জমাটবদ্ধ, মূর্ত, বাস্তব, স্থূল
কংক্রিত, মিশ্রপিণ্ড
জমাটবদ্ধ করা, জমাটবদ্ধ হত্তয়া, জমিয়া শক্ত হত্তয়া
(1) Capable of being perceived by the senses; not abstract or imaginary.
(2) Formed by the coalescence of particles.
(3) Capable of being perceived by the senses.
(4) Not abstract or imaginary.
(5) Actual.
(6) Factual.
(7) Hardened.
(1) A strong hard building material composed of sand and gravel and cement and water
(1) Cover with cement.
(2) Form into a solid mass; coalesce.
(3) Form into a solid mass.
(4) Coalesce.
(1) The fitments have been vandalised and the flaking concrete of the buildings is smothered in graffiti.
(2) The structure was completed in 1937, using steel and mass concrete with sand quarried in Joe Mangan's field.
(3) Sophocles' dramatic imagination is before all else physical and concrete .
(4) Fresh concrete is then poured over the slabs on site to produce a floor some 10 inches thick.
(5) That is, a species is a concrete particular, not a group noun.
(6) The substance of the building is in-situ concrete , in the form of columns and slabs.
(7) All round the site there were nice looking young men, with muscles, shovelling sand, cleaning moulds, and pouring concrete .
(8) When I say this, what I express is not my wish for a pure poetry, but a concrete , physical attitude.
(9) The only solid building of brick and concrete is Omar's house.
(10) Poetry allows us to examine science in a way that purely scientific discourse cannot by analogizing abstract concepts into concrete forms.
(11) First, the concrete tangibility of a visible Pagan structure is what will enable non-Pagans to relate to us positively.
(12) Consequently, teachers must carefully analyze any visual materials for concrete congruency with their lesson objectives.
(13) In the whole 4700-word article, the only concrete example of the language is presented in this passage.
(14) You will need to buy a bag of sand mix cement to re-cement the floor area around the sump well and the broken concrete .
(15) He compared grammar with geometry because they both abstracted from concrete instances to provide laws and rules for individual cases.
(16) Moreover, the piece only refers to a concrete physical setting twice.
(17) But is also one of the sites where the formation of new claims by informal political actors materializes and assumes concrete form.
(18) What these churches have to offer, in addition to intangibles like eternal salvation, is concrete , material assistance.
(19) Finlay made his reputation in the 1960s as a concrete poet, an art form in which the physical arrangement of words on the page creates meaning in the poem itself.
(20) Brand awareness should be a stepping stone to more concrete action, like opposing sweatshop labour, but it's not an end in itself.
solid
material
real
physical
tangible
palpable
substantial
visible
existing
hypothetical
ideal
platonic
possible
potential
suppositional
Abstract
Ideal
Immaterial
Intangible
Bending
Flexible
Pliable