dark dark teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Dark Ages
- The period of European history encompassing (roughly) 476–1000 CE
- Dark Ages
- Any relatively primitive period of time
Yes, DSL is a better, faster and less expensive way to access the Internet. Unfortunately, it's saddled with back-office systems that belong in the Dark Ages and politics that may require regulatory oversight.
- Dark Ages
- The time before the Internet was popular
Put yourself back in the dark ages, the time before the Internet took off–say, the 1970s–and ask: What was the environment for creativity then?.
- Dark Continent
- Africa
The Advertiser Adelaide, 10 November 1903.
- all cats are gray in the dark
- Variant of all cats are grey in the dark
- baryonic dark matter
- Any large aggregate of ordinary matter that does not emit light
- before dark
- Before night begins to fall. From morning until evening. In the daytime before sunset
I think you should finish mowing the lawn before dark.
- cold dark matter
- Dark matter traveling at classical, non-relativistic speeds
- dark
- Dull or deeper in hue; not bright or light
Her skin grew dark with a suntan.
- dark
- Conducive to hopelessness; depressing or bleak
The Great Depression was a dark time.
- dark
- With emphasis placed on the unpleasant aspects of life; said of a work of fiction, a work of nonfiction presented in narrative form or a portion of either
The ending of this book is rather dark.
- dark
- Lacking progress in science or the arts; said of a time period
- dark
- Ignorance
The lawyer was left in the dark as to why the jury was dismissed.
- dark
- Hidden, secret
Meantime we shall express our darker purpose (Shakespeare, King Lear, i 1).
- dark
- Nightfall
It was after dark before we got to playing baseball.
- dark
- A complete or (more often) partial absence of light
Dark surrounds us completely.
- dark
- Without moral or spiritual light; sinister, malign
- dark
- Having an absolute or (more often) relative lack of light
The room was too dark for reading.
- dark ages
- Alternative form of Dark Ages
- dark art
- Alternative form of black art
- dark arts
- plural form of dark art
- dark chocolate
- A serving of this chocolate
- dark chocolate
- chocolate that has not had milk products added to lighten and sweeten it
- dark chocolates
- plural form of dark chocolate
- dark culture
- an umbrella term, used to describe a summary of parts of several subcultures including gothic, darkwave, neofolk, industrial, electro, BDSM/fetish, metal and medieval
- dark current
- The temperature-dependant current that flows in a photodetector when no light is shining on it
- dark elf
- A race of elves
- dark elf
- A male ancestral spirit who may protect the people. They are generally light-avoiding, though not necessarily subterranean
- dark elf
- A dwarf, ancestor, or underground dwelling nature spirit in Heathenry
- dark elf
- One of a race of elves who live underground, and often but not always correlated with the dwarves
- dark elves
- plural form of dark elf
- dark energy
- A mysterious (and as yet hypothetical) form of energy which is spread out uniformly throughout space (and time) and which has anti-gravitational properties: it is one of the possible explanations for the current accelerating rate of expansion of the universe, and it is estimated to account for about 74% of the mass-energy of the universe
- dark factory
- A factory with no human labor
- dark figure
- The estimated number of unreported criminal cases; the dark figure of crime
By definition, they ignore the unreported “dark figure” of crime. We turn now to a second source of official crime data.
- dark horse
- An unexpected success
Everyone was expecting the red team to win, but the greens were the dark horse in the event.
- dark horse
- A candidate who is nominated unexpectedly, without previously having been discussed or considered as a likely choice
- dark horses
- plural form of dark horse
- dark l
- A consonantal sound, the velarized alveolar lateral approximant, represented by ɫ in the International Phonetic Alphabet
- dark lantern
- A lantern with a panel that slides to block the light
In the meantime, Mr. Merryweather, we must put the screen over that dark lantern..
- dark lanterns
- plural form of dark lantern
- dark matter
- particles of matter that cannot be detected by their radiation but whose presence is inferred from gravitational effects
- dark meat
- A black person, regarded as a sex partner
- dark meat
- The legs, thighs and wings of poultry
- dark meats
- plural form of dark meat
- dark nebula
- A type of nebula that unlike other types of nebulae does not emit or reflect light and therefore appears as a starless region in the sky
Horsehead Nebula is a typical dark nebula, and is famous for resembling the head of a horse.
- dark sleeper
- Odontobutis obscura, a freshwater goby found in East Asia
- dark sleepers
- plural form of dark sleeper
- dark space
- Any of several regions in a glow discharge in which little or no light is produced
- dark spaces
- plural form of dark space
- dark-lantern
- Alternative form of dark lantern
- hot dark matter
- Dark matter traveling at ultra-relativistic velocities
- in the dark
- Without information
They remained in the dark until the newspaper story came out.
- in the dark
- Lacking information
I was in the dark about the surprise party until I walked in.
- keep someone in the dark
- To deliberately not tell someone details about something
- leap in the dark
- shot in the dark
- murder in the dark
- A party game, played in a darkened room, in which a designated "murderer" eliminates other players, who must try to identify which player is the murderer
- non-baryonic dark matter
- dark matter comprised of elementary particles whose composition is as yet unknown, but is presumed to be unlike normal protons, neutrons and electrons etc
- oh dark hundred
- Some unspecified hour in the early morning (implies an unpleasant time to be awake)
I had to get up at oh dark hundred to catch a plane.
- oh dark thirty
- Some unspecified hour in the early morning (implies an unpleasant time to be awake)
I had to get up at oh dark thirty to catch a plane.
- oh-dark-thirty
- Alternative spelling of oh dark thirty
- pitch-dark
- Absolutely dark or black; as dark as pitch
The assassin crept into the royal bedchamber only after it was pitch-dark.
- shot in the dark
- A guess, attempt, or choice made with little or no evidence or knowledge
From listening, I can't tell who composed it. Beethoven, maybe, but that's a shot in the dark.
- take a shot in the dark
- To try on something without having any knowledge about the subject
I didn't study for the test and took a shot in the dark.
- warm dark matter
- Dark matter traveling at relativistic speeds, less than ultra-relativistic particles, but more than classical particles
- whistle in the dark
- To make a show of bravery despite one's fears
- whistle in the dark
- To speak of something despite having little knowledge of it
- dark
- {n} darkness, obscurity, ignorance, perplexity
- dark
- {a} void of light, blind, obscure
- a shot in the dark
- (deyim) a wild guess
- a shot in the dark
- (deyim) an attempt that has little chance of success
- a stab in the dark
- (deyim) an attempt that has little chance of success
- a stab in the dark
- (deyim) a wild guess
- dark magic
- Black magic or dark magic is type of magic that draws on malevolent powers. It is used for malevolent acts or to deliberately cause harm in some way. It is alternatively spelt with a 'K' (magick), this term is also known as black magick, dark magick, the dark arts of magick and dark side magick
- dark tourism
- Dark tourism or Grief tourism is tourism involving travel to sites associated with death and suffering. Thanatourism, derived from the Ancient Greek word thanatos for the personification of death, is associated with dark tourism but refers more specifically to violent death; it is used in fewer contexts than the terms dark tourism and grief tourism
- in the dark
- Unaware, ignorant, oblivious, uninformed, unenlightened, unacquainted, unconversant
- whistle in the dark
- (deyim) Pretend to be unafraid
- Afghani dark
- {i} type of marijuana
- Dark Ages
- Middle Ages, period of history between 476 A.D. and the beginning of the Renaissance, period of time between ancient times and modern times
- Dark Continent
- A former name for Africa, so used because its hinterland was largely unknown and therefore mysterious to Europeans until the 19th century. Henry M. Stanley was probably the first to use the term in his 1878 account Through the Dark Continent. the Dark Continent a name given to Africa by Europeans in the 19th century. The name meant that Africa was then an unknown area to Europeans, but it is now considered an offensive name
- Dark Continent
- {i} Africa; term used in the 19th century referring to Africa before its large areas had been explored
- Dark Prophet
- prophet of doom
- dark
- (used of color) having a dark hue; "dark green"; "dark glasses"; "dark colors like wine red or navy blue"
- dark
- Evincing black or foul traits of character; vile; wicked; atrocious; as, a dark villain; a dark deed
- dark
- If you describe something as dark, you mean that it is related to things that are serious or unpleasant, rather than light-hearted. Their dark humor never failed to astound him + darkly dark·ly The atmosphere after Wednesday's debut was as darkly comic as the film itself see also pitch-dark
- dark
- lacking enlightenment or knowledge or culture; "this benighted country"; "benighted ages of barbarism and superstition"; "the dark ages"; "a dark age in the history of education"
- dark
- A dark place or area is mysterious and not fully known about. the dark recesses of the mind
- dark
- Deprived of sight; blind
- dark
- adj [with very little light (I gets ~ at 7 o'clock )] gelap
- dark
- marked by difficulty of style or expression; "much that was dark is now quite clear to me"; "those who do not appreciate Kafka's work say his style is obscure"
- dark
- Strong tobacco, that is generally air-dried and cured
- dark
- A dark period of time is unpleasant or frightening. This was the darkest period of the war. = black
- dark
- absence of light or illumination
- dark
- Blank observation with the same on-chip exposure time as another observation
- dark
- {i} lack of light, gloom, darkness; black color
- dark
- stemming from evil characteristics or forces; wicked or dishonorable; "black deeds"; "a black lie"; "his black heart has concocted yet another black deed"; "Darth Vader of the dark side"; "a dark purpose"; "dark undercurrents of ethnic hostility"; "the scheme of some sinister intelligence bent on punishing him"-Thomas Hardy
- dark
- showing a brooding ill humor; "a dark scowl"; "the (Atasözü)ially dour New England Puritan"; "a glum, hopeless shrug"; "he sat in moody silence"; "a morose and unsociable manner"; "a saturnine, almost misanthropic young genius"- Bruce Bliven; "a sour temper"; "a sullen crowd"
- dark
- If you describe a white person as dark, you mean that they have brown or black hair, and often a brownish skin. Carol is a tall, dark, Latin type of woman fair
- dark
- When it is dark, there is not enough light to see properly, for example because it is night. It was too dark inside to see much People usually draw the curtains once it gets dark She snapped off the light and made her way back through the dark kitchen. light + darkness dark·ness The light went out, and the room was plunged into darkness. + darkly dark·ly a darkly lit, seedy dance hall
- dark
- If you describe something as dark, you mean that it is black in colour, or a shade that is close to black. He wore a dark suit and carried a black attaché case light + darkly dark·ly Joanne's freckles stood out darkly against her pale skin
- dark
- absence of moral or spiritual values; "the powers of darkness"
- dark age
- period without development or progression, period of regression
- dark ages
- Term in occasional use to refer to the migration period and Viking period, but unpopular because of its implication of ignorance ; most appropriately used of western Scotland before c 800, a period remarkably dark
- dark blue
- {i} deep blue
- dark bread
- bread made with whole wheat flour
- dark cloud
- storm cloud, gloomy cloud
- dark clouds
- rain clouds, gloominess, foreboding
- dark future
- gloomy or hopeless future, bad forecast, bad prospects
- dark green
- shade of green which is slightly blackish in tint, forest green
- dark horse
- If you describe someone as a dark horse, you mean that people know very little about them, although they may have recently had success or may be about to have success
- dark lantern
- a lantern with a sliding panel to conceal the light
- dark matter
- {i} (Astronomy) non luminous matter presumed to exist in space
- dark matter
- Matter that's thought to exist in the universe, but that emits no signals other than gravitational effects
- dark matter
- (cosmology) a hypothetical form of matter that is believed to make up 90 percent of the matter in the universe; it is invisible (does not absorb or emit light) and does not collide with atomic particles but exerts gravitational force
- dark matter
- Matter that is in space but is not visible to us because it emits no radiation by which to observe it The motion of stars around the centers of their galaxies implies that about 90% of the matter in a typical galaxy is dark Physicists speculate that there is also dark matter between the galaxies but this is harder to verify
- dark matter
- generally refers to undetected matter whose existence is needed to account for the motion of visible objects such as stars Dark matter may account for 90% of the mass of our universe
- dark matter
- Dark matter is material that is believed to form a large part of the universe, but which has never been seen. Physical objects or particles that emit little or no detectable radiation of their own and are postulated to exist because of unexplained gravitational forces observed on other astronomical objects. Dark matter is believed to be part of the missing mass. Nonluminous matter not directly detectable by astronomers, hypothesized to exist because the mass of the visible matter in the universe cannot account for observed gravitational effects. Long believed to exist in large quantities, it enters into many theories of the origin of the universe and its present large-scale structure and into models of gravitation and other fundamental forces (see fundamental interaction) between particles. Numerous candidates for dark matter have been proposed over the years, but none has yet been confirmed
- dark matter
- material that does not emit any light (or not detected yet), but has a significant gravitational effect
- dark matter
- Any nonluminous astronomical object or particle that is detected only by its gravitational influence Examples include planets, black holes, white dwarfs (because they are low luminosity) and more exotic things like weakly interacting particles (WIMPs)
- dark red
- red which has a blackish tint, maroon, brick red
- dark sky
- sky without light
- dark water
- Attack used by Beruche of the Ayakashi Sisters
- dark water
- Beruche's attack
- dark-haired
- having hair of a dark color; "a dark-haired beauty
- dark-skinned
- having skin rich in melanin pigments; "National Association for the Advancement of Colored People"; "the dark races"; "dark-skinned peoples"
- dark-skinned
- naturally having skin of a dark color; "a dark-skinned beauty"; "gold earrings gleamed against her dusky cheeks"; "a smile on his swarthy face"; "`swart' is archaic
- it was getting dark
- nighttime was falling, twilight came
- jet-dark
- coal black, deep black, intense black
- stab in the dark
- wild guess, random guess
- still in the dark
- still unsure about, still don't know about
- the Dark Mountains
- very distant place, remote place, far away location