Top 10 similar words or synonyms for representing

majority    0.985544

bishop    0.983204

individuals    0.982587

understanding    0.982014

sambalpur    0.981914

parts    0.981874

routes    0.981735

series    0.981322

study    0.980952

possibilities    0.980496

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for representing

Article Example
સુન્દરગઢ Current MLA from Sundargarh Assembly Constituency is Jogesh Singh of [INC], who won the seat in by-elections in 2006 after Sushama Patel who won the seat by election due to death of her husband and seating MLA Sankarsan Naik who won the seat in 2004 General Election. Previous MLAs from this seat were Kishore Chandra Patel who won this seat representing INC in 1995 and in 1977, and also representing INC(I) in 1980, and Bharatendra Shekhar Deo who won this seat representing JD in 1990 and representing JNP in 1985.
એકમ The International System of Units consists of a set of units together with a set of prefixes. The units are divided into two classes—base units and derived units. There are seven base units, each representing, by convention, different kinds of physical quantities.
ઓક્સફોર્ડ યુનિવર્સિટી ૧૧૬૭માં પેરિસ યૂનિવર્સિટીમાંથી વિદેશીઓની હકાલપટ્ટીના કારણે ઘણા અંગ્રેજી વિદ્વાનોને ફ્રાન્સથી પરત ફરવાની અને ઑક્સ્ફર્ડમાં સ્થાયી થવાની ફરજ પડી. ૧૧૮૮માં ઇતિહાસકાર જેરાલ્ડ ઓફ વેલ્સ સ્નાતકોને વ્યાખ્યાન આપતાં, સૌ પ્રથમ વિખ્યાત વિદેશી વિદ્વાન ઍમો ઓફ ફ્રાઇસલેન્ડનું આગમન ૧૧૯૦માં થયાની નોંધ છે. The head of the University was named a chancellor from 1201, and the masters were recognised as a "universitas" or corporation in 1231. The students associated together, on the basis of geographical origins, into two “nations”, representing the North (including the Scots) and the South (including the Irish and the Welsh). In later centuries, geographical origins continued to influence many students' affiliations when membership of a college or hall became customary in Oxford. Members of many religious orders, including Dominicans, Franciscans, Carmelites, and Augustinians, settled in Oxford in the mid-13th century, gained influence, and maintained houses for students. At about the same time, private benefactors established colleges to serve as self-contained scholarly communities. Among the earliest were William of Durham, who in 1249 endowed University College, and John I de Balliol, father of the future King of Scots: Balliol College bears his name. Another founder, Walter de Merton, a chancellor of England and afterwards Bishop of Rochester, devised a series of regulations for college life; Merton College thereby became the model for such establishments at Oxford as well as at the University of Cambridge. Thereafter, an increasing number of students forsook living in halls and religious houses in favour of living at colleges.
ડાયનાસોર The early forms Herrerasaurus (large), Eoraptor (small) and a Plateosaurus skullThe first few lines of primitive dinosaurs diversified through the Carnian and Norian stages of the Triassic, most likely by occupying the niches of groups that became extinct. Traditionally, dinosaurs were thought to have replaced the variety of other Triassic land animals by proving superior through a long period of competition. This now appears unlikely, for several reasons. Dinosaurs do not show a pattern of steadily increasing in diversity and numbers, as would be predicted if they were competitively replacing other groups; instead, they were very rare through the Carnian, making up only 1–2% of individuals present in faunas. In the Norian, however, after the extinction of several other groups, they became significant components of faunas, representing 50–90% of individuals. Also, what had been viewed as a key adaptation of dinosaurs, their erect stance, is now known to have been present in several contemporaneous groups that were not as successful (aetosaurs, ornithosuchids, rauisuchians, and some groups of crocodylomorphs). Finally, the Late Triassic itself was a time of great upheaval in life, with shifts in plant life, marine life, and climate.[11] Crurotarsans, today represented only by crocodilians but in the Late Triassic also encompassing such now-extinct groups as aetosaurs, phytosaurs, ornithosuchians, and rauisuchians, were actually more diverse in the Late Triassic than dinosaurs, indicating that the survival of dinosaurs had more to do with luck than superiority.[35]