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masthead Meaning in Bengali



 মাস্তুলশীর্ষ,

Noun:

মাস্তুলশীর্ষ,





masthead শব্দের বাংলা অর্থ এর উদাহরণ:

পুরুষ সিংহ চিত্রলিপিগুলি ব্যবহৃত হত "রাজপুত্র", "মাস্তুলশীর্ষ", "শক্তি" ও "ক্ষমতা" অর্থে ।

masthead's Usage Examples:

A masthead rig on a sailing vessel consists of a forestay and backstay both attached at the top of the mast.


The mast is farther forward on the boat than on a masthead rig and so it has a larger mainsail.


The headsail can be masthead-rigged or fractional-rigged.


On a masthead-rigged sloop, the forestay (on which the headsail.


The jury mast knot (or masthead knot) is traditionally used for jury rigging a temporary mast on a sailboat or ship after the original one has been lost.


The nameplate (American English) or masthead (British English) of a newspaper or periodical is its designed title as it appears on the front page or cover.


The commissioning pennant (or masthead pennant) is a pennant (also spelled "pendant") flown from the masthead of a warship.


Without a masthead truck, water could easily seep into the circular growth rings of a wooden.


Masthead may refer to: Nameplate (publishing), the banner name on the front page of a newspaper or periodical (UK "masthead") Masthead (American publishing).


The masthead of 1 January 1921 proclaimed itself FREE FROM THE INFLUENCE OF ADVERTISING.


The Age's masthead has received a number of updates since 1854.


The current masthead features a.


Reverse "2 131 × 67 mm Green Mohar (sovereign locket); domodomo (canoe masthead) as registration device; Queen Elizabeth II; Fijian coat of arms Children.


In American usage, a publication's masthead is a printed list, published in a fixed position in each edition, of its owners, departments, officers, contributors.


The Headlight was owned by MediaNews Group, and on its masthead is denoted "An edition of the Las Cruces Sun-News".


was shortened on May 14, 1849 to The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, but the lower masthead retained the political name until June 8.


distinguishable by their black-top masthead (both use the easy-to-carry tabloid paper size), as opposed to the red-top mastheads of down-market tabloids.


The paper uses "The Star" as its masthead, omitting the name "Shelby".


In 1941, Star-Telegram was dropped from the masthead, and in 1967 the name was shortened to simply The Ledger.



Synonyms:

flag; list; listing;

Antonyms:

low status; low; side;

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