The patron of a poem to whom it is addressed. 2. The hero of a poem.
பாட்டுடைத்தலைவன்
A patron, a generous, liberal person.
சீவதாதா
Patron
புரவலர், ஆதரவாளர்
B'hoja, a king famous in history, as a patron of learned men, also . 2. A luxurious man, . See .
போசன்
A poem in which the poet expresses the object or wish of his patron, having ascertained it by signs, gestures, &c., . 2. A poet who expresses his thoughts sweetly, . 3. A sweet poem, .
இங்கிதகவி
One of the Pandian kings who was a great patron of Tamil literature, . Also . 2. The name of a Tamil treatise, so called from the term with which it commences, .
சுந்தரபாண்டியன்
An own father, . 2. A patron, benefactor, protector, .
தந்தை
Patron of the helpless, ''particularly'', God.
அநாதரட்சகர்
voorbeelde
Advanced filtering
Voorbeelde moet herlaai word.
The brothers used to go from table to table in the local bars offering patrons copies of The Watchtower and Consolation (now Awake!).
The stigma of AIDS runs so deep in its prejudice that patrons have walked out of restaurants, shouting insults when a family with an AIDS-afflicted child entered.
On the contrary, one is constantly reminded of the architects who designed them, the artists and sculptors who decorated them, the wealthy patrons who paid for them, or the “saints” to whom they are dedicated.
This necessarily meant that the various divinities designated as the “patron deities” of governmental departments and administrative services were given temple sanctuaries in the agora.
இந்த நாள் வரை சான்றிதழ் செல்லுபடியாகும்jw2019 jw2019
On the other hand, full-time mothers who stay at home to look after their children say that they have to endure being patronized and downgraded by a society geared to glorifying paid work.
உங்கள் சான்றிதழ் அனுப்புவதற்கு தயாராக உள்ளதுjw2019 jw2019
And Lebanese gamblers are literally risking their lives to patronize West Beirut gaming houses that draw equal fire from militiamen and religious fundamentalists,” the Times reported.
In traditionally Catholic countries, religious images are one of the most visible signs of “popular devotion to the patron saints and protectors of holy places,” notes the Italian daily newspaper La Repubblica.