Synonym: Chennai, Madras, Tamil Nadu. Similar words: madrid, madrigal, quadrat, quadrant, road rage, quadrate, quadratic, quadrangle. Meaning: ['mædrəs /'mə'dræs ,mə'drɑːs] n. 1. a state in southeastern India on the Bay of Bengal (south of Andhra Pradesh); formerly Madras 2. a city in Tamil Nadu on the Bay of Bengal; formerly Madras 3. a light patterned cotton cloth.
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1 He was a poor student from Madras whose genius took him to Cambridge.
2 His time as Governor of Madras is well documented and is regarded as having been very successful.
3 From the tropics of Madras to the midst of the hill stations at Ootacumund and Kodaikanal.
4 Gandhi exclaimed at a meeting in Madras, on October 26, 1896, during a brief visit to his native land.
5 In Madras recuperating from the effects of dysentery self-induced by dietetic experiments, Gandhi searched for an answer.
6 Madras Packaging currently employs 79 in Argos.
7 He ordered a lamb madras to take away.
8 Madras, which is based in Argos, also has a manufacturing plant in Atlanta.
9 Lots of Talibs madras a have joined the fight but that doesn't mean we stopped learning.
10 If it becomes madras a or a college of inculcation only, that could be hugely problematic.
11 The other girls are carrying purses and wearing seersucker and madras cotton blouses or printed cotton dresses and penny loafers.
12 The railway companies soon turned their attention to the presidency cities of Madras, Bombay,[www.Sentencedict.com] and Calcutta.
13 Its biggest metropolitan agglomerations are Mumbai (formerly Bombay), Delhi, Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) and Chennai (formerly Madras).
14 The success in Assam encouraged the British to plant tea in South India, and commercial production began in 1859 in the Nilgiri Hills in Madras and in the wynaad district in Kerala.
15 The Malay Peninsula, Captain Peter James Begbie of the Madras Artillery, part of the Honourable East India Company.
16 Examples of fabrics produced by dobby weaving are pique, waffle cloth and shirting madras. Pique may utilize heavy yarns, called stuffer yarns, to produce an accentuated pattern.