inflict

લાદવું
definition
verb
they inflicted serious injuries on three other men
cause (something unpleasant or painful) to be suffered by someone or something.
translation of 'inflict'
લાદવું
verb
દુઃખ આપવું
example
The defendant was found to have a stainless steel multi-tool with a knife blade on it which he had used to 'inflict' the wounds.
she is wrong to 'inflict' her beliefs on everyone else
she is wrong to 'inflict' her beliefs on everyone else
Its whip-like tail can drive a tail spine into an intruder and 'inflict' a painful wound.
I grabbed the gaffing hook and managed to 'inflict' a minor flesh wound in his calf before we called it quits.
She cut him on his side, 'inflicting' wounds up to seven inches long.
It 'inflicts' a painful sting that is sometimes deadly to humans, as well as to young, unprotected livestock and wildlife.
The more polite 'inflictor' of this mildly embarrassing situation will usually hastily strafe away in a breakneck fashion.
A single large rocket 'inflicts' damage equivalent to that of a large mortar shell.
Foxhunting may be cruel, but it 'inflicts' less pain on ‘sensible beings’ than fishing which, as a popular sport, is never going to be banned.
My colleagues and I are living in a city recovering from the wounds 'inflicted' last week.
The function calculates their distance from the center of the explosion and based on this and the maximum damage 'inflictable' by the weapon, updates the health of the object.
At one level, this is certainly the case: the loss of a top operative inevitably 'inflicts' some damage on the operational capabilities of an organisation.
Both the Greater Weever and the Lesser Weever are capable of 'inflicting' a sharp and painful sting from the spiny rays of the first dorsal fin.
A blow of mild to moderate force with a knife could have 'inflicted' such a wound.
We've tried everything to help him deal with his issues, to get him to talk and to make him realize that the way he 'inflicts' his rage on those around him is totally unacceptable.
The speech itself was not the 'inflicter' of the excruciating pain.
But remember, the hand that 'inflicts' the wound also holds the cure.
But globalisation 'inflicts' insecurities on many whose cultures are put on the defensive and whose civilisations, after ages of little change, are compelled to adapt to outside influences.
In addition to 'inflicting' grave injustices on property owners, takings that transfer property to powerful private interests are not needed to rescue distressed urban areas.
The police say his wounds look as though they were 'inflicted' by a knife.
Falling to the ground, the injured boy grabbed his face and swore at the 'inflicter' of the pain.
However, some of them aren't exactly 'inflictable' .
On any view you 'inflicted' the fatal wounds with a knife and caused the victim's death.
Wounds were 'inflicted' by puncturing the plant material three times with a hypodermic needle.
In the first place, stiffer sentences need to be imposed on any person who stabs or 'inflicts' bodily harm on another person.
And this time, the defeat of a civilisation will have been 'inflicted' by its own side.
On this day in 1940 Leon Trotsky died in Mexico City from wounds 'inflicted' by an assassin.
But when one actively 'inflicts' pain, on oneself or on others, there is excitement and jubilation in the spectacle of the pain.
His strike hit home, knocking a few of the armoured scales loose and 'inflicting' a minor wound.
Credits: Google Translate