converse

उलट
definition
verb
he fell in beside her and they began to converse amicably
engage in conversation.
noun
He was neither a wit nor a brilliant raconteur, neither well-read nor well-educated, and he made no great contribution to enlightened social converse .
conversation.
if spirituality is properly political, the converse is also true: politics is properly spiritual
a situation, object, or statement that is the reverse of another, or that corresponds to it but with certain terms transposed.
adjective
the slow process of growth and the converse process of decay
having characteristics that are the reverse of something else already mentioned.
translation of 'converse'
कॉनवर्स,
उलट अर्थी,
उलट विधान,
बरोबर विरुद्ध असलेला,
विरुद्ध,
संभाषण करणे,
उलट
example
In his intense scrutiny of the politics adhering to various forms, Benjamin shows a 'converse' sensitivity to initial conditions.
Evidence exists that weight gain increases cancer risk, but the 'converse' proposition that weight loss would reduce risk of the disease has not been confirmed.
For example, it is possible for a female spectator to be addressed, as it were, ‘in the masculine’, and the 'converse' is presumably also true.
It is healthy for democracy, though the 'converse' is also true; over-concentration of ownership in too few hands is bad for democracy.
he fell in beside her and they began to 'converse' amicably
Most restaurants and farms have 'converse' hours.
With that he disappeared back into the kitchen and he heard the low tones of 'converse' resume.
A complete characterization of this quotient ring and a short proof of the 'converse' can be found in.
Nor do I think using the 'converse' argument is a valid point.
He also notes the 'converse' responsibility of policy makers to provide clear and unambiguous requirements to the intelligence community.
his 'converse' at such seasons was always elevating
The 'converse' is equally true: the Divine draws on the frameworks familiar to each individual in calling him or her toward itself.
They say politics makes strange bedfellows, but the 'converse' may also be true.
He was neither a wit nor a brilliant raconteur, neither well-read nor well-educated, and he made no great contribution to enlightened social 'converse' .
But, then, the 'converse' is also true: the Irish were good to America.
The 'converse' is also true: when we do not understand how our mind works, the practice becomes difficult, if not impossible.
Some theorists have suggested that drug policy should drive the law rather than the 'converse' strategy in place.
The 'converse' case, in which we encounter humanlike brains and retinas but find no verbal behavior, is the situation we encounter in the question of animal consciousness.
But the 'converse' can be true, as well: Sport sometimes puts supposedly life-and-death matters in perspective.
Clearly, there are people who are happier looking at the history of astrology and the philosophy behind it than actually sitting down with clients and doing charts - and people for whom the 'converse' is true.
Apart from the applied fisheries literature, the 'converse' link between adults and the production of cohorts of recruits has received much less attention.
Importantly, however, the 'converse' does not hold true.
The 'converse' is also true, i.e. that every rational number has a decimal fraction that either stops or eventually repeats the same cycle of digits over and over again for ever.
Unfortunately for translators, and for readers of Goethe unfamiliar with German, the 'converse' is also true: the poetry of the German language is of the essence of Goethe.
Obviously, the 'converse' position also applies in that during a downturn in investment markets the impact is felt directly in terms of a reduction in the value of the retirement account.
It was first proved by Lagrange in 1773 who showed that the 'converse' is true.
The 'converse' is true: When a robot is particularly unhumanoid, we seem to find it all the more ‘alive’.
His manager, too, appreciates the benefits of cups spilling over into the league and used a 'converse' example to make his point.
But the 'converse' is also true: a single physiological experience may be symptomatic of a number of different emotions.
On the 'converse' side, I know a girl who is so cripplingly insecure with such a fixed negative self image that she soon brings most other people around her to seeing her as she sees herself.
Credits: Google Translate