kol saati; cep saati

listen to the pronunciation of kol saati; cep saati
التركية - الإنجليزية
{i} watch
A particular time period when guarding is kept

The second watch of the night began at midnight.

To act as a lookout
To observe over a period of time; to notice or pay attention

Put a little baking soda in some vinegar and watch what happens.

{v} not to sleep, to guard, tend, observe
An object created by you via the StockAlerts com web site to watch the market for a condition that you specify and send an alert when that condition is satisfied
a purposeful surveillance to guard or observe a small portable timepiece a period of time (4 or 2 hours) during which some of a ship's crew are on duty the period during which someone (especially a guard) is on duty observe with attention; "They watched as the murderer was executed"
Portable timepiece designed to be worn on the wrist or carried in the pocket. The first watches appeared shortly after 1500, when the mainspring (see spring) was invented as a replacement for weights in driving clocks. The progressive miniaturization of electronic components in recent decades has made possible the development of all-electronic watches, in which the necessary transistors, resistors, capacitors, and other elements are all on one or several miniature integrated circuits, or chips. Such circuitry enables them to perform several timekeeping functions and also makes possible digital readouts of the time
clock in one's hand
To serve the purpose of a watchman by floating properly in its place; said of a buoy
A period of time on duty, usually four hours in length; the officers and crew who tend the working of a vessel during the same watch
1 A period of duty to which part of a boat's crew is assigned; 2 Crew members assigned for a period of duty
follow with the eyes or the mind; "Keep an eye on the baby, please!"; "The world is watching Sarajevo"; "She followed the men with the binoculars
a period of time (4 or 2 hours) during which some of a ship's crew are on duty
Gulliver's watch, and timepieces in general, figure in the first voyage only Samuel Johnson, who otherwise gave Swift little credit, "allowed very great merit to the inventory of articles found in the pockets of the Man Mountain, particularly the description of his watch, which it was conjectured was his God, as he consulted it upon all occasions " [Boswell's Life of Johnson, Friday, 24 March 1775] "a wonderful kind of Engine which appeared to be a Globe, half Silver, and half of some transparent Metal we saw certain strange Figures circularly drawn which made an incessant Noise like that of a Water-Mill And we conjecture it is either some unknown Animal, or the God that he worships: " Lilliputian description of Gulliver's pocket watch (I: 2)
Dogwatch
A small timepiece, or chronometer, to be carried about the person, the machinery of which is moved by a spring
look attentively; "watch a basketball game"
To give heed to; to observe the actions or motions of, for any purpose; to keep in view; not to lose from sight and observation; as, to watch the progress of a bill in the legislature
– Any of the periods of duty into which the day is divided on a ship, so that the work is shared among alternating shifts of the crew
observe or determine by looking; "Watch how the dog chases the cats away"
kol saati; cep saati
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