In sentence: - "Can you witness Hikmet´s will? Hikmet´in vasiyetnamesine tanıklık eder misin?." , "Did you witness that event? O olayı bizzat gördün mü? These walls have witnessed a lot of history. Bu surlar birçok tarihi olaya tanık oldu." , "He witnessed to having seen the murder. Tanıklık ederek cinayeti gördüğünü söyledi."
şahit, tanık, şahit olmak, tanık olmak, 1. bizzat görmek, -e tanık/şahit olmak: Did you witness that event? O olayı bizzat gördün mü? These walls have witnessed a, sahit olmak, şahid, sahid, göstermek, şahitlik etmek, sahne olmak, tanıklık, uzman, gözüyle görmek, burhan, hüccet, tanıt, tanıklık etmek, müşahade etmek, şehadet etmek, şehadet, bizzat görmek, -e tanık/şahit olmak: Did you witness that event? O olayı bizzat gördün mü? These walls have witnessed a, onaylamak, i. tanık, şahit. f, kabul etmek, witness box witness stand tanık kürsüsü, Witness my hand and seal, kanıtlamak, şahadet etmek, tanıklık yapmak, İmzam ve mühr, bilirkişi, bizzat görmek, zeka kıvraklığı, akıl, nükte, farkında olmak, zekâ, ince zekâ, nüktedan kimse, us, nüktecilik, nüktedanlık, to wit yani, zeki kimse, ince espri, espritüellik, bilmek, öğrenmek, demek ki, farkında ol(mak), farkında ol, espritüel kimse, tanıklar, yâni, fikir, bir şeye işaret etmek, bir şeyin delili olmak, bir şeye delalet etmek, -e tanıklık etmek, bir şeye şahitlik etmek, -e şahitlik etmek, bir şeyin kanıtı olmak,
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şahit isim
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tanık isim
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şahit olmak fiil
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tanık olmak fiil
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1. bizzat görmek, -e tanık/şahit olmak: Did you witness that event? O olayı bizzat gördün mü? These walls have witnessed a fiil
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sahit olmak
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şahid
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sahid
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göstermek
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şahitlik etmek
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sahne olmak
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tanıklık Hukuk
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uzman
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gözüyle görmek
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burhan
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hüccet
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tanıt
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tanıklık etmek
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müşahade etmek
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şehadet etmek
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şehadet
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bizzat görmek, -e tanık/şahit olmak: Did you witness that event? O olayı bizzat gördün mü? These walls have witnessed a
To present personal religious testimony; to preach at (someone) or on behalf of, One who has a personal knowledge of something, Attestation of a fact or event, Someone called to give evidence in a court, Something that serves as evidence; a sign, To take as evidence, To furnish proof of, to show, To see, note, or gain knowledge of, A witness to an event such as an accident or crime is a person who saw it. Witnesses to the crash say they saw an explosion just before the disaster No witnesses have come forward, look on, see, observe; testify, vouch for, corroborate; be an eye-witness; note, notice, testifier; onlooker, bystander; eye-witness; testimony, testis, That which furnishes evidence or proof, One who testifies in a cause, or gives evidence before a judicial tribunal; as, the witness in court agreed in all essential facts, Attestation of a fact or an event; testimony, One who is cognizant; a person who beholds, or otherwise has personal knowledge of, anything; as, an eyewitness; an earwitness, A person who is present when something occurs or who gives evidence of something they have observed or heard or of something in which they have recognised expertise •Bail, One who sees the execution of an instrument, and subscribes it for the purpose of confirming its authenticity by his testimony; one who witnesses a will, a deed, a marriage, or the like, a person who testifies before a court under oath regarding what he has seen, heard or otherwise observed, A person who has seen or knows something about the crime The victim is usually a witness, too, "an overarching term drawing together proclamation (kerygma), community (koinonia), and service (diakonia)" defining "evangelistic ministry, as the core of ministry" (Guder 2000, 53), testimony by word or deed to your religious faith someone who sees an event and reports what happened (law) a person who attests to the genuineness of a document or signature by adding their own signature (law) a person who testifies under oath in a court of law be a witness to perceive or be contemporaneous with; "We found Republicans winning the offices"; "You'll see a lot of cheating in this school"; "I want to see results"; "The 1960 saw the rebellion of the younger generation against established traditions"; "I want to see results, One who is called to court to testify in order to tell what he or she knows about the case (See, also, "Expert Witness"), testifier, To give testimony to; to testify to; to attest, To see the execution of, as an instrument, and subscribe it for the purpose of establishing its authenticity; as, to witness a bond or a deed, To bear testimony; to give evidence; to testify, To see or know by personal presence; to have direct cognizance of, A person who is in a position to provide information about the facts in an appeal, (law) a person who testifies under oath in a court of law, (law) a person who attests to the genuineness of a document or signature by adding their own signature, testimony by word or deed to your religious faith, be a witness to, perceive or be contemporaneous with; "We found Republicans winning the offices"; "You'll see a lot of cheating in this school"; "I want to see results"; "The 1960 saw the rebellion of the younger generation against established traditions"; "I want to see results", A person called upon by either side in a lawsuit to give testimony before the court or jury, person who observes the signing of a Will and/or codicil and attests to the signature of the Testator/rix, a close observer; someone who looks at something (such as an exhibition of some kind); "the spectators applauded the performance"; "television viewers"; "sky watchers discovered a new star", someone who sees an event and reports what happened, A witness is someone who appears in a court of law to say what they know about a crime or other event. In the next three or four days, eleven witnesses will be called to testify, If you witness something, you see it happen. Anyone who witnessed the attack should call the police = see, A witness is someone who writes their name on a document that you have signed, to confirm that it really is your signature, If someone witnesses your signature on a document, they write their name after it, to confirm that it really is your signature. Ask a friend to witness your signature, If a person or thing bears witness to something, they show or say that it exists or happened. Many of these poems bear witness to his years spent in India and China, If you say that a place, period of time, or person witnessed a particular event or change, you mean that it happened in that place, during that period of time, or while that person was alive. India has witnessed many political changes in recent years = see, A person who testifies to what he or she has seen, heard or otherwise experienced Also, a person who observes the signing of a will and is competent to testify that it is the will-maker's intended last will and testament, A person who testifies before a legislative committee, a person called to testify to provide information directly relevant to the incident resulting in long-term suspension recommendation, One who testifies to what he has seen, heard, or otherwise observed, A person called upon to give evidence in court, anyone who testifies in court including the victim, a witness is an individual present at an event such as a marriage or the signing of a document who can vouch that the event took place, An independent person (not a beneficiary or executor or the spouse of either) who watches you sign your Will and then signs it in your presence You must have two witnesses to your Will for it to be valid, A person who is present at the time other witnesses, notary and testator are all also present in his or her company and with proof of identification signs the Will and watches the other sign at the same time, (RWT) A person called upon by either side in a lawsuit to give testimony before the court or jury, One who testifies under oath to what he/she has seen, heard or otherwise observed, The regular definition of this word is a person who perceives an event (by seeing, hearing, smelling or other sensory perception) The legal definition refers to the court-supervised recital of that sensory experience, in writing (deposition) or verbally (testimony), One who gives evidence in a case before the court A witness is compelled by law to appear on the time and date specified Failure to do so could result in a warrant being issued for the arrest of the witness Under the provisions of Section 37(1) of the Jury Act, an employer of a person, who is required to attend upon court as a witness, shall pay that person the same wages and give the same benefits as that person would have received if he/she had worked, One who testifies to what (s)he has seen, heard or otherwise observed, One who personally sees or perceives a thing; one who testifies as to what he has seen, heard, or otherwise observed, A person appearing before an Investigative Committee to present evidence and answer questions, a person who is sworn at a trial to provide evidence in a case, w, Know, be aware of , Intellectual ability; faculty of thinking, reasoning, A person who tells funny anecdotes or jokes; someone witty, The senses, The ability to think quickly; mental cleverness, especially under short time constraints, Intelligence; common sense, Spoken humour, especially when clever or quick, Sanity, Simple past tense and past participle of witness, a witty amusing person who makes jokes, teste, test, emphasis If you say that you are at your wits' end, you are emphasizing that you are so worried and exhausted by problems or difficulties that you do not know what to do next. We row a lot and we never have time on our own. I'm at my wit's end, If you pit your wits against someone, you compete against them in a test of knowledge or intelligence. He has to pit his wits against an adversary who is cool, clever and cunning, If you have your wits about you or keep your wits about you, you are alert and ready to act in a difficult situation. Travellers need to keep their wits about them, emphasis You can use wits in expressions such as frighten someone out of their wits and scare the wits out of someone to emphasize that a person or thing worries or frightens someone very much. You scared us out of our wits. We heard you had an accident, know (Archaic), intellect; reason; cleverness; sharpness; one who is sharp, Wit is the ability to use words or ideas in an amusing, clever, and imaginative way. Boulding was known for his biting wit, If you describe someone as a wit, you mean that they have the ability to use words or ideas in an amusing, clever, and imaginative way. Holmes was gregarious, a great wit, a man of wide interests, If you say that someone has the wit to do something, you mean that they have the intelligence and understanding to make the right decision or take the right action in a particular situation. The information is there and waiting to be accessed by anyone with the wit to use it. = sense, You can refer to your ability to think quickly and cleverly in a difficult situation as your wits. She has used her wits to progress to the position she holds today, A mental faculty, or power of the mind; used in this sense chiefly in the plural, and in certain phrases; as, to lose one's wits; at one's wits' end, and the like, Felicitous association of objects not usually connected, so as to produce a pleasant surprise; also, A person of eminent sense or knowledge; a man of genius, fancy, or humor; one distinguished for bright or amusing sayings, for repartee, and the like, The ability to think quickly; mental cleverness, especially wittiness, Mind; intellect; understanding; sense, the power of readily combining objects in such a manner, To know; to learn, To wit is used to indicate that you are about to state or describe something more precisely. He'd like `happiness' to be given a new and more scientifically descriptive label, to wit `Major affective disorder, pleasant type'. = namely, a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter, mental ability; "he's got plenty of brains but no common sense", testifying for -, past of witness, plural of witness, third-person singular of witness, present participle of witness,
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To present personal religious testimony; to preach at (someone) or on behalf of - "Instead, Niebuhr's God was the God witnessed to in the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament, the Bible of the Christian world."
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One who has a personal knowledge of something - "As a witness to the event, I can tell you that he really said that."
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Attestation of a fact or event - "She can bear witness, since she was there at the time."
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Someone called to give evidence in a court - "The witness for the prosecution did not seem very credible."
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Something that serves as evidence; a sign
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To take as evidence
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To furnish proof of, to show - "This certificate witnesses his presence on that day."
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To see, note, or gain knowledge of - "He witnessed the accident."
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A witness to an event such as an accident or crime is a person who saw it. Witnesses to the crash say they saw an explosion just before the disaster No witnesses have come forward
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look on, see, observe; testify, vouch for, corroborate; be an eye-witness; note, notice fiil
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testifier; onlooker, bystander; eye-witness; testimony isim
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testis
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That which furnishes evidence or proof
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One who testifies in a cause, or gives evidence before a judicial tribunal; as, the witness in court agreed in all essential facts
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Attestation of a fact or an event; testimony
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One who is cognizant; a person who beholds, or otherwise has personal knowledge of, anything; as, an eyewitness; an earwitness
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A person who is present when something occurs or who gives evidence of something they have observed or heard or of something in which they have recognised expertise •Bail
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One who sees the execution of an instrument, and subscribes it for the purpose of confirming its authenticity by his testimony; one who witnesses a will, a deed, a marriage, or the like
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a person who testifies before a court under oath regarding what he has seen, heard or otherwise observed
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A person who has seen or knows something about the crime The victim is usually a witness, too
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"an overarching term drawing together proclamation (kerygma), community (koinonia), and service (diakonia)" defining "evangelistic ministry, as the core of ministry" (Guder 2000, 53)
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testimony by word or deed to your religious faith someone who sees an event and reports what happened (law) a person who attests to the genuineness of a document or signature by adding their own signature (law) a person who testifies under oath in a court of law be a witness to perceive or be contemporaneous with; "We found Republicans winning the offices"; "You'll see a lot of cheating in this school"; "I want to see results"; "The 1960 saw the rebellion of the younger generation against established traditions"; "I want to see results
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One who is called to court to testify in order to tell what he or she knows about the case (See, also, "Expert Witness")
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testifier isim
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To give testimony to; to testify to; to attest
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To see the execution of, as an instrument, and subscribe it for the purpose of establishing its authenticity; as, to witness a bond or a deed
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To bear testimony; to give evidence; to testify
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To see or know by personal presence; to have direct cognizance of
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A person who is in a position to provide information about the facts in an appeal
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(law) a person who testifies under oath in a court of law
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(law) a person who attests to the genuineness of a document or signature by adding their own signature
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testimony by word or deed to your religious faith
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be a witness to
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perceive or be contemporaneous with; "We found Republicans winning the offices"; "You'll see a lot of cheating in this school"; "I want to see results"; "The 1960 saw the rebellion of the younger generation against established traditions"; "I want to see results"
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A person called upon by either side in a lawsuit to give testimony before the court or jury
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person who observes the signing of a Will and/or codicil and attests to the signature of the Testator/rix
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a close observer; someone who looks at something (such as an exhibition of some kind); "the spectators applauded the performance"; "television viewers"; "sky watchers discovered a new star"
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someone who sees an event and reports what happened
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A witness is someone who appears in a court of law to say what they know about a crime or other event. In the next three or four days, eleven witnesses will be called to testify
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If you witness something, you see it happen. Anyone who witnessed the attack should call the police = see
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A witness is someone who writes their name on a document that you have signed, to confirm that it really is your signature
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If someone witnesses your signature on a document, they write their name after it, to confirm that it really is your signature. Ask a friend to witness your signature
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If a person or thing bears witness to something, they show or say that it exists or happened. Many of these poems bear witness to his years spent in India and China
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If you say that a place, period of time, or person witnessed a particular event or change, you mean that it happened in that place, during that period of time, or while that person was alive. India has witnessed many political changes in recent years = see
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A person who testifies to what he or she has seen, heard or otherwise experienced Also, a person who observes the signing of a will and is competent to testify that it is the will-maker's intended last will and testament
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A person who testifies before a legislative committee
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a person called to testify to provide information directly relevant to the incident resulting in long-term suspension recommendation
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One who testifies to what he has seen, heard, or otherwise observed
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A person called upon to give evidence in court
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anyone who testifies in court including the victim
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a witness is an individual present at an event such as a marriage or the signing of a document who can vouch that the event took place
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An independent person (not a beneficiary or executor or the spouse of either) who watches you sign your Will and then signs it in your presence You must have two witnesses to your Will for it to be valid
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A person who is present at the time other witnesses, notary and testator are all also present in his or her company and with proof of identification signs the Will and watches the other sign at the same time
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(RWT) A person called upon by either side in a lawsuit to give testimony before the court or jury
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One who testifies under oath to what he/she has seen, heard or otherwise observed
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The regular definition of this word is a person who perceives an event (by seeing, hearing, smelling or other sensory perception) The legal definition refers to the court-supervised recital of that sensory experience, in writing (deposition) or verbally (testimony)
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One who gives evidence in a case before the court A witness is compelled by law to appear on the time and date specified Failure to do so could result in a warrant being issued for the arrest of the witness Under the provisions of Section 37(1) of the Jury Act, an employer of a person, who is required to attend upon court as a witness, shall pay that person the same wages and give the same benefits as that person would have received if he/she had worked
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One who testifies to what (s)he has seen, heard or otherwise observed
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One who personally sees or perceives a thing; one who testifies as to what he has seen, heard, or otherwise observed
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A person appearing before an Investigative Committee to present evidence and answer questions
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a person who is sworn at a trial to provide evidence in a case
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Witness.
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wit
Know, be aware of - "She looked through these to God and was God’s priest."
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wit
Intellectual ability; faculty of thinking, reasoning - "Where she has gone to is beyond the wit of man to say."
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wit
A person who tells funny anecdotes or jokes; someone witty - "Your friend is quite a wit, isn't he?"
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wit
The senses
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wit
The ability to think quickly; mental cleverness, especially under short time constraints - "My father had a quick wit and a steady hand."
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wit
Intelligence; common sense - "The opportunity was right in front of you, and you didn't even have the wit to take it!"
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wit
Spoken humour, especially when clever or quick - "The best man's speech was hilarious, full of wit and charm."
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wit
Sanity - "He's gone completely out of his wits."
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witnessed
Simple past tense and past participle of witness
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wit
a witty amusing person who makes jokes
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A witness
teste
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A witness
test
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wit
emphasis If you say that you are at your wits' end, you are emphasizing that you are so worried and exhausted by problems or difficulties that you do not know what to do next. We row a lot and we never have time on our own. I'm at my wit's end
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wit
If you pit your wits against someone, you compete against them in a test of knowledge or intelligence. He has to pit his wits against an adversary who is cool, clever and cunning
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wit
If you have your wits about you or keep your wits about you, you are alert and ready to act in a difficult situation. Travellers need to keep their wits about them
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wit
emphasis You can use wits in expressions such as frighten someone out of their wits and scare the wits out of someone to emphasize that a person or thing worries or frightens someone very much. You scared us out of our wits. We heard you had an accident
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wit
know (Archaic) fiil
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wit
intellect; reason; cleverness; sharpness; one who is sharp isim
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wit
Wit is the ability to use words or ideas in an amusing, clever, and imaginative way. Boulding was known for his biting wit
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wit
If you describe someone as a wit, you mean that they have the ability to use words or ideas in an amusing, clever, and imaginative way. Holmes was gregarious, a great wit, a man of wide interests
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wit
If you say that someone has the wit to do something, you mean that they have the intelligence and understanding to make the right decision or take the right action in a particular situation. The information is there and waiting to be accessed by anyone with the wit to use it. = sense
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wit
You can refer to your ability to think quickly and cleverly in a difficult situation as your wits. She has used her wits to progress to the position she holds today
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wit
A mental faculty, or power of the mind; used in this sense chiefly in the plural, and in certain phrases; as, to lose one's wits; at one's wits' end, and the like
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wit
Felicitous association of objects not usually connected, so as to produce a pleasant surprise; also
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wit
A person of eminent sense or knowledge; a man of genius, fancy, or humor; one distinguished for bright or amusing sayings, for repartee, and the like
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wit
The ability to think quickly; mental cleverness, especially wittiness
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wit
Mind; intellect; understanding; sense
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wit
the power of readily combining objects in such a manner
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wit
To know; to learn
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wit
To wit is used to indicate that you are about to state or describe something more precisely. He'd like `happiness' to be given a new and more scientifically descriptive label, to wit `Major affective disorder, pleasant type'. = namely
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wit
a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter
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wit
mental ability; "he's got plenty of brains but no common sense"
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 witness kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. witness kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan witness kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.