Sloucher meaning in Urdu
Sloucher Definitions
1) Sloucher : بے ہنگم شخص : (noun) a person who slouches; someone with a drooping carriage.
Useful Words
Gracefulness : خوش اسلوبی , Hackney : کراۓ کی گاڑی , Coachman : کوچ والا , Coach : بگھی , Brougham : تانگہ , Lop-Eared : جھکے ہوئے کانوں والا , Wilt : مرجھانا , Gawkiness : بے تکا پن , Buggy : پرانے زمانے کی گہوڑا گاڑی , Chariot : گہوڑا گاڑی , Surrey : ایک قسم کی چار پہیوں والی گاڑی , Flaccid : پلپلا , Droshky : روس اور پولینڈ میں استعمال ہونے والے گہوڑا گاڑی , Chaise : ایک قسم کی گاڑی , Gig : تانگہ , Miller : پیسنے والی مشین , Axletree : دھرے کا ڈنڈا , Cab : بگھی , Himalaya Honeysuckle : اودے پھول والی جھاڑی , Hound : شکاری کتا , Landau : ایک قسم کی بگی نما چار پہیوں والی گاڑی , Ptosis : استرخا , Buckboard : گھوڑا گاڑی , Barouche : چار پہیوں والی بگھی , Betula Pendula : سفید چھال دار یورپی درخت , Homo : انسان , Flag : ایک قسم کا گول پہول دار پودہ , Horner's Syndrome : ریڑ کی ہڈی کی بیماری , Canafistola : گرم خطے کا پھلی دار ایک قسم کا درخت , Badger Dog : لمبے جسم اور چھوٹی ٹانگوں والا کتا , Gleditsia Triacanthos : کانٹے دار امریکی پودا
Useful Words Definitions
Gracefulness: beautiful carriage.
Hackney: a carriage for hire.
Coachman: a man who drives a coach (or carriage).
Coach: a carriage pulled by four horses with one driver.
Brougham: light carriage; pulled by a single horse.
Lop-Eared: having bent or drooping ears.
Wilt: causing to become limp or drooping.
Gawkiness: the carriage of someone whose movements and posture are extremely ungainly and inelegant.
Buggy: a small lightweight carriage; drawn by a single horse.
Chariot: a light four-wheel horse-drawn ceremonial carriage.
Surrey: a light four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage; has two or four seats.
Flaccid: drooping without elasticity; wanting in stiffness.
Droshky: an open horse-drawn carriage with four wheels; formerly used in Poland and Russia.
Chaise: a carriage consisting of two wheels and a calash top; drawn by a single horse.
Gig: small two-wheeled horse-drawn carriage; with two seats and no hood.
Miller: machine tool in which metal that is secured to a carriage is fed against rotating cutters that shape it.
Axletree: a dead axle on a carriage or wagon that has terminal spindles on which the wheels revolve.
Cab: small two-wheeled horse-drawn carriage; with two seats and a folding hood.
Himalaya Honeysuckle: shrub honeysuckle with drooping spikes of purplish flowers.
Hound: any of several breeds of dog used for hunting typically having large drooping ears.
Landau: a four-wheel covered carriage with a roof divided into two parts (front and back) that can be let down separately.
Ptosis: drooping of the upper eyelid caused by muscle paralysis and weakness.
Buckboard: an open horse-drawn carriage with four wheels; has a seat attached to a flexible board between the two axles.
Barouche: a horse-drawn carriage having four wheels; has an outside seat for the driver and facing inside seats for two couples and a folding top.
Betula Pendula: European birch with silvery white peeling bark and markedly drooping branches.
Homo: any living or extinct member of the family Hominidae characterized by superior intelligence, articulate speech, and erect carriage.
Flag: plants with sword-shaped leaves and erect stalks bearing bright-colored flowers composed of three petals and three drooping sepals.
Horner's Syndrome: a pattern of symptoms occurring as a result of damage to nerves in the cervical region of the spine (drooping eyelids and constricted pupils and absence of facial sweating).
Canafistola: deciduous or semi-evergreen tree having scented sepia to yellow flowers in drooping racemes and pods whose pulp is used medicinally; tropical Asia and Central and South America and Australia.
Badger Dog: small long-bodied short-legged German breed of dog having a short sleek coat and long drooping ears; suited for following game into burrows.
Gleditsia Triacanthos: tall usually spiny North American tree having small greenish-white flowers in drooping racemes followed by long twisting seed pods; yields very hard durable reddish-brown wood; introduced to temperate Old World.