuality is hardly inspirational imagery for those among us with more discriminating palates.
Awarded the Military Cross, he took lives to save others, contributing to the ‘long-famous glories, 'immemorial' shames of war’.
In fact we have a long tradition of protecting nature and have protected reserves from times 'immemorial' .
For example, we are already seeing nostalgic laments of the loss of the 'immemorial' rights of Internet users.
The right is ‘to indulge in lawful sports and pastimes’ while avoiding the need to prove an 'immemorial' custom or legal origin which would establish a class A or class B green.
Noah and his family understood this dependency on other living creatures when they devised the ark and its 'immemorial' zoo.
The jigsaw fairy lights appeared ephemeral; the dark, 'immemorial' and timeless.
By the will of God, these days add to your 'immemorial' past, your share of glory and victory.
Their crucial years between adolescence and adulthood are spent in some of the most moving buildings in England, surrounded by beautiful gardens and 'immemorial' traditions.
We yearn, with that 'immemorial' human ache, to find someone to blame - but whom?
It has 'immemorially' in Europe been the business of monarchs and their servants, and history has largely been the narrative of their doings.
There are good psychological and symbolic reasons why some parties want the cattle to be prehistoric and 'immemorially' wild, but the scientific studies do not bear out these claims.
Only by understanding the nature of traditional architecture, honed 'immemorially' by humankind's relationship to nature, can we begin to make sustainable buildings.
At times there is an overpowering sense of Eden to Angkor-the virgin light falling through the trees, the houses on stilts above the green paddies, the water buffalo chomping along 'immemorially' beside Tonle Sap lake.
But Physiocrats argued that freedom would create greater abundance, thereby banishing the fears 'immemorially' associated with famine.
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