英:[ˈdeɪvi]
美:[ ˈdeɪvi]
英:[ˈdeɪvi]
美:[ ˈdeɪvi]
De·vi
deI vi
Sanskrit devī, feminine of deva
1 We learn that one of the ways that Devi reacted was by temporarily losing her ability to walk, which Dr. Ryan deems a grief-based psychosomatic weakness.
2 Sure, Devi doesn't open up about her dad for a while, and she takes a hot minute to listen to Dr. Ryan's advice.
3 A majority of women have discarded their second name, and they the go with Devi, which means goddess in Hindi.
4 In contrast, Paxton doesn't even call Devi his girlfriend, and offers no plan to address her then-impending move.
5 That's exactly what Devi thinks — that there's only room for her.
6 As we look toward the fourth and final season of "Never Have I Ever," it's just as imperative that Devi make progress, too.
7 Many of Devi’s experiences are outlandish on the surface, but the emotions she is dealing with are relatable.
8 But the story Deen hears, from yet another relative, is that a small pocket of survivors rode out the storm inside the aforementioned shrine, protected by Manasa Devi.
9 So much of what we see in "Never Have I Ever" is naturally filtered through Devi and her wants and needs.
10 Devi Prasad built his own pottery kiln in the garden of his house in north London Devi Prasad, who has died aged 89, was a studio potter, educationist, political activist, painter, photographer and author.
11 The man who drove the car sat in front, and Mrs. Devi and I in the back.
12 “Devi is an incredibly complex character and written so beautifully,” said Lewison.
13 It's not until the aforementioned sleepover, during which they sneak out and Devi gets her nose pierced, does she begin to feel trust and kinship with Aneesa.
14 Here she questions the mythology of the goddess Devi and societal expectations of femininity.
15 Devi looked up at the ceiling, as if calculating odds in her head.
16 Luckily for Devi, Dr. Ryan helps both women work through their lack of communication, leading to some of the show's most gut-wrenching and hard-hitting scenes.
17 Meditation and ritual meet the tools of the electronic rave in Aisha Devi’s songs.
18 Devi opened a yoga studio on the Sunset Strip and started to teach "a commonsense exercise and relaxation system, utterly practical and wholesome, promising transformative results without the grunting agony of other physical culture regimens."
19 Suvarna Devi goes on living and creating far away in her village, but the secondary creator's fate is sadder: trying to write herself, Prema can only reproduce Devi's literary voice.
20 No one's forgetting Devi's Season 4 shouting match with Margot any time soon.