And that cow gave him every day a hundred palas of milk.
And seeing that one of them had taken flesh from the kitchen, he had five palas of flesh cut from his body.
Now the balance was made of a thousand palas of iron; and depositing it in the care of a certain merchant, he went to another land.
From the stalks of the munj grass and from the roots of the palas [327] tree they make ropes which are sold or bartered to villagers in exchange for grain and milk.
The mourners sprinkle cow's urine and milk over the bones, and picking them up with a palas (Butea frondosa) stick, wash them in milk and deposit them in a new earthen pot until such time as they can be carried to the Ganges.
Mr. Hira Lal suggests the derivation of Muria from mur, the palas tree, which is common in the plains of Bastar, or from mur, a root.
They dye their own thread with lac or the flowers of the palas tree (Butea frondosa).
Sometimes Akbar devoted the early morning to field sports, and sometimes the late evenings to the game of chaugan, or polo, for which purpose balls made of the palas wood were used.
For this purpose he had balls made of palas wood--a wood which is very light and which burns for a long time, and set them on fire.
Kroeber, of the University of California, affirms that the Palas belong to what is now generally called the Uto-Aztecan stock.
The Palas are also successful stock raisers and have many head of cattle grazing on the wild lands of their reservation.
Trained Christian Indians came over from San Luis Rey to assist in the work, and also to guide the Palas in the Christian life and the ceremonies of the Church.
But when the padres came the major part of the ancestors of the present-day Palas came under their influence.
The language of the Palas is simple, easy to pronounce, regular in its grammar, and much richer in the number of its words than is usually believed of Indian idioms.
Kanauj was often at war with the Palas of Bengal, a line of Buddhist kings which began about 730 A.
The Palas and Senas ruled in Bengal, the Tomaras at Delhi, the Chohans in Ajmer and subsequently in Delhi too.
About the middle of the 8th century Magadha was conquered by Gopala, who had made himself master in Bengal, and founded the imperial dynasty known as the Palas of Bengal.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "palas" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.