heaped up Meaning in Bengali
ডাঁই,
Similer Words:
heareshearing aid
hearing disorder
hearing impairment
hearing loss
hearing aid
hearing impaired
hearsay evidence
hearsy
heart and soul
heart attack
heart block
heart disease
heart failure
heart line
heaped up's Usage Examples:
the bodies of their dead leaders, ceremonially burned the houses, and heaped up mounds over the ruins of the houses.
Myth Lugal-e describes the abundance of the Hursag: ”I, a warrior have heaped up be Hursag, and be you its owner!” -At once, by Ninurta’s decree, thus.
In 1963, the spoil tip was heaped up with materials of the pit 5/9, i.
school was the Episynthetic school (Episynthetici), so called because they heaped up in a manner (episyntithêmi), and adopted for their own opinions different.
projections of one do not fit into the interstices of another; they are heaped up loosely in their extraordinary top-heavy form on slanting ground, half.
Iron pyrite was heaped up and allowed to weather (an example of an early form of heap leaching).
Gísla saga Súrssonar (14) when Vésteinn is buried: And when they had heaped up the howe, and were going to lay the body in it, Thorgrim the priest goes.
With 12 millions M3 sand heaped up, a height difference between dock edge and base of the Elbe river of 24.
at the request of Pope Benedict XIII, wrote two articles in which he heaped up accusations against the Jews and repeated old, apparently slanderous charges.
On top of these structures, rubble was heaped up and strengthened - providing a stable and strong base for the fortress.
Further a burial mound at the site of the town he heaped up over them.
at Prawle Point in March 1873, some of her cargo of tea and tobacco, heaped up to 11 feet (3.
The corpses of those they killed were then heaped up and burnt on a funeral pyre to eliminate traces of the deed.
A London chaldron, on the other hand, was defined as "36 bushels heaped up, each bushel to contain a Winchester bushel and 1 imperial quart (1.
The word sorites /sɒˈraɪtiːz/ comes from Ancient Greek: σωρίτης, heaped up, from σωρός heap or pile.
Synonyms:
current;
Antonyms:
noncurrent; styleless;