-
1 diyalekt
dialect -
2 diyalekt
dialect. -
3 lehçe
dialect. -
4 diyalekt
n. dialect* * *dialect -
5 lehçe
n. dialect, vernacular, idiom, patois, polish* * *1. dialect 2. lingo -
6 çekürge
Locust in Oγuz dialect; "locust before it can fly" in Turk dialect -
7 tıl
IOne calls " an enemy captive ": tıl tuttım - " I have taken one of the enemy " - to spy out the circumstances from himIILanguage; DialectTongueIVSpeechVDialectVISpySpeech or words -
8 çekürge
Locust in Oγuz dialect; "locust before it can fly" in Turk dialect -
9 tıl
IOne calls " an enemy captive ": tıl tuttım - " I have taken one of the enemy " - to spy out the circumstances from himIILanguage; DialectTongueIVSpeechVDialectVISpySpeech or words -
10 pekin lehçesi
beijing dialect -
11 adhruk
A word meaning "other" in Oγuz dialect -
12 balık
-
13 baynak
Dung(Oγuz dialect) -
14 beyrem
Festival(Oγuz dialect) -
15 çerik
IBattle lineIIOpposite side of anything, in Oγuz dialect; "time" of anything -
16 köm
Exaggerative particle for gray, in Oγuz dialect -
17 puşak er
Annoyed man. Dialect of Oγuz et al -
18 tenğlegün
Kite. Dialect of the rest of the Turks -
19 urk
The lightened form of uruk (rope) - in Oγuz dialect -
20 yıdhığot
Rue dialect of Kāšγar
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
dialect — DIALÉCT, dialecte, s.n. 1. Ramificaţie teritorială a unei limbi, cuprinzând adesea mai multe graiuri. 2. (impr.) Grai. 3. (impr.) Limbă. [pr.: di a ] – Din fr. dialecte, lat. dialectus. Trimis de romac, 03.03.2004. Sursa: DEX 98 DIALÉCT s. ( … Dicționar Român
dialect — n 1 Dialect, vernacular, patois, lingo, jargon, cant, argot, slang denote a form of language or a style of speech which varies from that accepted as the literary standard. Dialect (see also LANGUAGE 1) is applied ordinarily to a form of a… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
dialect — is the language form of a region, and varies from the standard language in matters of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation. Some dialects are also related to social class and ethnic origin. The dialects of the United Kingdom are recorded in… … Modern English usage
dialect — [dī′ə lekt΄] n. [L dialectus < Gr dialektos, discourse, discussion, dialect < dialegesthai, to discourse, talk < dia, between (see DIA ) + legein, to choose, talk (see LOGIC)] 1. the sum total of local characteristics of speech 2. Rare… … English World dictionary
Dialect — Di a*lect, n. [F. dialecte, L. dialectus, fr. Gr. ?, fr. ? to converse, discourse. See {Dialogue}.] 1. Means or mode of expressing thoughts; language; tongue; form of speech. [1913 Webster] This book is writ in such a dialect As may the minds of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dialect — Dialect identifies groups within a language. Some people’s speech displays features differentiating it from that used by members of other groups, although those belonging to either group can communicate with each other without excessive… … Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture
dialect — dialect; in·ter·dialect; trans·dialect; … English syllables
dialect — (n.) 1570s, form of speech of a region or group, from M.Fr. dialecte, from L. dialectus local language, way of speaking, conversation, from Gk. dialektos talk, conversation, speech; also the language of a country, dialect, from dialegesthai… … Etymology dictionary
dialect — index language, phraseology, speech Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
dialect — [n] local speech accent, argot, cant, idiom, jargon, language, lingo, localism, patois, patter, pronunciation, provincialism, regionalism, slang, terminology, tongue, vernacular, vocabulary; concept 276 … New thesaurus
dialect — ► NOUN ▪ a form of a language which is peculiar to a specific region or social group. DERIVATIVES dialectal adjective. ORIGIN originally in the sense «dialectic»: from Greek dialektos discourse, way of speaking … English terms dictionary