polo

listen to the pronunciation of polo
Englisch - Türkisch
water polo yüzerken oynanan bir çeşit top oyunu
polo
Kalınca tıp tişört
Atlara binilerek değneklerle oynanan bir çeşit top oyunu, polo
çevgen
kalın tişort
bu oyunda kullanılan bodur cins at
(isim) polo
çöven
polo neck
boğazlı
polo neck
(Tekstil) balıkçı yaka
polo neck
boğazlı yaka
polo closure
(Tekstil) polo kapama
polo neck
polo yaka
polo shirt
polo yaka (tişört)
polo stick
çevgen
water polo
su topu
water polo
Su topu: Topu karşı takımın kalesine sokmak temeline dayanan, yedi yüzücüden oluşan iki takım arasında havuzda yapılan spor türü
water polo
sutopu

Tom sutopu takımına katıldı. - Tom joined the water polo team.

Türkisch - Türkisch
At üstünde oynanan oyun
Çevgen
marco polo
ıtalo Calvino'nun Görünmez Kentler adlı kitabının da başkahramanı
Englisch - Englisch
A ball game where two teams of players on horseback use long-handled mallets to propel the ball along the ground and into their opponent's goal
A polo shirt
{i} last name; Marco Polo (1254-1324), Italian merchant and explorer from Venice, one of the first European explorers to travel across Asia; city in Illinois (USA); city in Missouri (USA); type of Spanish gypsy dance wherein the body moves energetically to harmony singing and rhythmic clapping of hands
A ball game where two teams of players on horseback use long-handled mallets to propel the ball along the ground and into their opponents goal
a game similar to field hockey but played on horseback using long-handled mallets and a wooden ball
Polo is a game played between two teams of players. The players ride horses and use wooden hammers with long handles to hit a ball. see also water polo. a game played between two teams of players who ride on horses and hit a small ball with long-handled wooden hammers water polo. Game played by teams of players on horseback. Players use mallets with long flexible handles to drive a wooden ball through goalposts. It was first played in Persia in the 6th century BC; from there it spread to Arabia, Tibet (polo is Balti for "ball"), South Asia, and the Far East. The first British polo clubs were formed in India in the mid-19th century; the game came to the U.S. a few decades later. Polo has long been primarily played by the wealthy, because of the expense of acquiring and maintaining a stable of polo "ponies" (actually full-sized adult horses, bred for docility, speed, endurance, and intelligence). The standard team is made up of four players whose positions are numbered 1-4. A game consists of six 7.5-minute periods called chukkers or chukkas. The field is 300 yards (274.3 m) long by 160 yards (146.3 m) wide; an indoor version of the game is played on a smaller field. Marco Polo Bridge Incident Polo Marco water polo
A shirt normally with a vertical slit, and three buttons at collar
a game similar to field hockey but played on horseback using long-handled mallets and a wooden ball Venetian traveler who explored Asia in the 13th century and served Kublai Khan (1254-1324)
Venetian traveler who explored Asia in the 13th century and served Kublai Khan (1254-1324)
A pullover shirt that has two to four buttons in a shortened placket with a soft collar
A similar game played on the ice, or on a prepared floor, by players wearing skates
A Spanish gypsy dance characterized by energetic movements of the body while the feet merely shuffle or glide, with unison singing and rhythmic clapping of hands
A game of ball of Eastern origin, resembling hockey, with the players on horseback
A game similar to hockey played by swimmers
{i} game played with a mallet and ball while riding horseback
A ball game played in BATs in swimming pools, the object being to score goals Rules are similar to those of soccer, etc , and the game has been likened to gladiatorial combat
Polo kinase
An enzyme that regulates cell cycle progression
polo shirt
a casual top modelled at first on the type worn by polo players
polo shirts
plural form of polo shirt
polo-neck
A light type of shirt with such a collar
polo-neck
A high collar covering the neck; a turtleneck
polo ball
wooden ball struck with mallets in playing polo
polo coat
special coat designed to be worn during polo matches
polo coat
A loose-fitting, tailored overcoat made from camel's hair or a similar material
polo mallet
a mallet used to strike the ball in polo
polo neck
A polo neck or a polo neck sweater is a sweater with a high neck which folds over. a shirt or sweater that has a high collar that folds down and fits closely around the neck American Equivalent: turtleneck
polo pony
a small agile horse specially bred and trained for playing polo
polo shirt
A polo shirt is a soft short-sleeved piece of clothing with a collar, which you put on over your head. A pullover sport shirt of knitted cotton. a shirt that has a collar, a few buttons near the neck, and is pulled on over the head
polo shirt
a shirt with short sleeves designed for comfort and casual wear
polo shirt
short or long sleeves cotton or knit shirt
polo-neck
having a close-fitting neckband or collar
Marco Polo
Game played (usually in a swimming pool) where one person runs or swims around blindly yelling "Marco" and everyone else must respond with "Polo" while the person who is "it" tries to locate them. See
Marco Polo
A traveler
San Polo
The smallest of the six sestieri of Venice; includes the Rialto market
elephant polo
A variety of polo played while riding elephants rather than horses
poloist
A polo player
water polo
A water sport consisting of two teams of swimmers who have to throw the ball into the opponents goal
Marco Polo
Polo, Marco. an Italian traveller whose writings gave Europeans their first knowledge of life in the Far East. He went to India, southeast Asia, and China, and spent several years working for the Chinese emperor Kublai Khan (?1254-1324). born 1254, Venice or Curzola, Venetian Dalmatia died Jan. 8, 1324, Venice Venetian merchant and traveler who journeyed from Europe to Asia (1271-95). Born into a Venetian merchant family, he joined his father and uncle on a journey to China, traveling along the Silk Road and reaching the court of Kublai Khan 1274. The Polos remained in China for about 17 years, and the Mongol emperor sent Marco on several fact-finding missions to distant lands. Marco may also have governed the city of Yangzhou (1282-87). The Polos returned to Venice in 1295, after sailing from eastern China to Persia and then journeying overland through Turkey. Captured by the Genoese soon after his return, Marco was imprisoned along with a writer, Rustichello, who helped him to write the tale of his travels. The book, Il milione, was an instant success, though most medieval readers considered it an extravagant romance rather than a true story
Marco Polo
{i} (1254-1324) Italian merchant and explorer from Venice, one of the first European explorers to travel across Asia
Marco Polo Bridge Incident
Conflict in 1937 between Chinese and Japanese troops near the Marco Polo Bridge outside Beijing. The incident was a culmination of the growing tensions between the two sides increasing Japanese aggression and Chinese reaction against it after Japan had occupied northeastern China and established its puppet state of Manchukuo in 1931. The skirmish expanded into a general war between Japan and China
marco polo
Polo: Venetian traveler who explored Asia in the 13th century and served Kublai Khan (1254-1324)
marco polo sheep
Asiatic wild sheep with exceptionally large horns; sometimes considered a variety of the argali (or Ovis ammon)
water polo
a game played in a swimming pool by two teams of swimmers who try to throw an inflated ball into the opponents' goal
water polo
similar to hand ball and is played in a swimming pool
water polo
Water polo is a game played in a swimming pool in which two teams of swimmers try to score goals with a ball. A water sport with two teams of swimmers each of which tries to pass a ball into the other's goal. a ball game played in water between two teams. Sport played in a swimming pool by teams of seven with a buoyant ball resembling a football (soccer ball). The ball may be carried or thrown, and a point is scored when the ball is placed in the opposing team's goal. The name derives from a mid-19th-century version of the sport in which players rode barrels and struck the ball with sticks. A rough and demanding game, it is played by both men and women. Modern water polo was introduced as an Olympic sport in 1900
Türkisch - Englisch
polo
polo yaka
(Tekstil) polo neck collar
polo kapama
(Tekstil) polo closure
polo yaka
(tişört) polo shirt
polo yaka
polo neck
polo

    Silbentrennung

    Po·lo

    Türkische aussprache

    pōlō

    Aussprache

    /ˈpōlō/ /ˈpoʊloʊ/

    Etymologie

    [ 'pO-(")lO ] (noun.) 1872. From the Balti word pulu, meaning ball.

    Gemeinsame Collocations

    polo shirt, polo neck
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