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1 cell
n. hücre; petek gözü, göz; pil; oda (manastır vb); toplumdan kaçan kimsenin kapandığı evi* * *hücre* * *[sel]1) (a small room (especially in a prison or monastery).) hücre2) (a very small piece of the substance of which all living things are made; the smallest unit of living matter: The human body is made up of cells.) göze, hücre3) ((the part containing the electrodes in) an electrical battery.) pil4) (one of many small compartments making up a structure: the cells of a honeycomb.) petek gözü•- cellular- cellphone -
2 kernel
n. çekirdek içi, çekirdek, tane, öz* * *1. çekirdek 2. iç* * *['kə:nl]1) (the softer substance inside the shell of a nut, or the stone of a fruit such as a plum, peach etc.) çekirdek içi2) (the central, most important part of a matter.) öz, esas -
3 stuff
n. şey, eşya, madde, hammadde, kumaş, yünlü kumaş [brit.], kereste, kâğıt hamuru, saçma, zırva, saçmalık, hamur, öz, uyuşturucu, kaçak içki————————v. doldurmak, içini doldurmak, tıkamak, sürmek, tıkmak, tıkıştırmak, tıkınmak, tıka basa yemek* * *1. doldur (v.) 2. madde (n.)* * *I noun1) (material or substance: What is that black oily stuff on the beach?; The doctor gave me some good stuff for removing warts; Show them what stuff you're made of! (= how brave, strong etc you are).) madde, cisim2) ((unimportant) matter, things, objects etc: We'll have to get rid of all this stuff when we move house.) önemsiz şey3) (an old word for cloth.) kumaş•- that's the stuff! II verb1) (to pack or fill tightly, often hurriedly or untidily: His drawer was stuffed with papers; She stuffed the fridge with food; The children have been stuffing themselves with ice-cream.) tıka basa doldurmak2) (to fill (eg a turkey, chicken etc) with stuffing before cooking.) doldurmak3) (to fill the skin of (a dead animal or bird) to preserve the appearance it had when alive: They stuffed the golden eagle.) doldurmak•- stuffing- stuff up
См. также в других словарях:
matter of substance — see matter Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
matter of substance — A matter going to the existence of a cause of action or defense as distinguished from a matter of formal pleading or procedure. Meath v Board of Mississippi Levee Comrs. 109 US 268, 277 L Ed 930, 3 S Ct 284. If the right of the party pleading… … Ballentine's law dictionary
matter of substance — That which goes to the merits. The opposite of matter of form … Black's law dictionary
matter of substance — That which goes to the merits. The opposite of matter of form … Black's law dictionary
matter — n 1 Matter, substance, material, stuff are comparable when they mean what goes into the makeup or forms the being of a thing whether physical or not. In the relevant sense matter basically denotes that of which all physical objects are made, but… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
matter — mat·ter n 1: a subject of consideration, disagreement, or litigation: as a: a legal case, dispute, or issue a matter within the court s jurisdiction often used in titles of legal proceedings matter of Doe see also in re b … Law dictionary
matter — [n1] substance amount, being, body, constituents, corporeality, corporeity, element, entity, individual, material, materialness, object, phenomenon, physical world, protoplasm, quantity, stuff, substantiality, sum, thing; concepts 407,433,470 Ant … New thesaurus
matter — mat|ter1 W1S1 [ˈmætə US ər] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(SUBJECT/SITUATION)¦ 2 matters 3¦(MATERIAL)¦ 4 as a matter of fact 5 what s the matter?/something s the matter/nothing s the matter etc 6.) the truth/fact of the matter is (that) 7 for that matter 8 be… … Dictionary of contemporary English
matter — 1 noun SUBJECT/SITUATION 1 (C) a subject or situation that you have to think about or deal with: You do realize this is a serious matter, don t you? | He wasn t particularly interested in financial matters. | a matter of importance/concern/regret … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
matter — I. noun Etymology: Middle English matere, from Anglo French, from Latin materia matter, physical substance, from mater Date: 13th century 1. a. a subject under consideration b. a subject of disagreement or litigation c. plural the events or… … New Collegiate Dictionary
matter — I n. affair 1) to pursue, take up a matter 2) to arrange; clear up, settle, straighten out; complicate; simplify matters 3) to give a matter (attention, thought) (we have given this matter considerable thought) 4) to not mince matters (she never… … Combinatory dictionary