থিতান, ত্বরন্বিতভাবে প্রস্থান করান, প্রচণ্ডবেগে প্রস্থান করান
প্রচণ্ড ত্বরাপূর্ণ, অধ:ক্ষিপ্ত
অধ:ক্ষেপ্ত
(1) Done with very great haste and without due deliberation
(2) Done with very great haste and without due deliberation- Shakespeare- Arthur Geddes
(1) A precipitated solid substance in suspension or after settling or filtering
(1) Bring about abruptly.
(2) Separate as a fine suspension of solid particles.
(3) Fall from clouds.
(4) Fall vertically, sharply, or headlong.
(5) Hurl or throw violently.
(6) Fall vertically.
(7) sharply.
(8) or headlong.
(9) Hurry.
(10) Speed.
(1) In such instances the will and the courage confronted by some great difficulty which it can neither master nor endure, appears in some to recede in precipitate flight, leaving only panic and temporary unreason in its wake.
(2) Real wages increased only slowly, probably not sufficiently to counter the precipitate decline of the handwork trades and the high marginal costs of urban life.
(3) It was decided by those present that the Agency must get a message to him warning him against precipitate action.
(4) The final Confederate collapse was precipitate .
(5) The process involves dissolving the black drugs in water, and adding ammonium hydroxide to precipitate the drugs present in the mixture.
(6) She was astonished that her precipitate escape attempt had met with no difficulties thus far.
(7) There are also some concerns about the use of sodium bicarbonate, because it may worsen hypocalcemia or precipitate calcium phosphate deposition on various tissues.
(8) A precipitate marriage legitimized the birth of their first child.
(9) They discovered that sulfur dioxide in the atmosphere allows clouds to precipitate rain in smaller particles.
(10) But she certainly stirred a mob reaction in populist manner on an issue that needs sensitive and informed leadership and serious democratic debate, careful and caring thought, not instinctive and precipitate action.
(11) If positive, the nutrients bind with the soil and become unavailable - an insoluble precipitate .
(12) The cracking of an old bough, or the hooting of the owl, was enough to fill me with alarm, and try my strength in a precipitate flight.
(13) This was known as the u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510Cloudbusteru251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb device, and it was sold to several US state governments to precipitate rain.
(14) It is then mixed with ammonia to precipitate solid uranium oxide that is of a purer grade.
(15) It said the dossier published by the Government on Monday u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510does not constitute evidence of immediate threat and therefore is not a justification for precipitate military actionu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb.
(16) It may be that the precipitate fall in the last survey - widely regarded in both the radio and advertising industries as a glitch - is no fluke.
(17) Here are corals that have gone with the flow for 200 million years, and now they're facing the precipitate exodus of their business partners, the zooxanthellae.
(18) Perhaps more than a handful of those members have come to understand the potential calamity of a precipitate withdrawal.
(19) The bizarre timing was a clear indication that the security services and the police had decided to take precipitate action.
(20) The modest fall-off which ensued was followed by a more precipitate decline in World War I, the result of a cut in mine production occasioned by labour shortages.
hasty
precipitous
bring about/on
hurl
fall
Check
Slow
Wait