varoş, bir şehirde, mahrumiyet içinde yaşayan azınlık mahallesi

listen to the pronunciation of varoş, bir şehirde, mahrumiyet içinde yaşayan azınlık mahallesi
التركية - الإنجليزية
ghetto
An economically depressed urban district predominantly inhabited by members of one ethnic or religious group

Bedford-Stuyvesant and Brownsville are often cited as African-American ghettos in New York City.

A district where members of an ethnic, religious or cultural minority are congregated, usually voluntarily

The term Chinatown denotes a Chinese Ghetto.

of low quality; cheap; shabby

I like to drive ghetto cars; if they break down you can just abandon them and pick up a new one!.

{i} highly populated area of a city inhabited mainly by people of the same ethnic or minority group; formerly a section within a city in which Jews were forced to live (especially during World War II)
Originally, the section of a European city to which Jews were restricted Today, commonly defined as a section of a city occupied by members of a minority group who live there because of social restrictions on their residential choice
minority group who live there because of social restrictions on their residential choice Originally, the section of a European city to which Jews were restricted
A ghetto is a part of a city in which many poor people or many people of a particular race, religion, or nationality live separately from everyone else. the black ghettos of New York and Los Angeles. Formerly, a street or quarter of a city set apart as a legally enforced residential area for Jews. Forced segregation of Jews spread throughout Europe in the 14th-15th centuries. Ghettos were customarily enclosed with walls and gates and kept locked at night and during Christian festivals. Since outward expansion was usually impossible, most ghettos grew upward; congestion, fire hazards, and unsanitary conditions often resulted. Ghettos were abolished in western Europe in the 19th century; those revived by the Nazi Party (see Warsaw Ghetto Uprising) were overcrowded holding places preliminary to extermination. More recently, the term ghetto has been applied to impoverished urban areas exclusively settled by a minority group or groups and perpetuated by economic and social pressures rather than legal and physical measures
any segregated mode of living or working that results from bias or stereotyping; "the relative security of the gay ghetto"; "no escape from the ghetto of the typing pool
The Jews'quarter in an Italian town or city
A quarter of a city where Jews live in greatest numbers
a poor densely populated city district occupied by a minority ethnic group linked together by economic hardship and social restrictions formerly the restricted quarter of many European cities in which Jews were required to live; "the Warsaw ghetto"
A section of a city where the Nazis forced all Jews to live A ghetto was often sealed off with walls, barbed wire and armed guards, preventing people from entering or leaving
The district in a city where Jews were compelled to confine themselves
of or related to a ghetto or to ghettos in general
an area of a city that is often rundown
A district where members of one ethnic, religious, or cultural group are congregated, usually voluntarily
a poor densely populated city district occupied by a minority ethnic group linked together by economic hardship and social restrictions
an isolated and deprived part of a town or city Jews were moved into ghettos in Poland during WWII
varoş, bir şehirde, mahrumiyet içinde yaşayan azınlık mahallesi

    الواصلة

    va·roş, bir şe·hir·de, mah·ru·mi·yet i·çin·de ya·şa·yan a·zın·lık ma·hal·le·si
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