a-seal teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Caribbean monk seal
- Monachus tropicalis, an extinct seal once native to the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico
- Christmas seal
- A charity label placed on mail during the Christmas season as a form of cinderella stamp
- Great Seal
- The official public seal of any of several nations
- SEAL
- A member of the Navy SEALs
- SEAL
- Sea, Air, Land (used as a name of a military unit)
- Saimaa ringed seal
- A subspecies of the ringed seal, lives only in Lake Saimaa in Finland
- Solomon's seal
- A mystic symbol in the form of a hexagram
- Solomon's seal
- Any flowering plant of the genus Polygonatum
- break the seal
- When consuming alcohol, to urinate for the first time, which leads to needing to urinate more and more often
- broad seal
- The public seal of a nation, especially the British Great Seal of the Realm
- common seal
- A seal living in the northern Atlantic and Pacific oceans
- company seal
- A device formerly used to impress a company's name or symbol (or both) onto a dollop of soft red wax attached to a legal instrument, where two directors or one director and the secretary can sign as witnesses, thus executing the instrument
- eared seal
- A seal belonging in the Otariidae family; a fur seal or a sea lion
- earless seal
- Any of the seals in the taxonomic family Phocidae characterized by lacking external ear flaps; true seals
- elephant seal
- A large marine mammal of the genus Mirounga, which is the largest of the pinnipeds
- fur seal
- A marine mammal of either of the genera Arctocephalus or Callorhinus of the eared seal family Otariidae. They differ from the true seals by having small, visible ears and the ability to walk on land
- gray seal
- Alternative spelling of grey seal
- great seal
- The main seal of a nation or state that symbolizes its authority, and with which official documents are stamped
- grey seal
- A seal species (Halichoerus grypus)
- harbor seal
- A species of true seals, Phoca vitulina
- harbour seal
- Alternative spelling of harbor seal
- harp seal
- A species (Phoca groenlandica) of true seal (or earless seal) found in the northernmost Atlantic Ocean and adjacent parts of the Arctic Ocean
- heat-seal
- To enclose (something) in plastic wrapping and make an airtight seal by applying heat to fuse the edges of the wrapping together
- hooded seal
- An arctic seal, Cystophora christata, notable for the fleshy bulge on its forehead and nose
- hot seal
- The adhesive backing itself
It was easy add his the new merit badge to his uniform because the patch had a hot seal backing.
- hot seal
- A method of applying a piece of embroidered or printed fabric (i.e. a patch) to another piece of fabric by using a heat activated adhesive
Little Johnnie's mother hot sealed his merit badge to his uniform.
- labyrinth seal
- A type of mechanical seal that provides a tortuous path to help prevent leakage
- leopard seal
- A large pinniped mammal (Hydrurga leptonyx) found in the Antarctic
- monk seal
- A seal of the genus Monachus
- privacy seal
- An online branded trust mark or seal of approval logo which is used by third party site verification entities, (i.e. Truste, BBB, Guardian e-Commerce, etc.) to help protect online consumers by identifying Web sites that have been verified for protecting the online privacy and safety of consumers
- privy seal
- The personal seal of a monarch, especially a British monarch
- ribbon seal
- A species (Histriophoca fasciata) of true seal (or earless seal) found in the arctic and subarctic regions of the North Pacific Ocean
- ringed seal
- An earless seal inhabiting arctic and subarctic coasts
- seal
- Security against unauthorized tampering
The spot-check found three containers with broken seals.
- seal
- An impression of a stamp on wax or paper
- seal
- A stamp used to impress a design on a soft substance such as wax
- seal
- To fasten (something) so that it cannot be opened without visible damage
The cover is sealed. If anyone tries to open it, we'll know about it.
- seal
- A chakra
- seal
- (Discuss() this sense) A design or ensignia usually associated with an organization or an official role
The front of the podium bore the presidential seal.
- seal
- To tie up animals (especially cattle) in their stalls
- seal
- A tight closure, secure against leakage
Close the lid tightly to get a good seal.
- seal
- To guarantee
The last-minute goal sealed United's win.
- seal
- To close securely to prevent leakage
I've sealed the bottle to keep the contents fresh.
- seal
- (Discuss() this sense) Something which will be visibly damaged if a covering or container is opened, and which may or may not bear an official design
The result was declared invalid, as the seal on the meter had been broken.
- seal
- Anything that secures or authenticates
- seal
- To place a notation of one's next move in a sealed envelope to be opened after an adjournment
After thinking for half an hour, the champion sealed his move.
- seal
- Confirmation or an indication of confirmation
Her clothes always had her mom's seal of approval.
- seal
- A pinniped, particularly an earless seal (true seal) or eared seal
The seals in the harbor looked better than they smelled.
- seal
- Something designed to prevent liquids or gases from leaking through a joint
The canister is leaking. I think the main seal needs to be replaced.
- seal
- To prevent people or vehicles from crossing (something)
The border has been sealed until the fugitives are found.
- seal
- To hunt seals
They're organizing a protest against sealing.
- seal
- To place in a sealed container
I've sealed the documents in this envelope.
- seal
- To place a seal on (a document)
- seal dribble
- In soccer, a move where the player bounces the ball on their head while running at the opponent
- seal point
- A dark brown area of fur on the ears, face, legs, and tail of a Siamese cat
- seal ring
- A finger ring with an engraved (often heraldic) seal, fit for sealing documents by pressing it in sealing wax or a similar substance
- seal script
- An ancient style of Chinese calligraphy
- seal the deal
- to come to an agreement, to finalise the deal
- southern elephant seal
- A large species of seal, found mainly around Antarctica, scientific name Mirounga leonina, famous for being the largest ever carnivorous mammal
- true seal
- Any of the seals in the taxonomic family Phocidae; earless seal
- under seal
- Legally bound not to be disclosed
The terms of the settlement will remain under seal indefinitely.
- under seal
- Bearing a seal
The letter was delivered under seal.
- seal up
- If you seal something up, you close it completely so that nothing can get in or out. The paper was used for sealing up holes in walls and roofs
- seal
- {n} a stamp, mark, confirmation, sea-calf
- seal
- {v} to fix a seal, close, settle, confirm, ratify
- seal coating
- Seal Coating is a thin asphaltic treatment used to protect pavement surfaces from UV radiation and oxidation. Seal coat may contain asphaltic or coal tar emulsion, fillers, sand, polymer latex, fibres and pigments. It depends on the application
- seal off
- Impose a blockade on, blockade
- seal off
- Make tight; secure against leakage, seal
- shaft seal
- (Or oil seal): In machines, a device that prevents the passage of fluids along a rotating shaft. Seals are necessary when a shaft extends from a housing (enclosure) containing oil, such as a pump or a gearbox. Leather, synthetic rubber, and silicones are among the materials used for the sealing ring
- weddell seal
- (Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) The Weddell seal, Leptonychotes weddellii, is a relatively large and abundant true seal (family: Phocidae) with a circumpolar distribution surrounding Antarctica
- weddell seal
- (Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) A vocal Antarctic hair seal (Leptonychotes weddelli) noted for its deep dives in search of food
The Weddell seal can swim under the ice.
- Great Seal of the United States
- the official seal (=special circle-shaped design) printed on important documents, used to prove that a document is from the US government. The seal has two sides, and on one side is a picture of a bald eagle (=the national bird of the US) , and on the other side is a picture of a pyramid with an eye above it. Both designs are printed on the back of a one-dollar bill
- Hudson seal
- Muskrat fur that is dyed, plucked, and sheared to resemble seal
- Lord Privy Seal
- an important member of the British cabinet who is not responsible for a particular government department
- Privy Seal
- Lord Privy Seal, the
- Solomon's seal
- Any of about 25 species of herbaceous perennials that make up the genus Polygonatum (lily family), found throughout the Northern Hemisphere. Particularly common in the eastern U.S. and Canada, Solomon's seals flourish in damp, wooded areas and thickets. They have thick, creeping rhizomes and tall, drooping stems, and they bear clusters of white or greenish-white flowers in the axils of leaves, followed by drooping red berries. Similar plants of the genus Smilacina, known as false Solomon's seal, bear their flower clusters at the tips of the stems
- affixing a seal
- attaching a seal
- broad seal
- The great seal of England; the public seal of a country or state
- common seal
- small spotted seal of coastal waters of the northern hemisphere
- eared seal
- pinniped mammal having external ear flaps and hind limbs used for locomotion on land; valued for its soft underfur
- earless seal
- any of several seals lacking external ear flaps and having a stiff hairlike coat with hind limbs reduced to swimming flippers
- fur seal
- Any of several eared seals of the genera Callorhinus or Arctocephalus, having thick, soft underfur that is valued commercially for use in making garments. Any of nine species of eared seals valued for their fur, especially the chestnut-coloured underfur. Fur seals live in groups and feed on fish and other animals. They were driven nearly to extinction by fur hunters, and most species are now protected by law. The northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) is a migratory inhabitant of northern seas. The male is deep brown, has a grayish mane, grows to about 10 ft (3 m) long, and weighs about 650 lb (300 kg). The dark gray female is much smaller. The eight species of southern fur seals (genus Arctocephalus) occur in the Southern Hemisphere and on Guadalupe Island, Mex. They are brown or black and average 4-6 ft (1.2-1.8 m) long
- fur seal
- eared seal of the southern hemisphere; the thick soft underfur is the source of sealskin fur seal of the northern Pacific
- great seal
- The principal seal of a government or state, with which official documents are stamped
- harbor seal
- A hair seal (Phoca vitulina) of coastal waters of the Northern Hemisphere, having a spotted coat
- harp seal
- common arctic seal; the young are all white
- heat seal
- A flexible adhesive connector bonded by heat to the contact edge of the glass
- heat seal
- In cabling, a method of sealing a tape wrap jacket by means of thermal fusion
- heat seal
- A method of sealing a tape wrap jacket by thermal fusion
- hooded seal
- A seal (Cystophora cristata) of northern seas, having a grayish, spotted coat and an inflatable hoodlike or bladderlike pouch in the region of the nose. Also called bladdernose
- hudson seal
- muskrat fur dressed to simulate sealskin
- leopard seal
- or sea leopard Species (Hydrurga leptonyx) of generally solitary earless seal (family Phocidae) found in Antarctic and sub-Antarctic regions. It is the only seal that feeds on penguins, young seals, and other warm-blooded prey. It is slender and has a long head and long three-cusped cheek teeth. Named for its black-spotted gray coat, it attains a maximum length and weight (greater in the female) of about 12 ft (3.5 m) and 840 lbs (380 kg). It has a reputation for ferocity but is not known to make unprovoked attacks on humans
- lord privy seal
- the senior cabinet minister in the British Cabinet who has no official duties
- oil seal
- (Automotive) round metal disk covered in rubber or plastic with a center hole used to prevent grease and oil from leaking out
- one way seal
- rubber band that allows a substance to pass only in one direction
- privy seal
- privacy seal, privacy stamp
- privy seal guard
- guard responsible for guarding the government seal
- rubber seal
- gasket made from rubber
- seal
- {f} fasten, secure, close tightly; imprint, stamp; approve, authorize; determine, set, decide
- seal
- Among the Mormons, to confirm or set apart as a second or additional wife
- seal
- Any aquatic carnivorous mammal of the families Phocidæ and Otariidæ
- seal
- affix a seal to; "seal the letter
- seal
- close with or as if with a seal; "She sealed the letter with hot wax"
- seal
- That which confirms, ratifies, or makes stable; that which authenticates; that which secures; assurance
- seal
- To set or affix a seal to; hence, to authenticate; to confirm; to ratify; to establish; as, to seal a deed
- seal
- French seel, a signet: Latin sigillum, a mark, seal 1 An instrument for impressing wax made to adhere to a writing, in attestation of the genuineness of the writing or of the deliberation with which it is executed The impression produced with such instrument Among the Saxons, seals were little used; their method was for such as could write to subscribe their names, and, whether they could write or not, to affix the sign of the cross
- seal
- the pelt or fur (especially the underfur) of a seal; "a coat of seal"
- seal
- A design associated with a government or governmental office
- seal
- Aquatic carnivore with webbed flippers and a streamlined body. Earless (true, or hair) seals (of the family Phocidae, with 18 species) lack external ears. In water, they propel themselves by side-to-side strokes of the hind limbs and maneuver with their forelimbs. On land, they wriggle on their belly or pull themselves with their forelimbs. Earless species include the elephant seal, harbour seal, harp seal, and leopard seal. The eared seals (family Otariidae, with five species of sea lion and nine of fur seal) have external ears and longer flippers. In water, they propel themselves by a rowing motion of their forelimbs; on land, they use all four limbs to move about. cylinder seal elephant seal fur seal harbour seal harp seal leopard seal oil seal shaft seal Solomon's seal
- seal
- An impression on malleable material, usually wax (sometimes metal, and later commonly shellac or a paper wafer), made by a matrix engraved with images or characters indicating personal or corporate identity and used as a means of authentication Term applied equally to the impression as to the object itself as well Attached to a document by cords or slips of parchment (pendant), or applied directly to a document (en placard)
- seal
- To fasten with a seal; to attach together with a wafer, wax, or other substance causing adhesion; as, to seal a letter
- seal
- See 2d Seal, 5
- seal
- To encipher a record containing several fields in such a way that the fields cannot be individually replaced without either knowledge of the encryption key or leaving evidence of tampering
- seal
- A pinniped, a large marine fish-eating mammal
- seal
- a device incised to make an impression; used to secure a closing or to authenticate documents
- seal
- Metal strip and lead fastener used for locking freight car or truck doors Seals are numbered for record purposes
- seal
- A formed material or paste-like substance used to prevent leaks
- seal
- an agreement entered into under seal (a deed) means that the agreement does not require consideration
- seal
- hunt seals
- seal
- hunt seals close with or as if with a seal; "She sealed the letter with hot wax"
- seal
- a stamp affixed to a document (as to attest to its authenticity or to seal it); "the warrant bore the sheriff's seal"
- seal
- Reserve parachutes have a small lead seal on a piece of red thread around the closing pin This seal indicates the reserve has not been opened since it left the riggers hands
- seal
- a member of a Naval Special Warfare unit who is trained for unconventional warfare; "SEAL is an acronym for Sea Air and Land"
- seal
- To place a notation of ones next move in a sealed envelope to be opened after an adjournment
- seal
- An impression made to attest the execution of an instrument
- seal
- Something which will be visibly damaged if a covering or container is opened, and which may or may not bear an official design
- seal
- A device used to impress a pattern upon paper or wax Also the pattern made by this device
- seal
- any of numerous marine mammals that come on shore to breed; chiefly of cold regions
- seal
- an indication of approved or superior status
- seal
- Any device that prevents the passage of a fluid
- seal
- Simple and Efficient Adaptation Layer
- seal
- SEa, Air, and Land This is the acronym that is the name of the US Navy's elite special operations program There are several SEAL units in operation, each having their own area of specialty (desert warfare, jungle warfare, counter-terrorism, etc )
- seal
- the wax or wafer placed on a letter or other closed paper, etc
- seal 1
- When you seal an envelope, you close it by folding part of it over and sticking it down, so that it cannot be opened without being torn. He sealed the envelope and put on a stamp Write your letter and seal it in a blank envelope A courier was despatched with two sealed envelopes
- seal 1
- If something sets or puts the seal on something, it makes it definite or confirms how it is going to be. Such a visit may set the seal on a new relationship between the two governments
- seal 1
- If you seal a container or an opening, you cover it with something in order to prevent air, liquid, or other material getting in or out. If you seal something in a container, you put it inside and then close the container tightly. She merely filled the containers, sealed them with a cork, and pasted on labels a lid to seal in heat and keep food moist. a hermetically sealed, leak-proof packet
- seal 1
- A seal is something such as a piece of sticky paper or wax that is fixed to a container or door and must be broken before the container or door can be opened. The seal on the box broke when it fell from its hiding-place
- seal 1
- A seal is a device or a piece of material, for example in a machine, which closes an opening tightly so that air, liquid, or other substances cannot get in or out. Check seals on fridges and freezers regularly
- seal 1
- Please look at category
- seal 2
- A seal is a large animal with a rounded body and flat legs called flippers. Seals eat fish and live in and near the sea, usually in cold parts of the world
- seal hole
- air hole in a ship
- seal number
- A metal, steel, aluminum, or plastic device affixed to the locking mechanism of the door to a truck, railcar, airline igloo or container See Container Seal
- seal of approval
- formal signature, permission, authorization
- seal off
- make tight; secure against leakage; "seal the windows"
- seal off
- If one object or area is sealed off from another, there is a physical barrier between them, so that nothing can pass between them. Windows are usually sealed off. the anti-personnel door that sealed off the chamber
- seal oil
- a pale yellow to red-brown fatty oil obtained from seal blubber; used in making soap and dressing leather and as a lubricant
- set one's seal
- sign with the use of an official seal
- solomon's seal
- {i} plant that belongs to the lily family with bell-like drooping greenish or yellow flowers; Star of David, six-pointed symbol that looks like a star formed by two overlapping triangles to form a hexagram