संज्ञा • कपड़े धोने का दिन | |
washing: स्नान धावन मार्जन | |
day: फ़तह अवसर चौबीस | |
washing day मीनिंग इन हिंदी
washing day उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
अधिक: आगे- Linus nearly wigs out ( on blanket washing day, wouldn't you ?)
- The " washing day " is also used in other North Germanic languages, although the planetary names generally are retained.
- HAMPER HELPER _ Between washing days, use a shaker bottle to sprinkle baking soda between layers of clothes in a laundry hamper for nice-smelling dirty clothes.
- A wide variety of alternatives have been recorded including : " Midsummer day ", " washing day ", " Christmas Day " and " Martha's wedding day ".
- Rubarth's song " Washing Day " ( co-written with Adam Levy ) won 1st Place in the 2006 International Songwriting Competition in the Lyrics Only category, judged by Tom Waits, Brian Wilson, and Robert Smith.
- Many's the squeeze she's had of my blue bag on washing day . " Robey scored a further hit with the show the following year, in Birmingham, which Cotes describes as " the most famous of all famous Birmingham Theatre Royal pantomimes ".
- Danish and Norwegian " l�rdag ", Swedish " l�rdag ", as well as Finnish " lauantai " may possibly derive from L��ur Dag, meaning " Saturday ", although more typically the etymology is proposed to originate from " washing day ".
- Even in the location where I stay, I find many stories to paint to show how the people live and what they do . Notable works include " After the Storm ", " Washing Day-Manzini ", " Nhlangano Town Mshengu St " and " Nhlangano-Old Bus Rank ".
- Icelandic is a special case within the Germanic languages, maintaining only the Sun and Moon ( " sunnudagur " and " m�nudagur " respectively ), while dispensing with the names of the explicitly heathen gods in favour of a combination of numbered days and days whose names are linked to pious or domestic routine ( " f�studagur ", " Fasting Day " and " laugardagur ", " Washing Day " ).
- The ancient use of lye for soap-making and as a detergent is the origin of the English word, deriving from Proto-Germanic " * laugo " and ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European root " * leue-", " to wash . " Relatives in other Germanic languages, besides their words for lye, include the Scandinavian languages'words for Saturday ( " laugardagur, l�rdag, l�rdag " ), meaning " washing day ".