berlin

listen to the pronunciation of berlin
İngilizce - Türkçe
{i} Berlin
(isim) Berlin
i bir çeşit fayton
bir limuzin türüberlin
oturulacak kapalı yeri olan at arabas
Berlin black
siyah cila
berlin doughnut
berlin lokması
berlin wall
berlin duvarı

Berlin duvarı Doğudaki Almanların Batıya kaçmasını engellemek için inşa edilmiştir. - The Berlin wall was built to prevent East Germans from fleeing to the West.

Berlin Duvarı yıkıldığında Tom on iki yaşındaydı. - Tom was twelve when the Berlin Wall fell.

berlin disease
(Tıp) berlin sendromu
berlin european council
(Politika, Siyaset) berlin zirvesi
berlin summit
berlin zirvesi
berlin treaty
(Politika, Siyaset) berlin anlaşması
berlin wall
1961 yılında batı berlin ile doğu berlin’i birbirinden ayırmak için inşa edilen ve 1989 yılında doğu bloku’nun çekilmesine kadar soğuk savaşın açık sembolü olan duvar
berlin wool
duvar halıcılığında kullanılan yün
İngilizce - İngilizce
One of the component states of Germany according to the current administrative division of the nation
The capital city of Germany
{n} a kind of coach contrived at Berlin
{i} capital city of Germany; family name; Irving Berlin (1888-1989), U.S. composer and songwriter best known for his work "Alexander's Ragtime Band
Russian-born American songwriter who wrote more than 1,500 songs, including "Alexander's Ragtime Band" (1911), and several musical comedies, such as Top Hat (1935) and Annie Get Your Gun (1946). Russian-born British political philosopher and historian best known for his distinction between positive and negative liberty and for his view that values are plural and conflicting. the capital city of Germany. Berlin was divided into East Berlin and West Berlin after World War II. It became a united city again when the Berlin Wall was destroyed in 1989. City and state (pop., 2002 est: city, 3,388,000; metro. area, 4,101,000), capital of Germany. Founded in the early 13th century, it was a member of the Hanseatic League in the 14th century. It became the residence of the Hohenzollerns and the capital of Brandenburg. It was successively the capital of Prussia (from 1701), the German Empire (1871-1918), the Weimar Republic (1919-32), and the Third Reich (1933-45). In World War II much of the city was destroyed by Allied bombing. In 1945 it was divided into four occupation zones: U.S., British, French, and Soviet. The three Western powers integrated their sectors into one economic entity in 1948; the Soviets responded with the Berlin blockade. When independent governments were established in eastern and western Germany in 1949, East Berlin was made the capital of East Germany, and West Berlin, though surrounded by East Germany, became part of West Germany. Continuing immigration from East to West Berlin through the 1950s prompted the 1961 erection of the Berlin Wall. The area immediately became the most vivid focal point of the Cold War. The dramatic dismantling of the wall in 1989 marked the international upheaval that accompanied the end of the Soviet Union. Berlin became reunified as Germany's official capital in 1991; the transfer of government from Bonn was completed in 1999. It is the site of the University of Berlin, Charlottenburg Palace, Brandenburg Gate, and Berlin Zoo and is home to the Berlin Opera and Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. Berlin blockade and airlift Berlin Painter Berlin Wall Berlin West Africa Conference Berlin Congress of Berlin Irving Berlin Sir Isaiah Berlin University of Humboldt University of Berlin
capital of Germany located in eastern Germany
United States songwriter (born in Russia) who wrote more than 1500 songs and several musical comedies (1888-1989)
Fine worsted for fancy-work; zephyr worsted; called also Berlin wool
{i} type of large closed horse-drawn carriage; type of limousine
a limousine with a glass partition between the front and back seats
a limousine with a glass partition between the front and back seats capital of Germany located in eastern Germany United States songwriter (born in Russia) who wrote more than 1500 songs and several musical comedies (1888-1989)
A four-wheeled carriage, having a sheltered seat behind the body and separate from it, invented in the 17th century, at Berlin
Berlin Wall
A wall constructed by the Soviet Union to keep East Berliners from escaping to West Berlin
Berlin Wall
Any barrier designed to keep people from crossing a border, e.g. the one proposed by some conservatives in the US to keep Mexicans out of their country
Berlin green
A colour of oil paint thought to resemble the colour of the chemical
Berlin green
Ferric ferricyanide; a complex cyanide with a structure similar to that of Prussian blue, used as a green dye
Berlin greens
plural form of Berlin green
Berlin Painter
flourished 500-460 BC, Athens, Greece Greek vase painter, the outstanding vase painter of the late Archaic period. He is best known as the decorator of an amphora now in Berlin. Whereas it had been customary to frame the groups of figures on each side of the vase with pattern bands, the Berlin Painter eliminated the frame, allowing the figures to dominate and stand out sharply against the black background. Nearly 300 vases are attributed to him
Berlin Wall
a wall that divided East and West Berlin, which was built in 1961 and destroyed in 1989. The communist government of East Germany built the wall in order to prevent people from escaping to West Berlin. Barrier surrounding West Berlin that closed off East Germans access to West Berlin from 1961 to 1989 and served as a symbol of the Cold War's division of East and West Germany. The barrier was built in response to the flight of about 2.5 million East Germans to West Germany in the years 1949-61. First erected on the night of Aug. 12-13, 1961, it developed into a system of concrete walls topped with barbed wire and guarded with watchtowers, gun emplacements, and mines. It was opened in the 1989 democratization that swept through eastern Europe and has been largely torn down
Berlin West Africa Conference
(1884-85) Series of negotiations at Berlin in which the major European nations met to determine the future of Central Africa. The participants declared the Congo River basin region to be neutral, guaranteed freedom of trade and shipping for all colonial powers, forbade slave trading, and rejected Portugal's claims to the region
Berlin blockade and airlift
(1948-49) International crises that arose from an attempt by the Soviet Union to force the Allied powers (U.S., Britain, and France) to abandon their postwar jurisdictions in West Berlin. The Soviets, regarding the economic consolidation of the three Allied occupation zones in Germany in 1948 as a threat to the East German economy, blockaded all transportation routes between Berlin and West Germany. The U.S. and Britain responded by supplying the city with food and other supplies by military air transport and airlifting out West Berlin exports. An Allied embargo on exports from the Eastern bloc forced the Soviets to lift the blockade after 11 months
Berlin festival
film festival held in Berlin (Germany)
Berlin wall
wall erected between 1961-1989 by the Communist regime in East Germany in an effort to prevent migration from East to West Germany (dismantled in 1989-1990)
Berlin wool
A light wool yarn used in making clothing, especially gloves
berlin airlift
airlift in 1948 that supplied food and fuel to citizens of west Berlin when the Russians closed off land access to Berlin
berlin doughnut
a raised doughnut filled with jelly or jam
East Berlin
the Soviet sector of Berlin between 1949 and 1990
Congress of Berlin
(June 13-July 13, 1878) Diplomatic meeting of the major European powers at which the Treaty of Berlin replaced the Treaty of San Stefano. Dominated by Otto von Bismarck, the congress solved an international crisis by revising the peace settlement to satisfy the interests of Britain and Austria-Hungary. By humiliating Russia and failing to acknowledge adequately the aspirations of the Balkan peoples, it laid the foundation for future Balkan crises
Irving Berlin
{i} (1888-1989) U.S. composer and songwriter best known for his work "Alexander's Ragtime Band
Irving Berlin
a US songwriter who wrote many popular songs and successful musicals (=plays or films that use singing and dancing to tell a story) . His songs include Alexander's Ragtime Band and White Christmas (1888-1989). orig. Israel Baline born May 11, 1888, Mogilyov, Russia died Sept. 22, 1989, New York, N.Y., U.S. U.S. songwriter. The son of a Russian Jewish cantor, he and his family immigrated to New York City in 1893. He worked as a street singer and singing waiter, then began writing songs. His first published song, "Marie from Sunny Italy," appeared in 1907; a printer's error named him Irving Berlin. In 1911 he wrote the great hit of Tin Pan Alley's ragtime vogue, "Alexander's Ragtime Band." He may have written more than 1,500 songs. Some of his songs include "Cheek to Cheek" and "God Bless America." He scored many successful films; his score for Holiday Inn (1942) introduced "White Christmas," one of the best-selling songs of all time. Altogether Berlin wrote the scores for 19 Broadway shows (including Annie Get Your Gun, 1946) and 18 films
Sir Isaiah Berlin
born June 9, 1909, Riga, Latvia died Nov. 5, 1997, Oxford, Eng. Latvian-born British political philosopher and historian of ideas. His family immigrated to Britain in 1920. Educated at the University of Oxford, Berlin taught there from 1950 to 1967, serving as president of Wolfson College from 1966 to 1975 and thereafter teaching at All Souls College. His writings on political philosophy are chiefly concerned with the problem of free will in increasingly totalitarian and mechanistic societies. His most important works include Karl Marx (1939), The Hedgehog and the Fox (1953), Historical Inevitability (1955), The Age of Enlightenment (1956), and Four Essays on Liberty (1969)
University of Berlin
or Humboldt University of Berlin Public university in Berlin, Germany. It was founded (as Friedrich Wilhelm University) in 1809-10 by Wilhelm, baron von Humboldt. By the mid 1800s it had attained world renown for its modern curriculum and its scientific research institutes. Among its faculty were G.W.F. Hegel, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Arthur Schopenhauer, Leopold von Ranke, Hermann von Helmholtz, Friedrich Schleiermacher, and Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm. In the 1930s it was Nazified, and many of its faculty fled abroad. Under the German Democratic Republic after World War II, it was renamed Humboldt University and given a Marxist-Leninist orientation. It was reorganized after East and West Germany reunified in 1990
west berlin
the part of Berlin under United States and British and French control until 1989
berlin

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    Etimoloji

    () From the German Berlin.

    Videolar

    ... 28C3 in Berlin called "The Coming War on General Purpose Computation." In a nutshell, the hypothesis ...