-
1 tıkırdı
clatter (n.) -
2 patırtı
"clatter, noise, din, racket; row, to-do, uproar, disturbance, disorder, tumult, clamour, clamor" -
3 takırtı
clatter, clack -
4 tangırtı
clatter, clang -
5 tangırtı
clatter, clang, racket. -
6 çangırtı
clatter, clank, rattle (of metal objects). -
7 laklak
1. clacking, noise made by storks. 2. clatter, chatter, yakking. - etmek to yak, clatter. -
8 patırtı
1. clatter or patter (of feet). 2. noise, clatter. 3. row, tumult, disturbance. - çıkarmak to provoke a row, cause a commotion, raise a ruckus. - etmek to make a great deal of noise. - kopmak for a commotion to break out. -ya pabuç bırakmamak not to be intimidated by empty threats. -ya vermek /ı/ to set (a place) in an uproar. -
9 ses
adj. sound, sonic, phonic, audio, vocal, acoustic--------n. sound, voice, noise, tone, cry, call, shout, clatter, sonance, vocal, vox--------pref. phono, sono--------ses (enstrüman)n. speech* * *1. sound 2. voice 3. volume 4. audio 5. sound (n.) 6. voice (n.) 7. tone (n.) -
10 takırtı
n. clatter, clack, rattle* * *rattle (n.) -
11 tıkırda
1. clattering (v.) 2. clatter (v.) -
12 uğultu
adj. humming--------n. roaring, roar, buzzing, howl, humming, hum, boom, clatter, singing, sough--------uğultu (araba)n. ping* * *1. background noise 2. humming noise 3. gabble (n.) -
13 gürültüyle yapmak
v. clatter -
14 patırtı
n. noise, clamor, clamour [Brit.], row, sound and fury, tumult, ado, bang, charivari, clatter, coil, disorder, dustup, fracas, plump, riot, roughhouse, rumpus, stir, to-do, welter -
15 ses çıkarmak
v. sound, speak, noise, clatter, utter, voice -
16 takırdamak
v. clatter, rattle -
17 takırdamamak
v. (neg. form of takırdamak) clatter, rattle -
18 takırdatmak
v. clatter -
19 takırdatmamak
v. (neg. form of takırdatmak) clatter -
20 tigretti
Made horse run with a clatter
См. также в других словарях:
Clatter — Clat ter, n. 1. A rattling noise, esp. that made by the collision of hard bodies; also, any loud, abrupt sound; a repetition of abrupt sounds. [1913 Webster] The goose let fall a golden egg With cackle and with clatter. Tennyson. [1913 Webster] 2 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
clatter — ► NOUN ▪ a loud rattling sound as of hard objects striking each other. ► VERB 1) make a clatter. 2) fall or move with a clatter. ORIGIN Old English, of imitative origin … English terms dictionary
Clatter — Clat ter, v. t. To make a rattling noise with. [1913 Webster] You clatter still your brazen kettle. Swift. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Clatter — Clat ter, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Clattered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Clattering}.] [AS. cla?rung a rattle, akin to D. klateren to rattle. Cf. {Clack}.] 1. To make a rattling sound by striking hard bodies together; to make a succession of abrupt, rattling… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
clatter — [n] loud noise ballyhoo*, bluster, clack, clangor, hullabaloo*, pandemonium, racket, rattle, rumpus, shattering, smashing; concepts 181,189,595 clatter [v] crash; make racket bang, bluster, bump, clang, clank, clash, hurtle, noise, rattle, roar,… … New thesaurus
clatter — [klat′ər] vi. [ME clateren < OE * clatrian (akin to MDu klateren) < IE base * gal , to CALL, cry out] 1. to make, or move with, a rapid succession of loud, sharp noises; rattle 2. to chatter noisily vt. to cause to clatter n. [ME clater… … English World dictionary
clatter — index noise Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
clatter — late O.E. clatrung, probably from O.E. *clatrian, of imitative origin. Cf. M.Du. klateren, E.Fris. klatern, dial. Ger. klattern. The noun is attested from mid 14c. Clatterer or clatterfart, which wyl disclose anye light secreate. [Richard Huloet … Etymology dictionary
Clatter — Coordinates: 52°32′32″N 3°28′36″W / 52.54215°N 3.47679°W / 52.54215; 3.47679 … Wikipedia
clatter — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ loud, noisy ▪ metallic ▪ sudden VERB + CLATTER ▪ make … Collocations dictionary
clatter — verb 1 (I, T) if heavy hard objects clatter, or if you clatter them, they make a loud unpleasant noise: The tray fell clattering to the ground. 2 (intransitive always + adv/prep) to move quickly and noisily: clatter over/down/along etc: The horse … Longman dictionary of contemporary English