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- (Noun)
- wet, soft earth or earthy matter, as on the ground after rain, at the bottom of a pond or along the banks of a river; mire; mud.
- a thick liquid.
- dirt; filth.
- (fig.) commotion or wild disorder; turbulence.
- (fig.) defamatory remarks; libel or slander.
- (fig.) mean mentality; baseness; pettiness.
- ರಾಡಿಯಾಗು rāḍiyāgu to become muddy; 2. to become confused; obscure; ರಾಡಿಯೆರಚು rāḍiyeracu to make unscrupulous, malicious attacks against one's opponent, as in political campaign; to sling mud against.
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- (Noun)
- a tormenting, troubling repeatedly; harassment; annoyance.
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- either of the two forelimbs of most birds and of bats that are specialised for flight; the wing.
- the part of the human body from shoulder to the wrist; the arm.
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- a particular lock or hold in wrestling.
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- (Noun)
- a small fixed wheel, sometimes turning in a block, with a grooved rim in which a rope or chain runs, as to raise or lower a weight attached at one end by pulling or releasing the rope; a pulley.
- a spinning wheel.
- a wheel, as a part of a machine.
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- (Noun)
- the horizontal structure, slab in the wall, above the main entrance of a building.
- a wooden or iron bar used to keep the door from opening.
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- a tree akin to the neem (Pongamia pinnata) tree.
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- (Noun)
- a looking down on with contempt; lack of due regard or respect; disregard; disrespect; contempt.
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- long-continued or established practice; habitual or customary use or way of acting; custom.
- the fact or condition of being favourably known widely or held in high repute; fame; renown.
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- got up; climbed; ascended.
- come forth; come to be seen or known.
- developed; progressed.
- huge; large; big.
- known widely; famous.
- used, followed daily or very often.