English to Marathi Dictionary peripatetic

peripatetic

फिरस्ता
definition
noun
In spite of these cataclysms, being a peripatetic of fortune had not diminished his craving for knowledge and science.
a person who travels from place to place.
This powerful and consistent materialism, somewhat modified from its original form by Epicurus, persisted as the chief competitor to the teleological natural philosophies of the Peripatetics , Stoics and Platonists.
an Aristotelian philosopher.
adjective
the peripatetic nature of military life
traveling from place to place, especially working or based in various places for relatively short periods.
Introductions (attributed to Aristophanes) to some plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, based on the Didascaliae (lists of dramatic productions) of Aristotle and on Peripatetic research, are extant in an abbreviated form.
Aristotelian.
translation of 'peripatetic'
परिव्राजक,
फिरस्ता,
गावोगाव फिरणारा
example
Perhaps the royal colleges should appoint 'peripatetic' experts who would travel around the country.
An employee was employed by the employers, the second defendant, as a 'peripatetic' lagger to install insulation at power stations.
The problem of educating the 'peripatetic' children who lived on the canal boats was formidable.
Europe was a society of restless and rootless people, many repeatedly forced to move to try to escape the ravages of the Plague, others regularly conscripted for far-off wars, some in constant motion like the 'peripatetic' court of Spain.
The 'peripatetic' household continued to gravitate towards the cities and towns of a ruler's domains, an urban environment providing the necessary infrastructures for court life.
The 'peripatetic' court lay at the heart of early Tudor government.
The consultants are a 'peripatetic' lot, following the work, but sooner or later they end up in Washington.
In spite of these cataclysms, being a 'peripatetic' of fortune had not diminished his craving for knowledge and science.
The Buddha and his monks were 'peripatetic' for much of the year, but gathered together in separate monasteries for the four months of the rainy season retreat, during the North Indian monsoon.
I have no respect for teachers, lecturers or 'peripatetic' drifters.
Prior to the building of the Theatre and its successors, professional acting in Britain was a largely 'peripatetic' activity.
This 'peripatetic' body, founded in 1831, with an open membership, has been very important in promoting public awareness of science.
And he has a dog - a large and very unpoodle-ish poodle - a sign that the 'peripatetic' lifestyle of yore has slowed down considerably.
The city was closely identified with Emperor Maximilian I, even though his 'peripatetic' court spent more time in Augsburg, Vienna, and Linz.
Hospitals without adequate capacity in stroke units may offer a 'peripatetic' service to patients who are not admitted to the stroke unit, whereby the unit staff regularly advises on general wards.
Perhaps by offering a 'peripatetic' clinic in a unofficial capacity I am allowing people to use me as a sounding board for their health concerns which I can listen to and direct them back to their own GP if appropriate.
As the child of a British Army officer, Jenny's childhood was 'peripatetic' and the countries in which she grew up included Germany, Singapore and Cyprus.
To these votaries, he is variously the perennial storyteller, the kindly sage, the gentle teacher, the maker of auspicious symbols, and the 'peripatetic' gardener of images.
A 'peripatetic' monarch - the entry of 1660 ended a year-long progress through the southern provinces - would henceforth confine his journeyings largely to the Île-de-France.
A monastic house, with a fixed centre, needed regular supplies of foodstuffs, but other great landlords, who were more 'peripatetic' , would probably be more interested in money.
For the same reason, the 'peripatetic' bookstall would concentrate on school and college campuses.
His intention was to defend the Cartesian doctrine of material substance against the 'Peripatetic' doctrine of substantial forms in his explication of transubstantiation.
By these three virtues we ascend to philosophize in that celestial Athens where Stoics and 'Peripatetics' and Epicureans, by the light of eternal truth, join ranks in a single harmonious will.
This powerful and consistent materialism, somewhat modified from its original form by Epicurus, persisted as the chief competitor to the teleological natural philosophies of the 'Peripatetics' , Stoics and Platonists.
A return to the views of the founder first appears among the later 'Peripatetics' , who did good service as expositors of Aristotle's works.
He held this view against that of the 'Peripatetics' who believed that there must be an internal principle of thought in beasts because of the intricacy and apparent human-like intelligence of their movements.
Introductions (attributed to Aristophanes) to some plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, based on the Didascaliae (lists of dramatic productions) of Aristotle and on 'Peripatetic' research, are extant in an abbreviated form.
Aristotle used to walk while teaching and his habit gave rise to 'peripateticism' (from peripatetic, to walk up and down), a system of philosophy that upheld his doctrines.
For doctrines in these areas, he turns to the Stoics and 'Peripatetics' .
He founded the early 'Peripatetic' school, combining Aristotelian and Neoplatonic elements and attempting to harmonize faith and reason.
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