English to Hindi Dictionary waterfront

waterfront

तट
definition
noun
What's more, the altered flow of water has induced booms to sprout up all along a world of new lake waterfronts and tributaries provided by the enormous expanding upstream pool of liquid.
a part of a town that borders a body of water.
translation of 'waterfront'
noun
बंदरगाह
example
Arisaig proper greets you after a few more turns in the road, with a small 'waterfront' looking out across a muddy harbour.
The Town of Digby wants to develop a 'waterfront' property as a Fishermen's Memorial.
Much of this passed through the 'waterfront' markets and industrial tenements of Dublin into the Irish interior.
a 'waterfront' restaurant
The light was so gentle over the river, and the thronging crowds at the 'waterfront' were so colourful.
The walk took her from the quay, through the town centre and back to the 'waterfront' .
On the way to work this morning I noticed the statue of Sir Thomas More sitting in his nice 'waterfront' gardens in Chelsea.
a hotel on the 'waterfront'
The edge of the ship channel is one of the most attractive sites for housing on the whole 'waterfront' .
His vision includes the development and revitalisation of the neglected 'waterfront' of the River Foyle.
Enjoy a long late lunch here on the deck of the Horizons 'waterfront' restaurant.
The office and the accommodation are a few hundred metres back from the harbour along the 'waterfront' road.
Look at similar cities with a 'waterfront' , a similar business profile and comparable population.
Hop on at Queen's pier and sail out for a few beers or supper at one of the 'waterfront' restaurants.
Liverpool's 'waterfront'
For a truly colonial feel visit the Old Courthouse Restaurant on the 'waterfront' .
Taking my drink and bag of food, I go to eat my meal at the 'waterfront' and drink in the taste of my home town.
We are a harbour city, yet we are cut off from the 'waterfront' by a six-lane road.
Even as waterfront property is today prized above all other, until the 1960s urban 'waterfronts' were primarily industrial, brutal, and cheap.
Those picturesque Eastern European capitals with their glistening 'waterfronts' and their pretty mediaeval old towns and their flat taxes are the new centre.
What's more, the altered flow of water has induced booms to sprout up all along a world of new lake 'waterfronts' and tributaries provided by the enormous expanding upstream pool of liquid.
For some years now, Dublin's quays and 'waterfronts' have been in the process of vigorous urban redevelopment.
They are unique and striking designs that - even if never built - should inspire cities on how to reuse their industrial 'waterfronts' .
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