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Etymology: [ ärch ] (noun.) 14th century. Middle English arche, from Middle French, from Vulgar Latin arca, from Latin arcus; more at ARROW.

önde gelen, kavis, kemer, en büyük, pref. baş, eğil/bükül, yay, nazlı, küçümser/çekici, en yukarıda, hor gören, tepeden bakan, archly cilveli bir edaarchness cilvelilik, çapkın, ayak tabanı kemeri, şen, cilveli, baş, şahı, taban çukuru, kurnaz, şeytan gibi, ayak kemeri, yay çizmek, jübe, rökonstrüksiyon, kubbelenmek, kemer yapmak, kabarmak, en iyisi, cin gibi, kamburlaşmak, kamburlaştırmak, kamburunu çıkarmak, eğmeç, en yüksek düzeyde, kavis yap, (havada) kavis çizmek, yay, over/above üzerinde kemer oluşturmak; üzerinde kemer gibi uzanmak, kemer, tak, archaic, archaism, architect, architecture, eğri; yay şeklinde yapı, ark, ayak, architect, archaism, archaic, Yay, kavis, kemer, arcus, ark,v.kavis yap:n.kavis, en başta, şeytanca,

1arch önde gelen     ts
2arch kavis     ts
3arch kemer  isim     ts
4arch en büyük     ts
5arch pref. baş     ts
6arch eğil/bükül     ts
7arch yay     ts
8arch nazlı     ts
9arch küçümser/çekici     ts
10arch en yukarıda     ts
11arch hor gören     ts
12arch tepeden bakan     ts
13arch archly cilveli bir edaarchness cilvelilik     ts
14arch çapkın     ts
15arch ayak tabanı kemeri     ts
16arch şen     ts
17arch cilveli     ts
18arch baş     ts
19arch şahı     ts
20arch taban çukuru     ts
21arch kurnaz     ts
22arch şeytan gibi     ts
23arch ayak kemeri     ts
24arch yay çizmek     ts
25arch jübe     ts
26arch rökonstrüksiyon     ts
27arch kubbelenmek     ts
28arch kemer yapmak     ts
29arch kabarmak     ts
30arch en iyisi     ts
31arch cin gibi     ts
32arch kamburlaşmak     ts
33arch kamburlaştırmak     ts
34arch kamburunu çıkarmak     ts
35arch eğmeç     ts
36arch en yüksek düzeyde     ts
37arch kavis yap  fiil     ts
38arch (havada) kavis çizmek, yay  fiil     ts
39arch over/above üzerinde kemer oluşturmak; üzerinde kemer gibi uzanmak  fiil     ts
40arch kemer, tak  isim     ts
41arch archaic, archaism, architect, architecture  kısaltma     ts
42arch eğri; yay şeklinde yapı  Diş Hekimliği     ts
43arch ark  Biyoloji     ts
44arch ayak     ts
45arch architect     ts
46arch archaism     ts
47arch archaic     ts
48arch Yay, kavis, kemer, arcus  Tıp     ts
49arch ark,v.kavis yap:n.kavis     ts
50arch en başta     ts
51arch şeytanca  sıfat     ts
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Arches National Park, a national park in Utah, pl, of Arch, n, Third person singular of arch, To form into an arch shape, Knowing, clever, mischievous, An architectural element having the shape of an arch, An arch-shaped arrangement of trapezoidal stones, designed to redistribute downward force outward, An inverted U shape, Principal; primary, An arc; a part of a curve, Abbreviation of architecture, Abbreviation of architectural, Abbreviation of archipelago, Abbreviation of architect, Abbreviation of archery, Abbreviation of archaic, Abbreviation of archaism, To form or bend into the shape of an arch, To form into an arch; to curve, To cover with an arch or arches, Any curvature in the form of an arch; as, the arch of the aorta, Any place covered by an arch; an archway; as, to pass into the arch of a bridge, A prefix signifying chief, as in archbuilder, archfiend, (architecture) a masonry construction (usually curved) for spanning an opening and supporting the weight above it a passageway under an arch a curved bony structure supporting or enclosing organs (especially arches of the feet) a curved shape in the vertical plane that spans an opening form an arch or curve; "her back arches"; "her hips curve nicely", A flat arch is a member constructed of stones cut into wedges or other shapes so as to support each other without rising in a curve, A chief, A suffix meaning a ruler, as in monarch (a sole ruler), Cunning or sly; sportively mischievous; roguish; as, an arch look, word, lad, Chief; eminent; greatest; principal, shrewd, cunning, sly; chief, main, principal, Primary among many, knowing, clever, In this sense arches are segmental, round i, Any part of a curved line, Usually a curved member made up of separate wedge-shaped solids, with the joints between them disposed in the direction of the radii of the curve; used to support the wall or other weight above an opening, Highly placed in a hierarchy, particularly used of church officials, semicircular, or pointed, (used of behavior or attitude) characteristic of those who treat others with condescension, A structural form in a building that spans openings by arranging wedge-shaped blocks (voussoirs), such that the pressure exerted by the part of the building above the opening is channeled to the vertical supports of the arch on either side of the opening; there are many varients of the form of the true arch; most common is the semicircular, curved type, but also known are the stilted, segmental, skewed, three centered and flat arch; a false arch can be formed by other means such as corbelling, expert in skulduggery; "an arch criminal", (of persons) highest in rank or authority or office; "his arch rival", form an arch or curve; "her back arches"; "her hips curve nicely", A curved structural member spanning an opening or recess The wedge shaped elements that make up an arch keep one another in palce and transform the vertical pressure of the structure above into lateral pressure; Can be round-headed, pointed, two-centered, or drop; ogee - pointed with double curved sides, upper arcs lower concave; lancet - pointed formed on an acute-angle triangle; depressed - flattened or elliptical; corbelled - triangular, peaked, each stone set a little further in until they meet, with a large capstone Parts of an arch: keystone, soffit, spring line, springer, voussoir Measurements of an arch: rise, span Related architectural elements: arcade, cusp, hood moulding, spandrel, tympanum, The pointed arch is widely regarded as the main identifiable feature of Gothic architecture (distinct from the round arch of the Romanesque period) The three most common Gothic arches are the Equilateral, Lancet and Tudor, make arched, make vaulted, build an arch; be arched, be vaulted, A curved, load-carrying monolithic or composite structure or member which spans an opening or recess and is essentially in compression Loads supported by an arch are resolved into vertical and horizontal forces at supports Before the advent of structural steel, masonry arches of a variety of shapes provided a major means of achieving long spans in buildings or structures, A curved structure that supports weight over an area, such as a doorway, (architecture) a masonry construction (usually curved) for spanning an opening and supporting the weight above it, a passageway under an arch, An arch is a curved line or movement. = arc, An arch is a structure that is curved at the top and is supported on either side by a pillar, post, or wall, pref. chief, principal, The arch of your foot is the curved section at the bottom in the middle, If you arch a part of your body such as your back or if it arches, you bend it so that it forms a curve. Don't arch your back, keep your spine straight, a curved bony structure supporting or enclosing organs (especially arches of the feet), a curved shape in the vertical plane that spans an opening, If you arch your eyebrows or if they arch, you move them upwards as a way of showing surprise or disapproval. `Oh really?' he said, arching an eyebrow. = raise see also arched. to form or make something form a curved shape. Curved structure that spans the opening between two piers or columns and supports loads from above. The masonry arch provides the stepping stone from the post-and-beam system to the evolution of the vault, and was first widely used by the Romans. Its construction depends on a series of wedge-shaped blocks (voussoirs) set side by side in a semicircular curve or along two intersecting arcs (as in a pointed arch). The central voussoir is called the keystone, and the two points where the arch rests on its supports are known as the spring points. An arch can carry a much greater load than a horizontal beam of the same size and material, because downward pressure forces the voussoirs together instead of apart. The resulting outward thrust must be resisted by the arch's supports. Present-day lightweight monolithic (one-piece) arches of steel, concrete, or laminated wood are highly rigid, and thereby minimize horizontal thrust. natural arch triumphal arch Arches National Park archer fish, n Position skydivers use to orient the front of their torso to the relative wind Described, it is hips forward with back arched; legs extended to 45 degrees, toes pointed; knees at shoulder width; arms bent 90-120 degrees at the shoulders and elbows and relaxed; head up, A curved structure that carries the weight over an opening, [arch] Stonework which spans an opening; allowed designers to make the openings much larger See: blunt-arch, circular-, corbel-, This is the overall architecture It is the same as BFD's use of arch, n an opening in a rock fin that allows light to pass through, must be at least three feet in at least one dimension, formed mostly by gravity and wind erosion; see also window and erosional landform, Can be round-headed, pointed, two-centered, or drop; ogee - pointed with double curved sides, upper arcs lower concave; lancet - pointed formed on an acute-angle triangle; depressed - flattened or elliptical; corbelled - triangular, peaked, each stone set a little further in until they meet, with a large capstone, The curved or pointed top on a door or open entryway Arches come in many different shapes and styles, vault, upward curve; entrance with a curved top, vaulted doorway, A position in which the body is curved backwards, A curved structure so built that the stones or other component parts support each other by mutual pressure and can sustain a load, of the foot, the part from head to toes of the body structure, normally having an upward curve, curved architectural element which joins two parts of a construction Which an either be:- round headed arch ( a perfect semi-circle)- pointed arch (the high part forming an angle)- horseshoe shaped (the diameter exceeding the opening), natural curved archway created by the coastal erosion of a headland, Structure, usually curved, spanning an opening and supporting the weight of upper parts of buildings, such as domes An arch is designed so that it can be supported only from the sides The style of the arch often provides a clue to the overall style of the church In general, rounded arches indicate Romanesque and pointed arches indicate Gothic Other common types of arches are basket, discharging, drop, elliptical, four-centered, horseshoe (also known as Moorish), lancet, ogee, pointed, relieving, segmental, shouldered, stilted, Tudor and trefoil, [n] the curved or pointed opening of a support (like the top of a doorway or window), ARCH is an Oracle background process created when you start an instance in ARCHIVE LOG MODE The ARCH process will archive on-line redo log files to some backup media, round-headed, ie semi-circular; pointed, ie consisting of two curves, each drawn from one centre, and meeting in a point at the top; segmental, ie in the form of a segment, An architectural element used to span the space between two posts Arch's shapes can vary but true arches are always constructed of wedge-shaped blocks called voussoirs Arches, though more difficult to construct, can span greater distances between columns or piers and support greater loads than the simple lintel Basic aches appear as a semicircle supported on two vertical elements, A structural device that supports a vertical load by translating it into axial, inclined forces; a means of spanning an opening by resolving vertical pressure into horizontal or diagonal thrust, Autoregressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity A time-series technique in which past observations of the variance are used to forecast future variances See also GARCH, A culvert section forming an arc of a circle (usually less than 180?) and having a natural substrate for its base, that is, a bottomless culvert (3) Types of arches include squash, elliptical, half-round and plate, and they can be high or low profile See Culvert, Bottomless Culvert, Arch Pipe and contrast with Pipe-Arch, A curved structure that converts the downward compression force of its own weight, and of any weight pressing down on top of it, into a force along its curve Thhis results in an outward and downward force along the sides and base of the arch,

52 Arches National Park, a national park in Utah     ts
53 pl     ts
54 of Arch, n     ts
55 Third person singular of arch     ts
56arch To form into an arch shape - "The cat arched its back"     ts
57arch Knowing, clever, mischievous - "I attempted to hide my emotions, but an arch remark escaped my lips."     ts
58arch An architectural element having the shape of an arch     ts
59arch An arch-shaped arrangement of trapezoidal stones, designed to redistribute downward force outward     ts
60arch An inverted U shape     ts
61arch Principal; primary - "The man is my arch rival, without him I would have no competition."     ts
62arch An arc; a part of a curve     ts
63arch. Abbreviation of architecture     ts
64arch. Abbreviation of architectural     ts
65arch. Abbreviation of archipelago     ts
66arch. Abbreviation of architect     ts
67arch. Abbreviation of archery     ts
68arch. Abbreviation of archaic     ts
69arch. Abbreviation of archaism     ts
70arch To form or bend into the shape of an arch     ts
71arch To form into an arch; to curve     ts
72arch To cover with an arch or arches     ts
73arch Any curvature in the form of an arch; as, the arch of the aorta     ts
74arch Any place covered by an arch; an archway; as, to pass into the arch of a bridge     ts
75arch A prefix signifying chief, as in archbuilder, archfiend     ts
76arch (architecture) a masonry construction (usually curved) for spanning an opening and supporting the weight above it a passageway under an arch a curved bony structure supporting or enclosing organs (especially arches of the feet) a curved shape in the vertical plane that spans an opening form an arch or curve; "her back arches"; "her hips curve nicely"     ts
77arch A flat arch is a member constructed of stones cut into wedges or other shapes so as to support each other without rising in a curve     ts
78arch A chief     ts
79arch A suffix meaning a ruler, as in monarch (a sole ruler)     ts
80arch Cunning or sly; sportively mischievous; roguish; as, an arch look, word, lad     ts
81arch Chief; eminent; greatest; principal     ts
82arch shrewd, cunning, sly; chief, main, principal  sıfat     ts
83arch Primary among many     ts
84arch knowing, clever     ts
85arch In this sense arches are segmental, round i     ts
86arch Any part of a curved line     ts
87arch Usually a curved member made up of separate wedge-shaped solids, with the joints between them disposed in the direction of the radii of the curve; used to support the wall or other weight above an opening     ts
88arch Highly placed in a hierarchy, particularly used of church officials     ts
89arch semicircular, or pointed     ts
90arch (used of behavior or attitude) characteristic of those who treat others with condescension     ts
91arch A structural form in a building that spans openings by arranging wedge-shaped blocks (voussoirs), such that the pressure exerted by the part of the building above the opening is channeled to the vertical supports of the arch on either side of the opening; there are many varients of the form of the true arch; most common is the semicircular, curved type, but also known are the stilted, segmental, skewed, three centered and flat arch; a false arch can be formed by other means such as corbelling     ts
92arch expert in skulduggery; "an arch criminal"     ts
93arch (of persons) highest in rank or authority or office; "his arch rival"     ts
94arch form an arch or curve; "her back arches"; "her hips curve nicely"     ts
95arch A curved structural member spanning an opening or recess The wedge shaped elements that make up an arch keep one another in palce and transform the vertical pressure of the structure above into lateral pressure; Can be round-headed, pointed, two-centered, or drop; ogee - pointed with double curved sides, upper arcs lower concave; lancet - pointed formed on an acute-angle triangle; depressed - flattened or elliptical; corbelled - triangular, peaked, each stone set a little further in until they meet, with a large capstone Parts of an arch: keystone, soffit, spring line, springer, voussoir Measurements of an arch: rise, span Related architectural elements: arcade, cusp, hood moulding, spandrel, tympanum     ts
96arch The pointed arch is widely regarded as the main identifiable feature of Gothic architecture (distinct from the round arch of the Romanesque period) The three most common Gothic arches are the Equilateral, Lancet and Tudor     ts
97arch make arched, make vaulted, build an arch; be arched, be vaulted  fiil     ts
98arch A curved, load-carrying monolithic or composite structure or member which spans an opening or recess and is essentially in compression Loads supported by an arch are resolved into vertical and horizontal forces at supports Before the advent of structural steel, masonry arches of a variety of shapes provided a major means of achieving long spans in buildings or structures     ts
99arch A curved structure that supports weight over an area, such as a doorway     ts
100arch (architecture) a masonry construction (usually curved) for spanning an opening and supporting the weight above it     ts
101arch a passageway under an arch     ts
102arch An arch is a curved line or movement. = arc     ts
103arch An arch is a structure that is curved at the top and is supported on either side by a pillar, post, or wall     ts
104arch pref. chief, principal     ts
105arch The arch of your foot is the curved section at the bottom in the middle     ts
106arch If you arch a part of your body such as your back or if it arches, you bend it so that it forms a curve. Don't arch your back, keep your spine straight     ts
107arch a curved bony structure supporting or enclosing organs (especially arches of the feet)     ts
108arch a curved shape in the vertical plane that spans an opening     ts
109arch If you arch your eyebrows or if they arch, you move them upwards as a way of showing surprise or disapproval. `Oh really?' he said, arching an eyebrow. = raise see also arched. to form or make something form a curved shape. Curved structure that spans the opening between two piers or columns and supports loads from above. The masonry arch provides the stepping stone from the post-and-beam system to the evolution of the vault, and was first widely used by the Romans. Its construction depends on a series of wedge-shaped blocks (voussoirs) set side by side in a semicircular curve or along two intersecting arcs (as in a pointed arch). The central voussoir is called the keystone, and the two points where the arch rests on its supports are known as the spring points. An arch can carry a much greater load than a horizontal beam of the same size and material, because downward pressure forces the voussoirs together instead of apart. The resulting outward thrust must be resisted by the arch's supports. Present-day lightweight monolithic (one-piece) arches of steel, concrete, or laminated wood are highly rigid, and thereby minimize horizontal thrust. natural arch triumphal arch Arches National Park archer fish     ts
110arch n Position skydivers use to orient the front of their torso to the relative wind Described, it is hips forward with back arched; legs extended to 45 degrees, toes pointed; knees at shoulder width; arms bent 90-120 degrees at the shoulders and elbows and relaxed; head up     ts
111arch A curved structure that carries the weight over an opening     ts
112arch [arch] Stonework which spans an opening; allowed designers to make the openings much larger See: blunt-arch, circular-, corbel-     ts
113arch This is the overall architecture It is the same as BFD's use of arch     ts
114arch n an opening in a rock fin that allows light to pass through, must be at least three feet in at least one dimension, formed mostly by gravity and wind erosion; see also window and erosional landform     ts
115arch Can be round-headed, pointed, two-centered, or drop; ogee - pointed with double curved sides, upper arcs lower concave; lancet - pointed formed on an acute-angle triangle; depressed - flattened or elliptical; corbelled - triangular, peaked, each stone set a little further in until they meet, with a large capstone     ts
116arch The curved or pointed top on a door or open entryway Arches come in many different shapes and styles     ts
117arch vault, upward curve; entrance with a curved top, vaulted doorway  isim     ts
118arch A position in which the body is curved backwards     ts
119arch A curved structure so built that the stones or other component parts support each other by mutual pressure and can sustain a load, of the foot, the part from head to toes of the body structure, normally having an upward curve     ts
120arch curved architectural element which joins two parts of a construction Which an either be:- round headed arch ( a perfect semi-circle)- pointed arch (the high part forming an angle)- horseshoe shaped (the diameter exceeding the opening)     ts
121arch natural curved archway created by the coastal erosion of a headland     ts
122arch Structure, usually curved, spanning an opening and supporting the weight of upper parts of buildings, such as domes An arch is designed so that it can be supported only from the sides The style of the arch often provides a clue to the overall style of the church In general, rounded arches indicate Romanesque and pointed arches indicate Gothic Other common types of arches are basket, discharging, drop, elliptical, four-centered, horseshoe (also known as Moorish), lancet, ogee, pointed, relieving, segmental, shouldered, stilted, Tudor and trefoil     ts
123arch [n] the curved or pointed opening of a support (like the top of a doorway or window)     ts
124arch ARCH is an Oracle background process created when you start an instance in ARCHIVE LOG MODE The ARCH process will archive on-line redo log files to some backup media     ts
125arch round-headed, ie semi-circular; pointed, ie consisting of two curves, each drawn from one centre, and meeting in a point at the top; segmental, ie in the form of a segment     ts
126arch An architectural element used to span the space between two posts Arch's shapes can vary but true arches are always constructed of wedge-shaped blocks called voussoirs Arches, though more difficult to construct, can span greater distances between columns or piers and support greater loads than the simple lintel Basic aches appear as a semicircle supported on two vertical elements     ts
127arch A structural device that supports a vertical load by translating it into axial, inclined forces; a means of spanning an opening by resolving vertical pressure into horizontal or diagonal thrust     ts
128arch Autoregressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity A time-series technique in which past observations of the variance are used to forecast future variances See also GARCH     ts
129arch A culvert section forming an arc of a circle (usually less than 180?) and having a natural substrate for its base, that is, a bottomless culvert (3) Types of arches include squash, elliptical, half-round and plate, and they can be high or low profile See Culvert, Bottomless Culvert, Arch Pipe and contrast with Pipe-Arch     ts
130arch A curved structure that converts the downward compression force of its own weight, and of any weight pressing down on top of it, into a force along its curve Thhis results in an outward and downward force along the sides and base of the arch     ts
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Günün Kelimesi




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 arches kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. arches kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan arches kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.

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