(Askeri) ALT TARET: Bombardıman tayyarelerinin alt kısımlarında bulunan, yuvarlak biçimde makineli tüfek tareti. Alt taret; bir makineli tüf eğin her istikamette ateş edebilmesini sağlayacak şekilde mekanik olarak hareket eder. Buna yalnız "turret" de denir
(Askeri) TAKATLE DÖNER TARET; TAKATLE DÖNER KULE: Özellikle tank, uçak, gemi vesairede motorla işler bir tertibatla döndürülen kule, taret veya kapalı top kaidesi. Taret veya kulenin içinde bulunan top, taret veya kule ile birliktedöner
(Askeri) TARET: İçinde bir veya birkaç silah bulunan ve tabya, harp gemisi ve uçaklara yerleştirilen, kubbe veya silindir şeklinde zırhlı yapı. Taretlerin çoğu, dönebilecek şekilde imal edilir. Buna (gun turret) de denir
(Askeri) GÖZETLEME MEVZİİ: Arada bulunan bir tepe veya bir örtü vasıtasıyla bir tankın gövde ve kulesinin düşmana karşı gizlenmiş olarak bulunduğu durum
A movable building, of a square form, consisting of ten or even twenty stories and sometimes one hundred and twenty cubits high, usually moved on wheels, and employed in approaching a fortified place, for carrying soldiers, engines, ladders, casting bridges, and other necessaries
A turntable that is rotated to move a feed and/or front end receiver package to the focus of an antenna, or to move a (usually tertiary) mirror into the optical path of an antenna
There is always a controversy about whether a particular rotating gun emplacement should be called a "Turret" or a "Mount " In the USN, the difference between a turret and a mount is that a "Turret" is built into the ship, has a stalk that extends well below the weather deck and includes a barbette while a "Mount" is not part of the ship's structure and does not include a barbette As a general rule, 5 inch (12 7 cm) and smaller guns are in "Mounts" while 6 inch (15 2 cm) and larger guns are in "Turrets " Other navies had similar distinctions
{i} small tower often on a larger structure (castle, building, etc.); rotating mount of a gun or cannon (on tanks, warships, etc.); pivoted mechanism for holding and using different lathe tools; tower used in breaching or scaling a wall
A small tower, often at the corner of a building Common in Queen Anne Styles among others A turret is a smaller structure while a tower begins at ground level
A small tower; more specifically the buttressed corner of a keep that provided extra protection to a most vulnerable part of the building (A corner, if 'blind' to the field, could be undermined and bring down parts of two walls )