English to Telugu Dictionary surrender

surrender

లొంగిపోయేందుకు
definition
verb
over 140 rebels surrendered to the authorities
cease resistance to an enemy or opponent and submit to their authority.
noun
A final series of surrenders followed as hungry Lakota bands capitulated at military posts along the upper Missouri and Yellowstone.
the action of surrendering.
translation of 'surrender'
విరమించు,
లొంగిపావు
example
This isn't a war against an enemy that will 'surrender' and move on.
Now, the merciless enemy commander wants to 'surrender' .
Customers 'surrender' policies early for a number of reasons, including early retirement, unemployment, illness or because they can no longer afford the investment.
The Kings could 'surrender' a Game 1 to Jersey from sheer jitters.
Midfielders were determined to 'surrender' possession in the early stages.
The Japanese refused to unconditionally 'surrender' to allied forces.
The suit demanded that Seaman 'surrender' the rights to 374 photos he took of the Lennon family and pay unspecified damages.
An indigenous society cannot, as it were, 'surrender' its rights by modifying its way of life.
It is an example of a leader and a party that will 'surrender' the right of this country to make decisions according to its own values and its own judgments.
However, he was a soldier true at heart and would never 'surrender' without resisting with all the means at his disposal.
If you're going to 'surrender' your passport, you can't leave the country.
he was surprised that Miriam should 'surrender' to this sort of jealousy
As a consequence of the approach adopted by insurance companies on the early 'surrender' of endowment policies, a market has developed in second-hand endowment policies.
If you do choose to 'surrender' the policy it would be a good idea to use the proceeds to pay off the mortgage, making sure that there would be no penalties incurred.
That view gained ascendancy and credibility when the atomic bomb brought on the final 'surrender' of Japan.
To frighten the people sufficiently that they will gladly 'surrender' their individual rights and those of their neighbors for the promise of security, you have to atomize them.
In 1931, the French Government was forced to 'surrender' its rights of jurisdiction to the local government.
they refused to 'surrender' their weapons
York City could soon face a scrap to save their Football League status if they continue to 'surrender' points in the alarming fashion that has been displayed in the club's last two outings.
The victor would then be able to starve his opponent into 'surrender' , or at least so disrupt his trade that his economy would collapse and he would no longer be able to continue the war.
The policy, while savage, often meant the next towns along the way would 'surrender' rather than resist.
Consumers who are forced to 'surrender' their policy early would lose any cover and the premiums they had paid.
If you 'surrender' your policy after one year, you will lose all the money you have paid the insurance company.
There was no element of 'surrender' in the early capitulations made between the powerful Ottoman Turk sultans and various European rulers.
The more infrastructure destroyed, the more quickly the enemy is willing to 'surrender' , or so the theory goes.
He doesn't want to 'surrender' the advantage he has as a fine hitter.
The Allied policy of unconditional 'surrender' also discouraged many from laying down their arms until there was no other option open.
In our system of government there is no provision for 'surrender' .
It all hinges on whether artists are considered to be employees of the labels, and as such obliged to 'surrender' copyright automatically to their labels.
This is effectively an exit penalty for anyone who wants to 'surrender' a with-profits policy early and shift their money elsewhere.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one