bowdlerised Meaning in Bengali
Similer Words:
bowdlerisingbowed
bowel
bowels
bower
bowers
bowie
bowing
bowl
bowlder
bowled
bowler
bowlers
bowlines
bowling
bowdlerised's Usage Examples:
been of scarce use outside of the judiciary themselves (who prefer the bowdlerised pronunciation /pwiːni/) since the middle of the 20th century).
In the 1980s racism and sexism were dropped or bowdlerised (e.
Throughout the eighteenth century it was performed in a bowdlerised version by Isaac Bickerstaffe.
des Enfans (1782-3) which was first translated into English, albeit bowdlerised, by Mary Stockdale and published in London The Looking-glass for the.
Literature', a series edited by Arthur Quiller-Couch: The Canterbury Pilgrims bowdlerised some of the bawdier elements of the Canterbury Tales.
cartoon episodes that ran in the United States, namely Toon Disney, were bowdlerised.
English versions, heavily bowdlerised, were presented in New York in 1877 and London in 1879.
be derived from the World War II-era military slang FUBAR, which was bowdlerised to foobar.
collected from traditional singers in England and the USA, and in a bowdlerised version was taught to English schoolchildren in music lessons in the.
" When quoted, "shag" is often bowdlerised as "steal".
The remaining six stories were written in early 1890 and published in bowdlerised form in a special Christmas number of The Graphic in December 1890.
Rob Donn's poetry sometimes contained bawdy images, which would be bowdlerised by later collectors; especially as Protestant clergymen were often major.
[citation needed] The bowdlerised version Love Lane is sometimes seen.
production company created a 50-minute children's animated film from a bowdlerised version of the story.
about the "colonial experience" man "smelling like a whore" is often bowdlerised to "smelling like a sewer" or completely rewritten.
Its original name was bowdlerised to "cut splice".
was memorable and was recorded by Max Bygraves, albeit with heavily bowdlerised lyrics.
Synonyms:
reduce; bowdlerize; expurgate; contract; abridge; castrate; abbreviate; foreshorten; shorten; cut;
Antonyms:
increase; deflate; lengthen; inflate; expand;