benç

listen to the pronunciation of benç
Türkçe - İngilizce
bench
The number of players on a team able to participate, expressed in terms of length

Injuries have shortened the bench.

To lift by bench pressing

For the first several years of my exclusive career in powerlifting, I couldn't bench too well.

To sideline; to remove a player from play

They benched him for the rest of the game because they thought he was injured.

{v} to furnish with benches, fix on seats
A long seat, differing from a stool in its greater length
Judges or Magistrates
a long seat for more than one person
To furnish with benches
A place where assembly or hand work is performed; a workbench
exhibit on a bench; "bench the poodles at the dog show"
In law, the people who decide on the verdict; the judiciary
The place where the judge sits in the courtroom; it also sometimes refers to the judge, as in a "bench trial" which is a trial by the judge without a jury
A long seat, for example, in the park
the magistrate or judge or judges sitting in court in judicial capacity to compose the court collectively exhibit on a bench; "bench the poodles at the dog show"
A heavy metal platform used to restore a vehicle's structural geometry to factory specifications This is done by securing a portion of the vehicle to the platform, then pulling appropriate areas of the vehicle into place using special clamps, chains and hydraulic winches Aternate Term(s): Frame Rack, Frame Machine
A Bench is comprised of the preparation and the instruments through which the user interacts with the preparation Each Bench is associated with a particular Macintosh file, and may opened/launched, renamed, copied, modified, and saved just like any other Macintosh document file
A bench is a long seat of wood or metal that two or more people can sit on. He sat down on a park bench
The place where the judges sit
{f} furnish with benches; sit in judgment; exhibit dogs at an exhibition; remove from a game (Sports)
benç

    Etimoloji

    [ 'ben ] (adverb.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English binnan, from be- + innan within, from within, from in.