Battle Fatigue Battle Dress Battle Damage Battle Cry Battle Born State Battle Batting Average Batting Battle Of Therm... Battle Royal Battlefield Battleful Battleground Battlemented Battler Battleship Battlewagon Battue Batty Bauble

Battle Of Thermopylae meaning in Urdu

Battle Of Thermopylae Synonym

Battle Of Thermopylae Definitions

1) Battle Of Thermopylae, Thermopylae : ایک جنگ : (noun) a famous battle in 480 BC; a Greek army under Leonidas was annihilated by the Persians who were trying to conquer Greece.

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Useful Words


Battle : لڑائی کرنا , Agincourt : فرانس کی لڑائی , Fall : جنگ میں مرنا , Recapture : دوبارہ حاصل کرنا , Battlefield : لڑائی کا میدان , Armageddon : تباہ کن جنگ , Embattle : جنگ کے لئے تیار ہونا صف بندی کرنا , Gallant : بہادر , Warpath : راہ جنگ , Bastion : قلعہ , Battle Damage : جنگی نقصان , Agonist : مقابلہ کرنے والا , Charger : جنگی گہوڑا , Encounter : کھیل میں مقابلہ کرنا , War Dance : جنگی ناچ , Deployment : تعیناتی , Deploy : تعینات کرنا , Remount : پھر تازہ گہوڑے پر سوار ہونا , Cyrus : قدیم ایران کا بادشاہ , Armin : جرمن ہیرو , Armageddon : معرکہ خیر و شر , Actium : قدیم بحری جنگ , Arnhem : ہولینڈ کا شہر , A. E. Burnside : امریکی جنرل , Pitched Battle : دو بدو جنگ کرنا , Acc : امریکی فضائی کمان , Aegospotami : ترکی کا دریا , Afield : میدان جنگ میں , Helen : قدیم یونانی شہزادی , Herodotus : یونانی مورخ , Aegean : بحر ایجیئن

Useful Words Definitions


Battle: battle or contend against in or as if in a battle.

Agincourt: a battle in northern France in which English longbowmen under Henry V decisively defeated a much larger French army in 1415.

Fall: die, as in battle or in a hunt.

Recapture: take back by force, as after a battle.

Battlefield: a region where a battle is being (or has been) fought.

Armageddon: any catastrophically destructive battle.

Embattle: prepare for battle or conflict.

Gallant: unflinching in battle or action.

Warpath: a course leading to warfare or battle.

Bastion: a stronghold into which people could go for shelter during a battle.

Battle Damage: loss of military equipment in battle.

Agonist: someone involved in a contest or battle (as in an agon).

Charger: formerly a strong swift horse ridden into battle.

Encounter: contend against an opponent in a sport, game, or battle.

War Dance: a ceremonial dance performed before a battle or after a victory.

Deployment: the distribution of forces in preparation for battle or work.

Deploy: place troops or weapons in battle formation.

Remount: a fresh horse especially (formerly) to replace one killed or injured in battle.

Cyrus: Persian prince who was defeated in battle by his brother Artaxerxes II (424-401 BC).

Armin: German hero; leader at the battle of Teutoburger Wald in AD 9 (circa 18 BC - AD 19).

Armageddon: (New Testament) the scene of the final battle between the kings of the Earth at the end of the world.

Actium: the naval battle in which Antony and Cleopatra were defeated by Octavian`s fleet under Agrippa in 31 BC.

Arnhem: a city in the central Netherlands on the lower Rhine River; site of a battle in 1944 during World War II.

A. E. Burnside: United States general in the American Civil War who was defeated by Robert E. Lee at the Battle of Fredericksburg (1824-1881).

Pitched Battle: a fierce battle fought in close combat between troops in predetermined positions at a chosen time and place.

Acc: a command that is the primary provider of air combat weapon systems to the United States Air Force; operates fighter, bomber, reconnaissance, battle-management, and rescue aircraft.

Aegospotami: a river in ancient Thrace (now Turkey); in the mouth of this river the Spartan fleet under Lysander destroyed the Athenian fleet in the final battle of the Peloponnesian War (404 BC).

Afield: in or into a field (especially a field of battle).

Helen: (Greek mythology) the beautiful daughter of Zeus and Leda who was abducted by Paris; the Greek army sailed to Troy to get her back which resulted in the Trojan War.

Herodotus: the ancient Greek known as the father of history; his accounts of the wars between the Greeks and Persians are the first known examples of historical writing (485-425 BC).

Aegean: an arm of the Mediterranean between Greece and Turkey; a main trade route for the ancient civilizations of Crete and Greece and Rome and Persia.

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