English to Hindi Dictionary harbinger

harbinger

अग्र-दूत
definition
noun
witch hazels are the harbingers of spring
a person or thing that announces or signals the approach of another.
translation of 'harbinger'
हरकारा,
अग्रदूत,
अगुआ
noun
अग्र-दूत
example
IBM's warning last week was one of several negative signals from the industry and may be a 'harbinger' of the earnings reports to come.
these works were not yet opera, but they were the most important 'harbinger' of opera
One might take him as a premature 'harbinger' of cultural studies, but for his important flaw of attachment to art.
The Nasdaq correction is a major signal, but not the 'harbinger' of disaster.
Everyone spoke about the heat, not really sure if it was a springtime anomaly or a 'harbinger' of summer.
The huge rally in the bond market last Thursday, in spite of renewed dollar weakness, could be a 'harbinger' of something very important.
In this way, Wislicenus stands as a 'harbinger' of a physical chemical, mechanistic approach to organic structure.
It's just that its call is the 'harbinger' of spring - a signal to start chucking chlorine into the swimming pool.
Those examples of working across different media are the most important to understand, as they are the 'harbinger' of the future.
these works were not yet opera but they were the most important 'harbinger' of opera
It's the first crack of the bat that's the true 'harbinger' of spring.
Monday's rallies would be important only if they are a 'harbinger' of much bigger and more confrontational demonstrations down the road.
Last Sunday I heard the unmistakable sound of the first cuckoo, traditional 'harbinger' of a spring election.
Through sleet and rain, through 25 cm of April snow, through the buzz of locusts, we turn to these weather prognosticators for 'harbingers' of better times.
The crows are great as 'harbingers' of spring but wear out their welcome quickly by shamelessly eating songbird eggs and cawing endlessly about absolutely nothing on the oaks surrounding my yard.
I am told I am on Prospero's Isle, where the scent of the cempak flower is said to ease the pains of the world, where frangipani blooms rain down as 'harbingers' of a storm, where even the poverty is wrapped in shiny banana leaves.
Come now, what else could I possibly say about a weblog which argues that Girls Aloud - ‘the anti-Carrie Bradshaws’ - are the 'harbingers' of a new punk revolution?
Indeed, during the last decade the chief 'harbingers' of leftist ideas have been the cosmopolitan intellectuals rather than the working class for whom they were intended.
The car keeps London gridlocked into a dysfunctional twentieth century, lending support for Ballard's view that it is the suburbs, not the metropolises, which are the 'harbingers' of the future.
In a way then, you could almost call them 'harbingers' of innovation… like wars have been for all of humanity's history…
They all seemed to be omens to me, 'harbingers' of misfortune, only multiplying the dread I was beginning to feel already for Monday.
Najaf governor Ali al-Zurufi has just announced that he sees the 'harbingers' of a settlement of the crisis.
In addition, there have been well-publicised 'harbingers' both of incipient ethnic conflict and of strong mass opposition to a long-term US military presence and a US-chosen Iraqi Government.
Here in Minnesota, we've seen some 'harbingers' of spring too, albeit on a slower schedule - slush in the streets, dirty cars, shrinking snowpiles.
Despite the 'harbingers' of doom the demand for electricity in Ireland continues to increase, Mr McManus told the Cork Chamber of Commerce business breakfast in association with the Irish Examiner.
Rooks are the 'harbingers' of spring and many people would love to have a rookery nearby, as we have at Penpergwm.
Where the anti-terrorists panic about evil individuals sneaking on to flights and doing bad things, the bird-flu worriers see all people moving around the world as the potential 'harbingers' of death and disease.
For a moment our man wondered whether the black clouds were 'harbingers' of some unforeseen ill omen, symbolic as they were of the darkness, representing the unknown.
Insiders say that rumblings behind the scenes at ABC's ‘Nightline’ are 'harbingers' of possible dramatic news about the show's future.
Pioneers of bushwalking and advocates of national parks were the 'harbingers' of an engagement with nature that at last offered respect for and restitution of the environment.
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