compass

దిక్సూచి
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'
దిక్కులను చూపే అయస్కాంత పరికరం,
పరిధి లేక హద్దు
example
this region had within its 'compass' many types of agriculture
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.
South is the least trustworthy direction on a 'compass' .
By ‘science’ he means ‘all that can fall within the 'compass' of human understanding’.
the event had political repercussions that are beyond the 'compass' of this book
Can 2,000 years of church history be recorded within the 'compass' of 200 pages?
These are works of dry stone masonry meticulously assembled, some aligned directly with points of the 'compass' .
goods and services which fall within the 'compass' of the free market
It got me puzzling about the points of the 'compass' .
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.
American roads also frustrated the traveller seeking to move diagonally rather than according to the four cardinal points of the 'compass' .
Using a 'compass' to create hundreds of circles in delicate works on paper, Hesse carried Minimalist repetition and seriality to the point of obsession.
Point the binos in any direction and a digital 'compass' takes a bearing.
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.
Letters continued to stream in from all points of the 'compass' - 538 of them in a single day, with the temperature steadily mounting.
The modern concert harp has 46 or 47 strings and a 'compass' of six and a half octaves.
Did such matters fall within the 'compass' of judicial review at all?
Extending the photograph beyond the 'compass' of the glance into a continuum, he presents more information than a single frame could be expected to contain.
Crewe was ideally placed on the rail network, with connections running to all points of the 'compass'
The matter is totally within the 'compass' of the jury's jurisdiction to determine.
All of this, he believed, falls within the 'compass' of science.
the cellos were playing in a rather sombre part of their 'compass'
Complete achievement of these objectives within the 'compass' of one individual lifetime is never possible, of course, but that is not the point.
If we were born with magnetic detectors, the 'compass' would never have been invented, because we wouldn't need one.
Within the 'compass' of these measurements, every outcome is inevitable.
Through binoculars they're visible at all points of the 'compass' ; gawky, fragile, birdlike skeletons of metal hauling skywards monstrous slabs of concrete and steel.
It is wonderfully satisfying to make these pictures by hand, patiently, with pencil and paper, 'compass' and straightedge.
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 event had political repercussions which are beyond the 'compass' of this book
This finding strengthened the idea that pigeons unable to see the sun rely on the earth's magnetic field as a 'compass' .
Credits: Google Translate