Back Street meaning in Urdu
Back Street Synonyms
Back Street Definitions
1) Back Street, Alley, Alleyway : پتلی گلی : (noun) a narrow street with walls on both sides.
Useful Words
Cross Street : وہ گلی جو دوسری گلی سے گزرے , Terrace : ایک جیسے مکانوں کی قطار , Blind Alley : صرف ایک طرف سے کھلی گلی , Cat Valium : نشہ آور دوا , Blow : کوکین , Adam : ایک نشہ , Avenue : گزر گاہ , Bazaar : بازار , Carrefour : چوراہا , Flower Girl : پھول بیچنے والی جوان لڑکی , Jaywalker : لا پروائی سے سڑک پار کرنے والا , Crossing : عبور پٹی , Pedestrian Crossing : پیدل چلنے والوں کے لیے سڑک عبور کرنے کرنے کی جگہ یا پٹی , High Street : مرکزی سڑک , Flea Market : لنڈا بازار , Boat Basin : بوٹ بیسن , Beggary : گداگری , Broadway : بڑی سڑک , Shopfront : سڑک کی دکان , El : بجلی سے چلنے والی ٹرین , Mugger : لٹیرا , Wall St. : نیویارک شہر میں واقع ایک گلی , Acid : نفسیاتی دوا , Display Window : سامان بیچنے کی کھڑکی , Barricade : ناکہ , Lombard Street : لندن کی ایک سڑک جو مالی مرکز کے طور پر مشہور ہے , Gingko : چینی درخت پنکھے کے جیسے پتوں والا , Ailanthus Altissima : چین میں پایا جانے والا ایک درخت جو تیزی سے بڑھتا ہے , Whitewall : چھوٹے بالوں کا ہیئر کٹ , Bacon : سور کی پشت کا گوشت , Isthmus : خشکی کا وہ حصہ جس کے دونوں طرف پانی ہو اور خشکی کے دو بڑے حصوں کو ملائے
Useful Words Definitions
Cross Street: a street intersecting a main street (usually at right angles) and continuing on both sides of it.
Terrace: a row of houses built in a similar style and having common dividing walls (or the street on which they face).
Blind Alley: a street with only one way in or out.
Cat Valium: street names for ketamine.
Blow: street names for cocaine.
Adam: street names for methylenedioxymethamphetamine.
Avenue: a wide street or thoroughfare.
Bazaar: a street of small shops (especially in Orient).
Carrefour: a junction where one street or road crosses another.
Flower Girl: a woman who sells flowers in the street.
Jaywalker: a reckless pedestrian who crosses a street illegally.
Crossing: a path (often marked) where something (as a street or railroad) can be crossed to get from one side to the other.
Pedestrian Crossing: street crossing where pedestrians have right of way; often marked in some way (especially with diagonal stripes).
High Street: street that serves as a principal thoroughfare for traffic in a town.
Flea Market: an open-air street market for inexpensive or secondhand articles.
Boat Basin: Famous food street located in Clifton Karachi.
Beggary: a solicitation for money or food (especially in the street by an apparently penniless person).
Broadway: a street in Manhattan that passes through Times Square; famous for its theaters.
Shopfront: the front side of a store facing the street; usually contains display windows.
El: a railway that is powered by electricity and that runs on a track that is raised above the street level.
Mugger: a robber who takes property by threatening or performing violence on the person who is robbed (usually on the street).
Wall St.: a street in lower Manhattan where the New York Stock Exchange is located; symbol of American finance.
Acid: a street name for lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), a powerful hallucinogenic drug that alters perception, mood, and thought.
Display Window: a window of a store facing onto the street; used to display merchandise for sale in the store.
Barricade: a barrier set up by police to stop traffic on a street or road in order to catch a fugitive or inspect traffic etc.
Lombard Street: a street in central London containing many of the major London banks.
Gingko: deciduous dioecious Chinese tree having fan-shaped leaves and fleshy yellow seeds; exists almost exclusively in cultivation especially as an ornamental street tree.
Ailanthus Altissima: deciduous rapidly growing tree of China with foliage like sumac and sweetish fetid flowers; widely planted in United States as a street tree because of its resistance to pollution.
Whitewall: A faded or tapered haircut in which the sides and back have maximum scalp exposure.
Bacon: back and sides of a hog salted and dried or smoked; usually sliced thin and fried.
Isthmus: a relatively narrow strip of land (with water on both sides) connecting two larger land areas.