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full-year

  • 1 full

    adj. dolu, tam, tok, etine dolgun, balıketi, bol, geniş, meşgul, öz, elinden gelenin en iyisi, son
    ————————
    n. doluluk, dolu şey, son had
    ————————
    v. yıkayıp çektirmek, yıkayıp büzmek
    * * *
    1. doğrudan (adv.) 2. dolu (adj.) 3. tam dolu
    * * *
    [ful] 1. adjective
    1) (holding or containing as much as possible: My basket is full.) dolu
    2) (complete: a full year; a full account of what happened.) tam, bütün
    3) ((of clothes) containing a large amount of material: a full skirt.) bol, geniş
    2. adverb
    1) (completely: Fill the petrol tank full.) tamamen, ağzına kadar
    2) (exactly; directly: She hit him full in the face.) tam, doğruca
    - full-length
    - full moon
    - full-scale
    - full stop
    - full-time
    - fully-fledged
    - full of
    - in full
    - to the full

    English-Turkish dictionary > full

  • 2 busy

    adj. meşgul, yoğun, faal, işlek
    * * *
    meşgul
    * * *
    ['bizi] 1. adjective
    1) (having a lot (of work etc) to do: I am very busy.) meşgul, işi var
    2) (full of traffic, people, activity etc: The roads are busy; a busy time of year.) kalabalık, işlek
    3) ((especially American) (of a telephone line) engaged: All the lines to New York are busy.) meşgul
    2. verb
    ((sometimes with with) to occupy (oneself) with: She busied herself preparing the meal.) oyalamak, meşgul etmek

    English-Turkish dictionary > busy

См. также в других словарях:

  • full-year — ˈfull year adjective [only before a noun] ACCOUNTING full year earnings, profits, results etc are for a complete period of 12 months, rather than a shorter period of time: • Despite the fourth quarter deficit, the airline had a full year profit… …   Financial and business terms

  • full-year — adj. Full year is used with these nouns: ↑profit …   Collocations dictionary

  • full-year loss — ➔ loss * * * full year loss UK US noun [C] ► ACCOUNTING the loss made by a company at the end of a whole financial year: »The bank posted its first ever full year loss last week after exposure to the global property market crash …   Financial and business terms

  • full year — As an element of a legal settlement of a pauper, the full space of one year continuously and without interruption. Eaton Town v Shrewsbury, 49 NJL 188, 6 A 319 …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • full year — complete calendar year …   English contemporary dictionary

  • One Full Year — Studio album by The Secret Handshake Released September 25 2007 …   Wikipedia

  • full — full, complete, plenary, replete are not interchangeable with each other, but the last three are interchangeable with the most comprehensive term, full, in at least one of its senses. Full implies the presence or inclusion of everything that is… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • year — /year/, n. 1. a period of 365 or 366 days, in the Gregorian calendar, divided into 12 calendar months, now reckoned as beginning Jan. 1 and ending Dec. 31 (calendar year or civil year). Cf. common year, leap year. 2. a period of approximately the …   Universalium

  • Year-round school — Year round schools are educational institutions based on a schedule that has school throughout most of the calendar year, as opposed to having no school in summer. A motivation is that higher student throughput is accomplished via more effective… …   Wikipedia

  • Year and a day — can refer to: * the Year and a day rule, a period tied into various legal principles in a number of jurisdictions * A Year and a Day (1998 novel), by Virginia Henley * A Year and a Day (2004 novel), by Leslie Pietrzyk Morrow * A poem by Elizabeth …   Wikipedia

  • year — /jɪə / (say year) noun 1. a period of 365 or 366 days, divided into 12 calendar months, based on the Gregorian calendar and now reckoned as beginning 1 January and ending 31 December (calendar year). 2. a period of approximately the same length… …  

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