English to hausa meaning of

Ma'anar ƙamus na kalmar "rashin jin daɗi" ita ce:(noun) yanayi ko lamari da ke haifar da wahala ko matsala, musamman wani abu mai ban haushi ko ya haifar da cikas (fi'ili) haifar da wahala ko matsala ga wani, musamman ta hanyar zama abin bacin rai ko cikas

Sentence Examples

  1. This difficulty of direct vision had troubled me more or less for the last forty-eight hours but my present enormous elevation brought closer together, as it were, the floating bodies of vapor, and the inconvenience became, of course, more and more palpable in proportion to my ascent.
  2. It was very certain that I could not do without sleep but I might easily bring myself to feel no inconvenience from being awakened at intervals of an hour during the whole period of my repose.
  3. Only the most gifted treated the code as a mild inconvenience and favoured their own intuition above all else.
  4. Then they agreed that the captain and Zoraida should return with his brother to Seville, and send news to his father of his having been delivered and found, so as to enable him to come and be present at the marriage and baptism of Zoraida, for it was impossible for the Judge to put off his journey, as he was informed that in a month from that time the fleet was to sail from Seville for New Spain, and to miss the passage would have been a great inconvenience to him.
  5. The cat and pigeons seemed to suffer no inconvenience whatsoever.
  6. I as yet suffered no bodily inconvenience, breathing with great freedom, and feeling no pain whatever in the head.
  7. I have just left the deck, where I find it impossible to maintain a footing, although the crew seem to experience little inconvenience.
  8. House Staerleigh was pleased that the Toran Stowley business had been resolved with as little fuss and inconvenience to them as possible, and both Burl and the Elders felt Kila had played his part in that particular charade.
  9. Is the oath to be observed in spite of all the inconvenience and discomfort it will be to sleep in your clothes, and not to sleep in a house, and a thousand other mortifications contained in the oath of that old fool the Marquis of Mantua, which your worship is now wanting to revive?
  10. I could only account for all this by extending my theory, and supposing that the highly rarefied atmosphere around might perhaps not be, as I had taken for granted, chemically insufficient for the purposes of life, and that a person born in such a medium might, possibly, be unaware of any inconvenience attending its inhalation, while, upon removal to the denser strata near the earth, he might endure tortures of a similar nature to those I had so lately experienced.