(isim) kemer, kuşak, korse, eklem desteği

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) kemer, kuşak, korse, eklem desteği
Türkisch - Englisch
girdle
To gird, encircle, or constrain by such means
A belt; especially, a belt, sash, or article of dress encircling the body usually at the waist, often used to support stockings or hosiery
A thin bed or stratum of stone
The clitellum of an earthworm
That which girds, encircles, or encloses; a circumference
{n} a thing tied round the waist
of Brilliant
To kill or stunt a tree by removing or inverting a ring of bark
The girdle is the outermost edge of the diamond between the crown and the pavilion Growth or grain lines These can be considered internal flaws, and can often be seen only by rotating the diamond very slowly They can appear and disappear almost instantaneously They appear as small lines or planes within the diamond Gypsy setting The Gypsy setting is predominantly used for men's jewelry The band is one continuous piece that gets thicker at the top The top is dome shaped and the stone is inserted in the middle Illusion setting This setting is more intricate than others in that it surrounds the stone to make it appear larger The metal that surrounds the stone usually has an interesting design
To make a cut or gnaw a groove around a tree, etc
A girdle is a piece of women's underwear that fits tightly around the stomach and hips. a piece of women's underwear which fits tightly around her stomach, bottom, and hips and makes her look thinner. to surround something
cut a girdle around so as to kill by interrupting the circulation of water and nutrients; "girdle the plant
To encircle the stem of a living tree with cuts that completely sever bark and cambium and often are carried well into the outer sapwood, for the purpose of killing the tree by preventing passage of nutrients or by introducing toxic materials Besides girdling proper, or removal of bark and cambium in a band of appreciable width girdling may take several forms, viz: 1) Hacking or frilling - A single line of overlapping downward axe cuts, leaving a frill into which toxic materials may be poured 2) Double hacking - Girdling by means of a double frill cut around the tree and the removal of the chips between them 3) Notching - Ringing the tree with notches cut well into the sapwood 4) Stripping - Peeling off a band of bark completely around the tree
The outermost/widest edge of a diamond This is usually the area in which the setting is mounted
a belt, sash, or article of dress encircling the body usually at the waist; a cestus
a belt or sash worn at the waist; figures appear with a variety of objects "at" or "under" their girdles: a bottle (Lovesick Court, 99), "a black Box" (Fine Companion, B3v), books (Puritan, B2v), looking glasses (City Madam, 1 1 46; Fancies Chaste and Noble, A4v); a clown enters "with his girdle full of shoes" (Famous Victories, F4r), and a "devil like a Sergeant" appears "with a mace under his girdle" (Devil's Charter, A2v); actions include "draws the naked Dagger from his girdle and shakes it" (Twins, E2v) and an attempt by a figure who has climbed a tree to reach "one Apple that grows highest": "He stands fishing with his girdle for it" (Old Fortunatus, 4 1 85); a related verb occurs once as part of a conversion ceremony where the chief priest "puts on his Turban and Robe, girds his sword, then swears him on the Mahomet's head, ungirds his sword" (Christian Turned Turk, F2v)
To bind with a belt or sash; to gird
an encircling or ringlike structure
a band of material around the waist that strengthens a skirt or trousers
(1 ) Heb hagor, a girdle of any kind worn by soldiers (1 Sam 18: 4; 2 Sam 20: 8; 1 Kings 2: 5; 2 Kings 3: 21) or women (Isa 3: 24)
(isim) kemer, kuşak, korse, eklem desteği
Favoriten