İngilizce - Türkçe çeviri
Tenses: dykes, dyking, dyked

Related:
bulldyke
dike
dyke porn
Van Dyke brown
Volcanic dyke
 
dykeadd into favorites
UK    US    AU    
Etymology: () Variant of dike.

lezbiyen, bent, hendek, duvar, kanal, siper, set, etrafına set çek, i., bak. dike, dike, etrafına set çekmek, suyolu, mecra, kazmak, dayk, Zeus ile Themis'in kızı. Adalet sembolü, set yaparak korumak, su yolu, toprak duvar, süslemek, set çekmek, hendek açmak, argo lezbiyen, sevici, sevici kadın, hendek, suyolu, ark, kanal, şedde, öbür, set çek, lezbiyen/hendek/set,

1 lezbiyen  isim     ts
2 bent     ts
3 hendek     ts
4 duvar     ts
5 kanal     ts
6 siper     ts
7 set     ts
8 etrafına set çek  fiil     ts
9 i., bak. dike     ts
10 dike     ts
11 etrafına set çekmek     ts
12 suyolu     ts
13 mecra     ts
14 kazmak     ts
15 dayk  Jeoloji     ts
16Dike Zeus ile Themis'in kızı. Adalet sembolü  Mitoloji     ts
17dike set yaparak korumak     ts
18dike su yolu     ts
19dike toprak duvar     ts
20dike süslemek     ts
21dike set çekmek     ts
22dike hendek açmak  fiil     ts
23dike argo lezbiyen, sevici  isim     ts
24dike sevici kadın  isim     ts
25dike hendek, suyolu, ark, kanal  isim     ts
26dike şedde     ts
27dike öbür     ts
28dike set çek     ts
29dike lezbiyen/hendek/set     ts
More results

a ditch, A lesbian, particularly one who appears masculine or acts in a masculine manner. This word has been reclaimed, by some, as politically empowering. (See usage notes.), a valley, A toilet, Alternative spelling of dike, a vertical (up and down) run of molten rock that has cooled and become solid These are normally found through layers of rock, An artificial embankment constructed to prevent flooding, The spelling dyke is restricted by some to the geological meaning, A crosscutting rock unit that is younger than the rocks it intrudes, A lesbian. This word has been reclaimed, by some, as politically empowering. (See usage notes.), An earthwork or fortification comprising a ditch (and possibly a rampart), See Dike, A dyke is a lesbian. Variant of dike. Offa's Dyke Van Dyke Dick Richard Wayne Van Dyke, offensive terms for a lesbian who is noticeably masculine, a barrier constructed to contain the flow of water or to keep out the sea, A dyke is a thick wall that is built to stop water flooding onto very low-lying land from a river or from the sea, The spelling dike is also used, especially for meaning 1, build a protective wall, construct a rampart; dig a drainage channel, protective wall, rampart; drainage channel; (Slang) lesbian, A tabular, near vertical, minor igneous intrusion that cuts across horizontal to gently dipping planar structures in the host rock, enclose with a dike; "dike the land to protect it from water", A vertical sheet of igneous rock filling a fissure in the rocks, A long mass of eruptive rock, a dyke (vein) may consist of mineral deposits located between other rocks, Thin vertical veins of igneous rock that form when magma enters and cools in fractures found within the crust Also see intrusive igneous rock, an igneous intrusion which cuts across the bedding of other planar structures in the country rock, A sheet-like body of igneous rock which cuts across the bedding of the rocks it intrudes; it is often steeply inclined, narrow body of igneous rock cutting across structure of the adjacent country rocks, A topographic surname for someone living near a dike, The goddess personifying the principle of justice, Alternative spelling of Dikê, A lesbian, especially a manly or unattractive lesbian, A barrier of stone or earth used to hold back water and prevent flooding, The northern English form of ditch, A body of once molten igneous rock that was injected into older rocks in a manner that crosses bedding planes, A ditch and bank running alongside each other, A wall-like mass of mineral matter, usually an intrusion of igneous rocks, filling up rents or fissures in the original strata, An embankment to prevent inundations; a levee, To surround or protect with a dike or dry bank; to secure with a bank, enclose with a dike; "dike the land to protect it from water, A wall of turf or stone, To drain by a dike or ditch, To work as a ditcher; to dig, digue, build a dike; protect with an embankment; drain with a canal or ditch, A ditch and bank running alongside each other (the excavation was the soruce of the material of the embankment.), A ditch; a channel for water made by digging, A bank (usually earthen) constructed to control or confine water, An embankment used to confine or control water, especially one built along the banks of a river to prevent overflow of low lands or to deflect water away from a bank Also called a levee (4), A tabular body of igneous rock that cuts across the structure of adjacent rocks or cuts massive rocks A massive wall or embankment built around a low-lying area to prevent flooding (Bates & Jackson 1984), An embankment to confine or control water, often built along the banks of a river to prevent overflow of lowlands; a levee, An artificial watercourse (ditch) Also, a bank usually of earth constructed to control or confine water (levee); raised causeway, embankment constructed to control water, earthwork, rampart, canal, see dyke. Variant of dyke. another spelling of dyke. Bank, usually of earth, constructed to control or confine water. Dikes were purely defensive at first but later became a means to acquire polders (tracts of land reclaimed from a body of water through the construction of offshore dikes roughly parallel to the shoreline). After a dike is built, the polder is drained by pumping out the water. Where the land surface is above low-tide level, tide gates discharge water into the sea at low tide and automatically close to prevent reentry of seawater at high tide. To reclaim lands that are below low-tide level, the water must be pumped over the dikes. The most notable example of polder construction is the system adjacent to Holland's IJsselmeer (Zuider Zee) barrier dam. If The Netherlands were to lose the protection of its dikes, its most densely populated portion would be inundated by the sea and rivers, A low embankment, usually constructed to close up low areas of the reservoir rim and thus limit the extent of the reservoir Embankment for restraining a river or a stream Embankments which contain water within a given course Usually applied to dams built to protect land from flooding, A barrier constructed to control or confine hazardous substances and prevent them from entering sewers, ditches, streams or other flowing waters, Bank of earth or stone used to form a barrier, frequently and confusingly interchanged with levee A dike restrains water within an area that normally is flooded See levee, (1) (Engineering) An embankment to confine or control water, especially one built along the banks of a river to prevent overflow of lowlands; a levee (2) A low wall that can act as a barrier to prevent a spill from spreading (3) (Geology) A tabular body of igneous (formed by volcanic action) rock that cuts across the structure of adjacent rocks or cuts adjacent rocks, to enclose, protect, or provide with a dike, an embankment built to prevent flooding, Sometimes written as dyke; earth structure along sea or river in order to protect littoral lands from flooding by high water; dikes along rivers are sometimes called levees, An embankment constructed of earth or other suitable materials to protect land against overflow from streams, lakes, or tidal influences or to protect flat land areas from diffused surface water, A barrier constructed to control or confine hazardous substances and prevent them from entering sewers, ditches, steams, or other flowing waters, An embankment to confine or control water A Levee, A sheet or wall-like mass of igneous rock that cuts across other rocks, A tabular intrusive rock that cuts across strata or other structural features of the surrounding rock, Sometimes written as dyke; earth structure along a SEA or RIVER in order to protect LITTORAL lands from flooding by high water; dikes along RIVERS are sometimes called LEVEES, Anything constructed, assembled or installed to prevent flooding of land It may be an embankment, a wall, fill of sand, gravel, clay, silt or rocks pilings, pipe sluice, culvert, canal, ditch, drain, pump, gate or flood box, Rising magma cooling underground which cuts vertically across exisiting rock Dikes and sills of Keweenawan time arose among the older Rove Formation which runs from Gunflint Lake east to Superior (our BWCA Region V) More resistant to erosion and glaciation than the surrounding rock, they delineate the long and narrow lakes which are the hallmark of this region, A discordant pluton that is substantially wider than it is thick Dikes are often steeply inclined or nearly vertical See also sill dilatancy The expansion of a rock's volume caused by stress and deformation, an earthen embankment constructed to retain floodwater; when used in conjunction with a bridge, it prevents stream erosion and localized scour and/or so directs the stream current such that debris does not accumulate; also known as dyke; see SPUR DIKE, an embankment built to prevent overflow of water from a stream or other water body; an embankment built to retain water in a reservoir; a vertical or steeply inclined wall of igneous rock, which has been forced into a fissure in a molten condition, a bank, usually of earth, built to control or confine water, plural of dyke,

30 a ditch     ts
31 A lesbian, particularly one who appears masculine or acts in a masculine manner. This word has been reclaimed, by some, as politically empowering. (See usage notes.)     ts
32 a valley - "Let's walk to Devil's Dyke."     ts
33 A toilet     ts
34 Alternative spelling of dike     ts
35 a vertical (up and down) run of molten rock that has cooled and become solid These are normally found through layers of rock     ts
36 An artificial embankment constructed to prevent flooding     ts
37 The spelling dyke is restricted by some to the geological meaning     ts
38 A crosscutting rock unit that is younger than the rocks it intrudes     ts
39 A lesbian. This word has been reclaimed, by some, as politically empowering. (See usage notes.)     ts
40 An earthwork or fortification comprising a ditch (and possibly a rampart)     ts
41 See Dike     ts
42 A dyke is a lesbian. Variant of dike. Offa's Dyke Van Dyke Dick Richard Wayne Van Dyke     ts
43 offensive terms for a lesbian who is noticeably masculine     ts
44 a barrier constructed to contain the flow of water or to keep out the sea     ts
45 A dyke is a thick wall that is built to stop water flooding onto very low-lying land from a river or from the sea     ts
46 The spelling dike is also used, especially for meaning 1     ts
47 build a protective wall, construct a rampart; dig a drainage channel  fiil     ts
48 protective wall, rampart; drainage channel; (Slang) lesbian  isim     ts
49 A tabular, near vertical, minor igneous intrusion that cuts across horizontal to gently dipping planar structures in the host rock     ts
50 enclose with a dike; "dike the land to protect it from water"     ts
51 A vertical sheet of igneous rock filling a fissure in the rocks     ts
52 A long mass of eruptive rock, a dyke (vein) may consist of mineral deposits located between other rocks     ts
53 Thin vertical veins of igneous rock that form when magma enters and cools in fractures found within the crust Also see intrusive igneous rock     ts
54 an igneous intrusion which cuts across the bedding of other planar structures in the country rock     ts
55 A sheet-like body of igneous rock which cuts across the bedding of the rocks it intrudes; it is often steeply inclined     ts
56 narrow body of igneous rock cutting across structure of the adjacent country rocks     ts
57Dike A topographic surname for someone living near a dike     ts
58Dikê The goddess personifying the principle of justice - "Dolos and Dikê in Sophokles’ Elektra"     ts
59Dikē Alternative spelling of Dikê     ts
60dike A lesbian, especially a manly or unattractive lesbian     ts
61dike A barrier of stone or earth used to hold back water and prevent flooding - "The king of Texcuco advised the building of a great dike, so thick and strong as to keep out the water."     ts
62dike The northern English form of ditch     ts
63dike A body of once molten igneous rock that was injected into older rocks in a manner that crosses bedding planes     ts
64dike A ditch and bank running alongside each other     ts
65dike A wall-like mass of mineral matter, usually an intrusion of igneous rocks, filling up rents or fissures in the original strata     ts
66dike An embankment to prevent inundations; a levee     ts
67dike To surround or protect with a dike or dry bank; to secure with a bank     ts
68dike enclose with a dike; "dike the land to protect it from water     ts
69dike A wall of turf or stone     ts
70dike To drain by a dike or ditch     ts
71dike To work as a ditcher; to dig     ts
72dike digue  isim     ts
73dike build a dike; protect with an embankment; drain with a canal or ditch  fiil     ts
74dike A ditch and bank running alongside each other (the excavation was the soruce of the material of the embankment.)     ts
75dike A ditch; a channel for water made by digging     ts
76dike A bank (usually earthen) constructed to control or confine water     ts
77dike An embankment used to confine or control water, especially one built along the banks of a river to prevent overflow of low lands or to deflect water away from a bank Also called a levee (4)     ts
78dike A tabular body of igneous rock that cuts across the structure of adjacent rocks or cuts massive rocks A massive wall or embankment built around a low-lying area to prevent flooding (Bates & Jackson 1984)     ts
79dike An embankment to confine or control water, often built along the banks of a river to prevent overflow of lowlands; a levee     ts
80dike An artificial watercourse (ditch) Also, a bank usually of earth constructed to control or confine water (levee); raised causeway     ts
81dike embankment constructed to control water, earthwork, rampart, canal  isim     ts
82dike see dyke. Variant of dyke. another spelling of dyke. Bank, usually of earth, constructed to control or confine water. Dikes were purely defensive at first but later became a means to acquire polders (tracts of land reclaimed from a body of water through the construction of offshore dikes roughly parallel to the shoreline). After a dike is built, the polder is drained by pumping out the water. Where the land surface is above low-tide level, tide gates discharge water into the sea at low tide and automatically close to prevent reentry of seawater at high tide. To reclaim lands that are below low-tide level, the water must be pumped over the dikes. The most notable example of polder construction is the system adjacent to Holland's IJsselmeer (Zuider Zee) barrier dam. If The Netherlands were to lose the protection of its dikes, its most densely populated portion would be inundated by the sea and rivers     ts
83dike A low embankment, usually constructed to close up low areas of the reservoir rim and thus limit the extent of the reservoir Embankment for restraining a river or a stream Embankments which contain water within a given course Usually applied to dams built to protect land from flooding     ts
84dike A barrier constructed to control or confine hazardous substances and prevent them from entering sewers, ditches, streams or other flowing waters     ts
85dike Bank of earth or stone used to form a barrier, frequently and confusingly interchanged with levee A dike restrains water within an area that normally is flooded See levee     ts
86dike (1) (Engineering) An embankment to confine or control water, especially one built along the banks of a river to prevent overflow of lowlands; a levee (2) A low wall that can act as a barrier to prevent a spill from spreading (3) (Geology) A tabular body of igneous (formed by volcanic action) rock that cuts across the structure of adjacent rocks or cuts adjacent rocks     ts
87dike to enclose, protect, or provide with a dike, an embankment built to prevent flooding     ts
88dike Sometimes written as dyke; earth structure along sea or river in order to protect littoral lands from flooding by high water; dikes along rivers are sometimes called levees     ts
89dike An embankment constructed of earth or other suitable materials to protect land against overflow from streams, lakes, or tidal influences or to protect flat land areas from diffused surface water     ts
90dike A barrier constructed to control or confine hazardous substances and prevent them from entering sewers, ditches, steams, or other flowing waters     ts
91dike An embankment to confine or control water A Levee     ts
92dike A sheet or wall-like mass of igneous rock that cuts across other rocks     ts
93dike A tabular intrusive rock that cuts across strata or other structural features of the surrounding rock     ts
94dike Sometimes written as dyke; earth structure along a SEA or RIVER in order to protect LITTORAL lands from flooding by high water; dikes along RIVERS are sometimes called LEVEES     ts
95dike Anything constructed, assembled or installed to prevent flooding of land It may be an embankment, a wall, fill of sand, gravel, clay, silt or rocks pilings, pipe sluice, culvert, canal, ditch, drain, pump, gate or flood box     ts
96dike Rising magma cooling underground which cuts vertically across exisiting rock Dikes and sills of Keweenawan time arose among the older Rove Formation which runs from Gunflint Lake east to Superior (our BWCA Region V) More resistant to erosion and glaciation than the surrounding rock, they delineate the long and narrow lakes which are the hallmark of this region     ts
97dike A discordant pluton that is substantially wider than it is thick Dikes are often steeply inclined or nearly vertical See also sill dilatancy The expansion of a rock's volume caused by stress and deformation     ts
98dike an earthen embankment constructed to retain floodwater; when used in conjunction with a bridge, it prevents stream erosion and localized scour and/or so directs the stream current such that debris does not accumulate; also known as dyke; see SPUR DIKE     ts
99dike an embankment built to prevent overflow of water from a stream or other water body; an embankment built to retain water in a reservoir; a vertical or steeply inclined wall of igneous rock, which has been forced into a fissure in a molten condition     ts
100dike a bank, usually of earth, built to control or confine water     ts
101dykes plural of dyke     ts
More results


blog comments powered by Disqus

Word of the day




Sözlük . Dictionary . Wörterbuch . λεξικό . Diccionario . 字典 . словарь . Dictionnaire . القاموس . Dizionario . מילון . Matokeo . واژه نامه . 辞書
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada dyke kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. dyke kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan dyke kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.

© 1999-2012 SesliSozluk™
sesli sözlük ltd. şti.