relic

అవశిష్టాన్ని
definition
noun
The saddle no longer looked like an interesting historical relic but an instrument of torture.
an object surviving from an earlier time, especially one of historical or sentimental interest.
translation of 'relic'
ప్రాచీన చిహ్నము,
స్మారక గుర్తు
example
But in election year 2004, the film views like a historical 'relic' .
The violence he remembered was no local riot: it was part of a chain of violence that had been set off by the theft of a holy 'relic' from the Hazrat Bal mosque in 1964.
By the 1840s, however, there was growing interest in antiques, and this bowl may well have been given to the church as a historical 'relic' .
It, in a sense, is a 'relic' of an earlier age of procedure.
What is so important about her is that even at the age of 92, she is no 'relic' of the early twentieth century but continues to be a prolific commentator on her world.
In Scotland, however, the old code remained legal and came to be viewed simultaneously as a 'relic' of outmoded ways of life and as a sign of modernity.
the supermodel has become an embarrassing 'relic' from the early 1990s
To them, Sonny was an anachronism, a 'relic' from a primitive time when the locomotive was technology's cutting edge.
The 65,000-square-foot structure was a 'relic' of the 1970s, designed to house the post office's old computer system.
Coombs was a 'relic' of an earlier, gentler time, when the privacy of public officials (even politicians) was normally regarded as sacrosanct.
Indeed, there is a 'relic' in the historical museum of the University of Lund which is said to be a piece of the tree under which the Holy Family rested on their famous journey.
The doctors who were tending to the Pope during his final hours are auctioning off a sample of the Pope's blood as a holy 'relic' .
No longer a ‘basic sauce’, the demi-glace is now considered to be a 'relic' of an archaic form of cookery referred to respectfully as cuisine classique but no longer practised.
The holy 'relic' is believed to protect the 25 sq. km. former Portuguese colony, on the doorstep of China, from natural disasters.
I hope also to show that perennial philosophy is not an historical 'relic' , a cast-off from an alien time, fit only for the cramped exegesis of modern historians of ideas.
The award is something of a quaint 'relic' - freemen have the right to graze sheep on common ground.
The saddle no longer looked like an interesting historical 'relic' but an instrument of torture.
These holy 'relics' were keenly sought after as the people saw their purchase as a way of pleasing God.
Trees grow out of the windows and rotted roofs of stately old brick homes, 'relics' of bygone opulence.
Models of historic buildings and cultural 'relics' enable architects and archaeologists to study their subject in closer detail than might otherwise be possible.
He could invoke saints and employ 'relics' , sprinkle holy water and exorcise the devil.
But you can also see it in the hint of a new cinema born from the 'relics' of its own history.
Even more tragic is the loss of thousands of cultural and historical 'relics' .
Like 'relics' from an earlier age, they appeared gaunt, angular, rugged and unshaven!
The three rooms in the cottage are furnished as they would have been in the pioneering days and many 'relics' of interest have been donated to add to the display.
The reverence shown for 'relics' has roots in the celebration of the Eucharist over the graves of the first Christian martyrs.
With the canonisation of the Confessor in 1161, his regalia gained the status of holy 'relics' , further increasing the veneration with which they were regarded.
We imitated the West in creating museums to house the 'relics' of our past, whereas traditionally we had lived with our past in our daily present.
It's loaded with ceramic artifacts and historical 'relics' .
Luther lived at a time when the bible was only available in Latin, when the Church exploited people by selling holy 'relics' for salvation.
Credits: Google Translate