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come to the fore Meaning in Bengali



Verb:

সম্মুখ আসতে,





come to the fore's Usage Examples:

The terrible defeat gave Gaius Marius the opportunity to come to the fore and make radical reforms to the organisation and the recruitment of.


Hebrides and the two familiar Ransome themes of sailing and ornithology come to the fore.


In the 1960s, African runners began to come to the fore.


then, Bobby Simpson, Bill Lawry, Wally Grout and Garth McKenzie had come to the fore.


Professional athleticism has come to the fore through a combination of developments.


An alternative account that has come to the fore in recent Freudian scholarship emphasizes that the theory, as posited.


 921, but the family did not really come to the fore until the 11th century, when Constantine IX became emperor.


strength of the Romblomanons, as the native inhabitants are called, have come to the fore to solve the vital problems that beset the diocese.


His melancholy, lyricism and gentle irony come to the fore in the naturalist vignettes of Din lumea celor care nu cuvântă (1910).


languages, this secondary connotation, of a disputatious tract, has come to the fore: compare libelle, from the Latin libellus, denoting a "little book".


Scrutinizing the idea of evolution that had come to the fore, he proved not only that no Person can be wholly "the product of 'continuous.


Since the mid-1990s spatial elements often come to the fore in Van Emmerik's work, for instance in De Leesmachine A-D (1994), a.


1968 also saw Looney come to the fore with the county’s minor hurling team, as he won a Munster title but.


Few Serbian-Maltese have come to the fore in Maltese society too.


as a response to and reaction against the neo-Gothic style that had come to the fore in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.


the Moon—the themes of eroticism, fertility, and marriage strongly come to the fore.


suspended Pakistan, it seemed as though the India-Pakistan rivalry would come to the fore once again.


variety of roles when it came to swordplay, but five principal means come to the fore as described in MS I.


Issues of concern that come to the fore are handled by the ministry.


1984 effort at continuation, a new school of social historians had come to the fore in the field of American history, an unorganized group sharing a disaffection.



Synonyms:

put down; attain; flood in; come in; roll up; pull in; reach; move in; set ashore; drive in; get in; arrive; get; shore; set down; land; bring down; plump in; draw in; hit;

Antonyms:

leave; pull out; arrive; embark; inflate;

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