a-knife teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Bowie knife
- A large sheath knife
- Stanley knife
- A utility knife, originally one made by Stanley Works
- Swiss Army knife
- A brand of multi-function pocket knife or multitool, having a blade and various tools, such as screwdrivers and can openers
- boot knife
- A knife that is carried inside a sheath in or attached to a boot. Usually having a fixed double edged blade
- bread knife
- A knife, with a serrated edge, designed to cut bread; sometimes slots into a bread board
- bring a knife to a gunfight
- To enter into a confrontation or other challenging situation without being adequately equipped or prepared
e can shoot down missiles. . . . Our Kingfisher sonars can detect mines. . . . Our ships are hardened against chemical and biological weapons. But how do you stop a torpedo? . . . The best engineers in the business agree that nearly every class of torpedo currently being deployed has the capacity to sink one of our ships with a single shot. . . . e are the poor bastards that brought a knife to a gunfight.
- butcher knife
- Alternative spelling of butchers' knife
- butcher's knife
- Alternative spelling of butchers' knife
- butchers knife
- Alternative spelling of butchers' knife
- butchers' knife
- A large, sharp knife, used by the butcher for hacking meats
He came after me with a butchers' knife.
- butter knife
- A sharp-pointed, dull edged knife, often with a sabre shape, used only to serve out pats of butter from a central butter dish to individual diners' plates
- carving knife
- A large knife designed for cutting cooked turkey and similar dishes
- catch a falling knife
- To buy an instrument whose price is falling rapidly
Buying that stock now would be catching a falling knife. Wait until you see capitulation.
- clasp-knife
- a knife with a folding blade or blades
- clicking knife
- A small knife, with a thin, flexible blade, used by clickers to cut leather
- cut like a knife
- To be very sharp (of a character, or remark)
- cut like a knife
- To sting severely, to cause a sensation of stinging, especially said of cold weather
To my small hands, the bitter wind cuts like a knife, freezing my fingers and numbing my circulation.''.
- diving knife
- a type of knife
- falling knife
- A stock whose price has dropped rapidly
- fish-knife
- A table knife with spatula-shaped blade designed for eating fish
- fish-knife
- A knife for cutting and serving fish at table
- flick knife
- A type of knife which has the blade mounted on a pivot so that it can fold back sideways into the handle when not in use, but can flick out straight, usually with a spring-loaded mechanism, when required. Such a knife is almost always used as a weapon
- flick-knife
- Alternative spelling of flick knife
- folding knife
- A class of knives in which the blade or multiple blades can be folded inside the handle
- gamma knife
- a machine that produces and focuses beams of gamma-rays at a specific location in the body, used to burn-up diseased tissues
- hunting knife
- A large knife designed for use in hunting animals, usually with a smooth front edge and a back edge that is partially serrated for sawing
I had had to discard my rifle before I commenced the rapid descent of the cliff, so that now I was armed only with a hunting knife, and this I whipped from its scabbard as Kho leaped toward me.
- jack-knife
- The front-dive pike, in which the body folds and unfolds
It took me hundreds of dives to master even the simple jackknife.
- jack-knife
- A semi-trailer truck accident in which the vehicle mimics the closing of a jack-knife
I have seen several jack-knives along that dangerous stretch of road.
- jack-knife
- Alternative spelling of jackknife
- jack-knife
- A compact folding knife
He kept a jack-knife in his pocket for various tasks.
- jack-knife
- To cause a semi-trailer truck to fold like a jackknife in a traffic accident
Before I knew what was happening, I'd jack-knifed like nobody's business.
- jack-knife
- To fold in the middle, as a jackknife does
The cat jackknifed in the air and landed gracefully on its feet.
- knife
- To betray, especially in the context of a political slate
- knife
- A utensil or a tool designed for cutting, consisting of a flat piece of hard material, usually steel or other metal (the blade), usually sharpened on one edge, attached to a handle. The blade may be pointed for piercing
- knife
- To use a knife to injure or kill by stabbing, slashing, or otherwise using the sharp edge of the knife as a weapon
- knife
- A weapon designed with the aforementioned specifications intended for slashing and/or stabbing and too short to be called a sword. A dagger
- knife
- To cut through as if with a knife
- knife
- Any blade-like part in a tool or a machine designed for cutting, such as the knives for a chipper
- knife
- To positively ignore, especially in order to denigrate. compare cut
- knife
- To cut with a knife
- knife pleat
- A type of sharply pressed pleating, especially in a skirt or kilt, in which all of the folds are turned in one direction, with each pleat being three (3) layers of fabric thick
- knife rest
- A piece of kitchenware for resting a used knife without touching the table
- molecular knife
- an enzyme capable of removing specific genes from a sequence of DNA, especially to disable the replication of a virus
- not the sharpest knife in the drawer
- One who is deficient in intelligence; a dimwit
man who has lost every dollar he ever won–somewhere north of $US300 million ($370 million)–and done three years for rape is possibly not the sharpest knife in the drawer, nor the most likeable.
- palette knife
- In painting, a small, edge-less, more or less flexible steel blade used to mix paint on a palette and sometimes to apply paint to a surface
- paring knife
- A thin-bladed knife intended for coring and paring (peeling) fruit such as apples
- radio knife
- a surgical instrument that uses a high-frequency electric arc to cut through or cut away tissue and at the same time sterilize the edges of the wound and seal cut blood vessels
- sheath knife
- A knife with a fixed blade that fits in a sheath to protect the knife and its owner
- steak knife
- A knife with a sharp, narrow, and serrated blade designed for cutting tougher foods such as cooked meats
- survival knife
- a knife used for chipping
- take a knife to a gunfight
- Alternative form of bring a knife to a gunfight
- tanto knife
- a speciality knife
- under the knife
- Undergoing a surgical procedure
Rumor that De Gaulle was under the knife sped through Paris. . . . Finally, at 7:15 p.m., a bulletin signed by three doctors said that De Gaulle had been operated on that morning.
- under the knife
- Into surgery
I don't want to go under the knife again. I had 10 surgeries as a player and many more since, Dykstra said.
- utility knife
- A cutting tool that has an interchangeable blade that retracts into the handle
- Stanley knife
- {i} metal or plastic flat knife with retractable blades, box cutter knife
- chopping knife
- {n} a knife to cut or mince meat
- knife
- {n} knives, a steel, utensil to cut with
- go under the knife
- have surgery
- go under the knife
- having surgery
- hay knife
- A sharp instrument used in cutting hay out of a stack or mow
- jack knife
- (noun) a knife with a blade that folds into its handle
- jack knife
- (noun) a dive in which you bend at the waist when you are in the air
- jack knife
- (verb) if a large vehicle with two parts jack-knifes, it slides out of control and the back part swings towards the front part. "The truck skidded on the ice and jack-knifed."
- A knife
- chiv
- A knife
- shive
- A knife
- cuttle
- Batangas knife
- {i} butterfly knife, Balisong, Philippine folding pocket knife with a blade and two moveable half handles
- Stanley knife
- A Stanley knife is a very sharp knife that is used to cut materials such as carpet and paper. It consists of a small blade fixed in the end of a handle. a very sharp knife with a small triangular blade that you use in activities such as decorating and woodwork American Equivalent: exacto knife
- blunt knife
- dull knife, knife which is not sharp
- bowie knife
- Also, by extension, any large sheath knife
- bowie knife
- It was named from its inventor, Colonel James Bowie
- bowie knife
- A knife with a strong blade from ten to fifteen inches long, and double-edged near the point; used as a hunting knife, and formerly as a weapon in the southwestern part of the United States
- box cutter knife
- {i} metal or plastic flat knife with retractable blades, Stanley knife
- butcher knife
- A heavy-duty knife with a broad sharp blade used for cutting meat
- butcher knife
- special large knife used by a butcher for cutting meat
- butter knife
- a small knife with a dull blade; for cutting or spreading butter
- carving knife
- a large knife used to carve cooked meat
- case knife
- A proteid substance present in both the animal and the vegetable kingdom
- case knife
- Its reactions resemble those of alkali albumin
- case knife
- In the animal kingdom it is chiefly found in milk, and constitutes the main part of the curd separated by rennet; in the vegetable kingdom it is found more or less abundantly in the seeds of leguminous plants
- case knife
- A large table knife; so called from being formerly kept in a case
- case knife
- a knife with a fixed blade that is carried in a sheath a metal blade with a handle; used as cutlery
- cheese knife
- type of knife specially designed for cutting cheese
- clasp knife
- pocket knife, small portable knife
- craft knife
- craft knives a very sharp knife used for cutting paper, thin wood etc
- devein knife
- {i} knife used to remove the large dark thread-like dorsal vein from a shrimp
- drawing knife
- A tool used for the purpose of making an incision along the path a saw is to follow, to prevent it from tearing the surface of the wood
- fig knife
- knife used for cutting figs
- fish knife
- a small table knife with a spatula blade used for eating fish
- fish knife
- A fish knife is a knife that you use when you eat fish. It has a wide flat blade and does not have a sharp edge
- flick knife
- a knife with a blade inside the handle that moves quickly into position when you press a button American Equivalent: switchblade
- flick-knife
- A flick-knife is a knife with a blade in the handle that springs out when a button is pressed
- flick-knife
- a knife with the blade hidden in the handle; the blade springs out when a button is pressed
- folding pocket-knife
- penknife that can be folded shut for safe and compact storage
- fruit knife
- small sharp knife for peeling and cutting fruit
- get one's knife into
- cut, operate; insert a knife into
- hunting knife
- knife used to skin and cut up game
- jack-knife
- If a truck that is in two parts jack-knifes, the back part swings around at a sharp angle to the front part in an uncontrolled way as the truck is moving. His vehicle jack-knifed, and crashed across all three lanes of the opposite carriageway. if a large vehicle with two parts jack-knifes, it slides out of control and the back part swings towards the front part
- knife
- TR>
- knife
- knives is the plural form of the noun and knifes is the third person singular of the present tense of the verb
- knife
- To knife someone means to attack and injure them with a knife. Dawson takes revenge on the man by knifing him to death
- knife
- A knife is a tool for cutting or a weapon and consists of a flat piece of metal with a sharp edge on the end of a handle. a knife and fork Two robbers broke into her home, held a knife to her throat and stole her savings
- knife
- A sword or dagger
- knife
- n pisau
- knife
- If a lot of people want something unpleasant to happen to someone, for example if they want them to lose their job, you can say that the knives are out for that person. The Party knives are out for the leader
- knife
- A sixth level spell that creates any kind of knife (that is shorter than a short sword)
- knife
- To stab in the back; to try to defeat by underhand means, esp
- knife
- is the emblem borne by St Agatha, St Albert, and St Christina The flaying knife is the emblem of St Bartholomew, because he was flayed A sacrificing knife is borne in Christian art by St Zadkiel, the angel The knife of academic knots Chrysippos, so called because he was the keenest disputant of his age (B C 280-207) War to the knife Deadly strife
- knife
- use a knife on; "The victim was knifed to death"
- knife
- any long thin projection that is transient; "tongues of flame licked at the walls"; "rifles exploded quick knives of fire into the dark"
- knife
- A surgeon's knife is a piece of equipment used to cut flesh and organs during operations. It is made of metal and has a very thin sharp edge. = scalpel If you go under the knife, you have an operation in a hospital. Kelly was about to go under the knife when her surgeon stopped everything. see also carving knife, fish knife, flick knife, palette knife, paper knife, pocket knife, Stanley knife
- knife
- edge tool used as a cutting instrument; has a pointed blade with a sharp edge and a handle a weapon with a handle and blade with a sharp point use a knife on; "The victim was knifed to death
- knife
- Any flint, stone, or other tool with a sharp edge for cutting
- knife
- If someone does something like a knife through butter or like a hot knife through butter, they do it very easily. Spending by Japanese companies has left them more competitive than companies in other nations. They will be cutting through the competition like a hot knife through butter
- knife
- {f} cut or stab with a knife; cut through as with a knife, move through as with a knife
- knife
- kouto
- knife
- edge tool used as a cutting instrument; has a pointed blade with a sharp edge and a handle
- knife
- To cut or stab with a knife
- knife
- Noun: The part of a serger which cuts the edge of the fabric as it passes through to the needle
- knife
- meet
- knife
- in politics; to vote or work secretly against (a candidate of one's own party)
- knife
- el cuchillo
- knife
- To positively ignore, especially in order to denigrate. cf cut
- knife edge
- the sharp cutting side of the blade of a knife
- knife edge
- blade of a knife, sharp side of a knife
- knife pleat
- a single pleat turned in one direction
- knife switch
- A switch consisting of one or more knifelike pieces hinged at one end and making contact near the other with flat gripping springs
- knife-drawing
- pulling out of knives, use of knives for violent activity
- knife-edge
- You can use knife-edge to refer to something that is very exciting or tense because you do not know what is going to happen next. Tonight's knife-edge vote could be uncomfortably close
- knife-edge
- To be on a knife-edge means to be in a situation in which nobody knows what is going to happen next, or in which one thing is just as likely to happen as another. The game is poised on a knife-edge. One mistake or one piece of good luck could decide it
- knife-edge
- a narrow boundary; "he lived on a knife-edge between genius and insanity
- knife-edge
- a narrow boundary; "he lived on a knife-edge between genius and insanity"
- knife-grinder
- device which sharpens knives; person who sharpens knives
- palette knife
- An artist's knife with a thin, dull, flexible blade, used for mixing, scrapping or applying paint It can be made of plastic or metal
- palette knife
- A palette knife is used for mixing paint, for applying thick impasto and for scraping back areas of wet oil colour in order to make corrections It should ideally have a forged blade that diminishes in thickness towards the tip giving it great flexibility The handle is sturdy, comfortable and firmly attached to the blade Such knives are expensive and often painters use palette knives that have a simple pressed blade Steel blade knives are used with oil paint
- paring knife
- a small sharp knife used in paring fruits or vegetables
- pocket knife
- small knife with blades that can be folded into the handle
- putty knife
- A tool having a flat flexible blade, used for scraping and applying putty
- run a knife into a person
- stab someone with a knife
- sheath knife
- A knife that has a fixed blade and fits into a sheath. a knife with a fixed blade that is carried in a sheath
- spalding knife
- A spalting knife
- spalting knife
- A knife used in splitting codfish
- steak knife
- A table knife with a sharp, usually serrated steel blade
- table knife
- eating utensil used for cutting food
- trench knife
- a knife with a double-edged blade for hand-to-hand fighting
- war to the knife
- total war, all-out war
- you could cut it with a knife
- very uncomfortable atmosphere, very tense atmosphere, extremely tense tension in a room; something very thick (hot and humid air, heavy accent)