Перевод: с английского на турецкий

с турецкого на английский

object

  • 121 her

    pron. onu, ona, onun, o, kendisi, kendine
    * * *
    onun
    * * *
    [hə:] 1. pronoun
    ((used as the object of a verb or preposition) a female person or animal already spoken about: I'll ask my mother when I see her; He came with her.) onu
    2. adjective
    (belonging to such a person or animal: My mother bought the neighbour's car, so it's her car now; a cat and her kittens.) onun
    - herself

    English-Turkish dictionary > her

  • 122 him

    pron. onu, ona, o, kendi, kendine
    * * *
    ona
    * * *
    [him]
    ((used as the object of a verb or preposition) a male person or animal already spoken about: I saw him yesterday; I gave him a book; I came with him.) onu, ona
    See also:
    - he, his

    English-Turkish dictionary > him

  • 123 horn

    n. boynuz, kap burnu, ırmak, anten, haliç kolu, duyarga, korna, klakson, boru, boynuzdan yapılmış eşya, kalkmış penis, bolluk simgesi
    ————————
    v. boynuzlamak, toslamak, boynuz gibi yapmak
    * * *
    boynuz
    * * *
    [ho:n]
    1) (a hard object which grows (usually in pairs) on the head of a cow, sheep etc: A ram has horns.) boynuz
    2) (the material of which this is made: spoons made of horn; ( also adjective) horn spoons.) boynuz (maddesi)
    3) (something which is made of horn: a shoehorn.) boynuzdan yapılmış (şey)
    4) (something which looks like a horn in shape: a snail's horns.) boynuz şeklinde şey
    5) (the apparatus in a car etc which gives a warning sound: The driver blew his horn.) klâkson, korna
    6) (an instrument, formerly an animal's horn but now made of brass, that is blown to produce a musical sound: a hunting-horn.) borazan
    7) ((also French horn) the type of coiled brass horn that is played in orchestras etc.) Fransız kornosu
    - - horned
    - horny

    English-Turkish dictionary > horn

  • 124 immovable

    adj. oynamaz, yerinden oynamaz, kımıldamaz, taşınmaz, sabit, sarsılmaz, metin, kararlı
    * * *
    kımıldamaz
    * * *
    [i'mu:vəbl]
    1) (impossible to move: an immovable object.) kımıldamaz
    2) (not allowing one's feelings or attitude to be changed.) duygusuz, hissiz

    English-Turkish dictionary > immovable

  • 125 impact

    n. çarpışma, çarpma, vuruş, darbe, etki, şok
    ————————
    v. sıkıştırmak, pekiştirmek
    * * *
    etki
    * * *
    ['impækt]
    1) ((the force of) one object etc hitting against another: The bomb exploded on impact.) çarpma, vuruş
    2) (a strong effect or impression: The film had quite an impact on television viewers.) etki, tesir

    English-Turkish dictionary > impact

  • 126 impale

    v. kazığa oturtmak, kazık sokmak
    * * *
    1. kazığa oturt 2. kazıkla
    * * *
    [im'peil]
    (to fix on, or pierce with, a long pointed object such as a spear etc.) saplamak

    English-Turkish dictionary > impale

  • 127 in / out of perspective

    1) ((of an object in a painting, photograph etc) having, or not having, the correct size, shape, distance etc in relation to the rest of the picture: These houses don't seem to be in perspective in your drawing.) perspektife uygun ol(ma)ma
    2) (with, or without, a correct or sensible understanding of something's true importance: Try to get these problems in(to) perspective; Keep things in perspective.) gereken önemi verme/vermeme

    English-Turkish dictionary > in / out of perspective

  • 128 inanimate

    adj. cansız, ölü, ruhsuz, donuk, sıkıcı
    * * *
    cansız
    * * *
    [in'ænimət]
    (not living: A rock is an inanimate object.) cansız

    English-Turkish dictionary > inanimate

См. также в других словарях:

  • Object — may refer to: Object (philosophy), a thing, being or concept Entity, something that is tangible and within the grasp of the senses As used in object relations theories of psychoanalysis, that to which a subject relates. Object (grammar), a… …   Wikipedia

  • Object — Ob ject ([o^]b j[e^]kt), n. [L. objectus. See {Object}, v. t.] 1. That which is put, or which may be regarded as put, in the way of some of the senses; something visible or tangible and persists for an appreciable time; as, he observed an object… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • object — ob·ject 1 / äb jikt/ n 1: something toward which thought, feeling, or action is directed see also natural object 2: the purpose or goal of something; esp in the civil law of Louisiana: the purpose for which a contract or obligation is formed… …   Law dictionary

  • Object-Z — is an object oriented extension to the Z notation developed at the University of Queensland, Australia. Object Z extends Z by the addition of language constructs resembling the object oriented paradigm, most notably, classes. Other object… …   Wikipedia

  • Object 47 — Studio album by Wire Released July 7th 2008 …   Wikipedia

  • object — object, objective nouns. Both words have the meaning ‘something sought or aimed at’ and in practice they are often interchangeable, although object is more common when followed by a qualifying construction, e.g. one with in or of (and is… …   Modern English usage

  • object — [äb′jikt, äbjekt; ] for v. [ əb jekt′, äbjekt′] n. [ME < ML objectum, something thrown in the way < L objectus, a casting before, that which appears, orig. pp. of objicere < ob (see OB ) + jacere, to throw: see JET1] 1. a thing that can… …   English World dictionary

  • Object — Ob*ject ([o^]b*j[e^]kt ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Objected}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Objecting}.] [L. objectus, p. p. of objicere, obicere, to throw or put before, to oppose; ob (see {Ob }) + jacere to throw: cf. objecter. See {Jet} a shooting forth.] 1.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • object# — object n 1 *thing, article Analogous words: *affair, concern, matter, thing: *form, figure, shape, configuration 2 objective, goal, end, aim, design, purpose, *intention, intent Analogous words: * …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Object V — EP by Leaether Strip Released 1991 …   Wikipedia

  • object — the noun [14] and object the verb [15] have diverged considerably over the centuries, but they come from the same ultimate source: Latin obicere. This was a compound verb formed from the prefix ob ‘towards’ and jacere ‘throw’ (source of English… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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