lash

కొరడా
definition
verb
they lashed him repeatedly about the head
strike (someone) with a whip or stick.
the cat was lashing its tail back and forth
(of an animal) move (a part of the body, especially the tail) quickly and violently.
noun
he was sentenced to fifty lashes for his crime
a sharp blow or stroke with a whip or rope, typically given as a form of punishment.
she fluttered her long dark lashes
an eyelash.
translation of 'lash'
కొరడా దెబ్బ,
కొరడా త్రాడు
example
she felt the 'lash' of my tongue
Bring back the 'lash' , and thumbscrews and the oubliette.
Those winds will whip or 'lash' coastal communities and batter barrier islands along the mid-Atlantic.
they were living under the threat of the 'lash'
he brought the 'lash' down upon the prisoner's back
His voice was cool and Andreus raised the 'lash' again threateningly, but was ordered to lower it.
My fingers are still dripping wet, but the handle to the 'lash' is gripped to prevent it from slipping free from my slick, white scales.
Even asking questions in class warranted a 'lash' of the whip.
Owing to the steep slope of Quebec roofs, the men must 'lash' themselves to the chimney pots to move about.
I think the latest from her is to bring back the 'lash' .
she felt the 'lash' of my tongue
I looked up as he came closer, but Andreus coiled up the 'lash' into a plaited leather loop and hit me across the back of the neck with it, forcing my eyes back down.
they were living under the threat of the 'lash'
Outrages like the Thomas case make it a good deal more difficult for enlightened penal reformers like the Professor to get a fair hearing when they advocate bringing back the 'lash' .
A 'lash' , also of flax, was then attached and the whip was finished.
A single 'lash' emerged from the ebony handle, but it had been wickedly inlaid with tiny adamantine barbs.
Zhu Ke, the writer, said the substitution of the 'lash' for crueler corporal punishments revealed a forward movement of civilization.
His convicts were more useful to society as workers than as objects of penal punishment; the 'lash' became an element in labour relations.
Masters served their slaves, accepting taunts and insults that would be punished by the 'lash' or death any other time of year.
Forecasters said it would 'lash' the shores with strong winds, up to 10 inches of rain and waves up to 20 feet.
It is not frail and infirm, it is a fighting machine. Entrenched in filth in the centre of the aisle it will without warning extend its wooden 'lash' and administer a swift but excruciating rap to the back of the legs.
A government official last year called for a return of the 'lash' - the cat-o-nine-tails that takes off a quarter pound of flesh with each stroke.
Katie's mother screamed, pulling the whip back to 'lash' Katie.
Now before you sneer and condemn me to 1,000 strokes of the 'lash' , let me tell you about a little experience I had recently.
Speaking quietly, his huge chocolate-coloured eyes fringed by dark 'lashes' , he looks the picture of peaceful, healthy youth.
Foreigners unfamiliar with local customs often find themselves tied to a post and receiving fifty 'lashes' .
Rosie was the most beautiful girl in the school in her eyes, with her naturally rosy cheeks, bright blue eyes with long, dark 'lashes' , and a mouth that was not only gentle in shape but gentle with words as well.
Hurricane Dean has been upgraded to a category-five storm as it begins 'lashing' the coast of northern Mexico with winds exceeding 150 mph.
From the moment Zurawski 'lashed them into' the lead in the 13 th minute, they were not in the remotest danger of dropping points, a fact that was not lost on the Aberdeen manager, Jimmy Calderwood.
With much heaving and sweating, and a few choice cuss words, he got it wedged up under the axle, and, with the rope from his saddle, he 'lashed' it securely in place.
Credits: Google Translate