obliger
du lat. obligare, de ob, et ligare, lier.
+
the source of noblesse oblige [no-'bles o-'bleezh] "honorable behavior that is the duty of those with rank or wealth." The French verb is the descendant of Latin obligare, comprising ob- "to" + ligare "to tie, bind." The Latin root is related to ligate "tie or sew up surgically," "ligature," the cord or wire used in surgical stitching, and "ligament," the tough tissue that binds the joints of the skeleton together. "Religion" comes from Latin "religio(n)" from the verb religare "to bind firmly."vâ bastan (pbp.)
vâ dâštan
bar ân dâštan
vâ-dâr kardan/sâxtan
nâ-câr kardan
+
eng. be obliged (to so.) : eng. be indebted or grateful => fra. redevable
SYNONYME :
OBLIGER, CONTRAINDRE, FORCER. L'obligation lie, engage. La contrainte serre et ne permet pas qu'on s'échappe. La force nous surmonte et triomphe de nous. De plus dans contraindre et forcer, il y a une idée de nécessité physique qui n'est pas dans obliger.
obliger
vt (qn à qch) məcbur etmək
obliger#
◊ danh từ ◊ người có trách nhiệm trước pháp luật ◊ người bị giao ước trói buộc
obliger
obliger
Eng: obliger
Urdu: پابندی کرنے والا ۔ معاہدہ کرنے والا ۔
اقرار کرنے والا . مجبور کرنے والا . پاس کرنے والا