English to hausa meaning of

Ma'anar ƙamus na kalmar "ɗabi'a" tana da alaƙa da ƙa'idodin ɗabi'a mai kyau da mara kyau, da halaye masu kyau da mara kyau. Yana nufin batutuwan ɗabi'a, ɗabi'a, ko lamiri, kuma galibi ana amfani da su don bayyana halayen da suka dace da irin waɗannan ƙa'idodin. Hakanan ana iya amfani da kalmar don bayyana ma'anar ɗabi'a ko ɗabi'a na wani aiki ko yanke shawara.

Sentence Examples

  1. The Gascon, however, was a man of calm self-possession and no sooner did he touch his bright steel blade, than he knew how to adopt morally the cold, keen weapon as his guide of action.
  2. It was true that Beaumont was ruthless in business and his financial backing of William Caskie was morally questionable, but Beaumont was not a political animal.
  3. It is something to be able to paint a particular picture, or to carve a statue, and so to make a few objects beautiful but it is far more glorious to carve and paint the very atmosphere and medium through which we look, which morally we can do.
  4. It was also obvious now to have morally impoverished his family and his country.
  5. They could have seen how morally bankrupt his practices were and moved on to something more personally and karmicly rewarding.
  6. And so much easier is it to believe what we have seen and known, than what we hear of only, that we remember him but with admiration and respect these descriptions of him, when morally insane, seeming to us like portraits, painted in sickness, of a man we have only known in health.
  7. I will not be handled or managed by those too morally superior or idealistically misguided to do the things they want at the time they want for the reasons they hold.
  8. He was a Calabrian by birth, and a worthy man morally, and he treated his slaves with great humanity.