English to Tamil Dictionary compass

compass

திசைகாட்டி
definition
verb
the ship wherein Magellan compassed the world
go around (something) in a circular course.
he compassed his end only by the exercise of violence
contrive to accomplish (something).
noun
Point the binos in any direction and a digital compass takes a bearing.
an instrument containing a magnetized pointer that shows the direction of magnetic north and bearings from it.
Discover that despite the aid of pairs of compasses , scissors and anything else you consider useful, the most you can get in before it breaks is about 1 cm.
an instrument for drawing circles and arcs and measuring distances between points, consisting of two arms linked by a movable joint, one arm ending in a point and the other usually carrying a pencil or pen.
translation of 'compass'
திசை காட்டி,
கவராயம்
noun
சுற்றளவு
example
Roughly, one measures everything with a ruler and 'compass' and sets things up according to strict astrological correspondences.
Did such matters fall within the 'compass' of judicial review at all?
Yet the moral of the book may be expressed within the 'compass' of a single phrase - too much intelligence, and not enough brains.
American roads also frustrated the traveller seeking to move diagonally rather than according to the four cardinal points of the 'compass' .
This is easily determined by holding a 'compass' near the magnet to determine if the strength of the magnet overrides the magnetic force of the poles.
A magnetometer is a device that, like the magnet of a 'compass' , reacts to changes in the earth's magnetic field.
this region had within its 'compass' many types of agriculture
a regular heptagon cannot be constructed accurately with only ruler and 'compass'
The car stopped further back on North Terrace, probably not within the 'compass' of the map, but at best somewhere towards that very far left-hand side of the map.
Then, using an electronic 'compass' and ultrasonic sensors, it cuts the area about 10 times, ensuring a minimum of missed patches.
The modern concert harp has 46 or 47 strings and a 'compass' of six and a half octaves.
We even relocate daybreak and sunset, which, one might surmise, are logical ways to determine the beginning and end of a given day, within the 'compass' of clock-time.
No. 1 presents to us a good specimen of a general servant, one who will do anything within the 'compass' of her capacities.
The question is whether that school falls within the 'compass' of this particular legislation.
Yet there are more than two directions on a 'compass' .
You look around at the highest peaks of the Rockies, and you're at the water epicenter of North America, where the glaciers and rivers flow to all points of the 'compass' .
the cellos were playing in a rather sombre part of their 'compass'
As philosophers or historians we treat the datum as something impersonal to be brought within the 'compass' of our own world of thought.
During the Cold War, nuclear danger grew to threaten all points of the 'compass' .
It is, almost, within the 'compass' of our understanding.
Within the 'compass' of these measurements, every outcome is inevitable.
She was high in her praise of the level of organisation of last year's training sessions and suggests that reaching the decider this year is well within the 'compass' of the minors.
To absorb 5,000 years of a country's rich cultural past within the 'compass' of seven days, was like delving into a honeypot and emerging in a daze.
goods and services which fall within the 'compass' of the free market
We had some sturdy white board behind a cabinet, so I brought that out for him, along with a 'compass' , yardstick, pencil, glue, and Exacto knife.
These are works of dry stone masonry meticulously assembled, some aligned directly with points of the 'compass' .
It got me puzzling about the points of the 'compass' .
This finding strengthened the idea that pigeons unable to see the sun rely on the earth's magnetic field as a 'compass' .
walkers should be equipped with a map and 'compass'
If we were born with magnetic detectors, the 'compass' would never have been invented, because we wouldn't need one.
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