anne-

listen to the pronunciation of anne-
Englisch - Englisch

Definition von anne- im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch

<span class="word-self">Annespan>-Robert-Jacques baron de l'Aulne Turgot
born , May 10, 1727, Paris, France died March 18, 1781, Paris French administrator and economist. He entered the royal administrative branch of the magistracy in 1753, then became intendant (governor) of Limoges (1761-74), where he instituted economic and administrative reforms. A physiocrat, in 1766 he wrote his best-known work, Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Wealth. In 1774 he was appointed comptroller general by Louis XVI and introduced his Six Edicts to expand economic reforms. His effort to abolish the corvée (unpaid forced labour by peasants) was opposed by the privileged classes, and he was dismissed in 1776
<span class="word-self">Annespan>
A female given name

Oh, it makes such a difference. It looks so much nicer. When you hear a name pronounced can't you always see it in your mind, just as if it was printed out? I can, and A-n-n looks dreadful, but A-n-n-e looks so much more distinguished. --.

<span class="word-self">Annespan>
A male given name
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Marie
A female given name
Jo-<span class="word-self">Annespan>
A female given name, one of the 20th century spelling variants of Joanne
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>
A style of architecture, furniture, etc. popular during the reign of Queen Anne
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>
A small town in Maryland, USA
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>
Queen Anne of Great Britain (reigned 1702-1714)
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>
Of the style (of architecture, furniture, etc.) popular during the reign of Queen Anne

We inherited our Queen Anne chairs from my wife's family.

Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>'s Bounty
A fund, set up in the early 18th century, to financially assist the poor members of the clergy
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>'s lace
A flowering plant, species Daucus carota, especially the flowering part of the plant
<span class="word-self">Annespan>
very, rare, given name, male, from Germanic
<span class="word-self">Annespan>
{i} female first name
<span class="word-self">Annespan>
Queen of Great Britain and Ireland (1702-1714). The last monarch of the Stuart line, she was also the last English ruler to exercise the royal veto over Parliament (1707). born Feb. 6, 1665, London, Eng. died Aug. 1, 1714, London Queen of Great Britain (1702-14) and the last Stuart monarch. Second daughter of James II, who was overthrown by William III in 1688, Anne became queen on William's death (1702). Though she wished to rule independently, her intellectual limitations and poor health led her to rely on advisers, including the duke of Marlborough. Her reign was marked by the Act of Union with Scotland (1707) and by bitter rivalries between Whigs and Tories. Because she never gave birth to a successor, the regency passed to the Hanoverian descendants of James I. Anne Boleyn Anne of Austria Anne of Brittany Anne of Cleves Bradstreet Anne Anne Dudley Camargo Marie Anne de Cupis de Corday d'Armont Marie Anne Charlotte Ferraro Geraldine Anne Hébert Anne Hutchinson Anne Anne Marbury Montmorency Anne duke de Alice Anne Laidlaw Phoebe Anne Moses Porter Katherine Anne Queen Anne's lace Queen Anne style Queen Anne's War Royall Anne Newport Anne Newport Sexton Anne Anne Gray Harvey Turgot Anne Robert Jacques baron de l'Aulne Tyler Anne Anne Louise Germaine Necker Baroness de Staë l Holstein
<span class="word-self">Annespan>
used interchangably with Ann since the Middle Ages
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Bancroft
{i} (1931-2005, born as Anna Maria Italiano), United States actress who starred in the 1967 movie "The Graduate" (wife of Mel Brooks)
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Boleyn
the second wife of the English king Henry VIII, who was the mother of Queen Elizabeth I (1507-36). born 1507? died May 19, 1536, London, Eng. British royal consort. After spending part of her childhood in France, Anne lived at the court of Henry VIII, who soon fell in love with her and began secret proceedings to rid himself of his first wife, Catherine of Aragon. For six years Pope Clement VII refused to grant an annulment. In 1533 Henry and Anne were secretly married, and Henry had the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, annul his previous marriage. Anne gave birth to the future Elizabeth I but failed to produce the male heir Henry wanted. He lost interest in her, and in 1536 he had her imprisoned on questionable charges of adultery and incest. She was convicted and beheaded
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Boleyn
(1507-1536) second wife of Henry VIII, mother of Queen Elizabeth I
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Bradstreet
orig. Anne Dudley born 1612, Northampton, Northhamptonshire?, Eng. died Sept. 16, 1672, Andover, Massachusetts Bay Colony English-born American poet, one of the first poets of the American colonies. At age 18 she sailed from England with her husband, her parents, and other Puritans to settle on Massachusetts Bay. She wrote many of her poems while rearing eight children. Without her knowledge, her brother-in-law took her poems to England, where they were published in 1650. She won critical acceptance in the 20th century, particularly for "Contemplations," a sequence of religious poems first published in the mid 19th century. Her prose works include "Meditations," a collection of aphorisms
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Bronte
{i} (1820-1849) English author of novels, youngest of the Bronte sisters (sister of Charlotte and Emily)
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Frank
a Jewish girl who wrote a famous diary, in which she describes her life while she and her family were hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam. The family was eventually discovered, and sent to the Nazi concentration camp of Belsen, where most of them died (1929-45). born June 12, 1929, Frankfurt am Main, Ger. died March 1945, Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, near Hannover German diarist. Frank was a young Jewish girl who kept a record of the two years her family spent in hiding in Amsterdam to escape Nazi persecution. After their discovery by the Gestapo in 1944, the family was transported to concentration camps; Anne died of typhus at Bergen-Belsen. Friends searching the hiding place found her diary, which her father published as The Diary of a Young Girl (1947). Precocious in style and insight, it traces her emotional growth amid adversity and is a classic of war literature
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Frank
{i} (1929-1945) young German Jewish girl who kept a diary while she and her family were hiding from the Nazis in Holland (she was eventually captured and died in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp)
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Hathaway
{i} (born 1982) USA movie actress
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Hathaway
the wife of William Shakespeare (?1557-1623)
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Hathaway
{i} (1557-1623) wife of William Shakespeare
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Hutchinson
orig. Anne Marbury (baptized July 20, 1591, Alford, Lincolnshire, Eng. died August or September 1643, Pelham Bay, N.Y.) Anglo-American religious leader. In 1612 she married William Hutchinson, and they followed John Cotton to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634. She organized weekly meetings of Boston women to discuss recent sermons and to express their own theological views. Before long, ministers and magistrates were attracted to her sessions, at which she criticized the narrow Puritan orthodoxy and espoused a "covenant of grace." Her opponents accused her of believing that God's grace had freed Christians from the need to observe established moral precepts. Tried for "traducing the ministers," she was sentenced to banishment; refusing to recant, she was excommunicated. In 1638 she and her husband established a colony at Aquidneck Island, which became part of Rhode Island
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Hutchinson
(1591-1643) USA settler and religious leader, Puritan settler in the New World who was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for promoting religious heresy
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Newport Royall
orig. Anne Newport born June 11, 1769, New Baltimore, Md. died Oct. 1, 1854, Washington, D.C., U.S. U.S. writer, generally considered the nation's first newspaperwoman. Royall journeyed across the country and during 1826-31 published 10 accounts of her travels, which remain valuable sources of social history. An eccentric and acerbic woman, she was convicted in Washington, D.C., in 1829 of being a "common scold," the result of her antagonism to a local Presbyterian church. In 1831 she began to publish her outspoken and controversial views on various subjects in her Washington newspaper, Paul Pry (1831-36), which was succeeded by The Huntress (1836-54)
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Rice
{i} (born 1941) United States author of dark fantasy and horror books, author of "Interview With The Vampire
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Sexton
orig. Anne Gray Harvey born Nov. 9, 1928, Newton, Mass., U.S. died Oct. 4, 1974, Weston, Mass. U.S. poet. She worked as a model, librarian, and teacher. Her first book of poetry, To Bedlam and Part Way Back (1960), examines her mental breakdowns and subsequent recoveries with confessional intensity. She continued probing her personal life in All My Pretty Ones (1962) and Live or Die (1966, Pulitzer Prize). Her other works include the nonfiction collection No Evil Star (1985). She died a suicide. Several volumes of poetry were published posthumously
<span class="word-self">Annespan> Tyler
born Oct. 25, 1941, Minneapolis, Minn., U.S. U.S. writer. Tyler worked as a bibliographer and librarian before settling in Baltimore in 1967 and beginning to write full-time. Her novels, comedies of manner marked by compassionate wit and precise details of domestic life, include Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant (1982), The Accidental Tourist (1985; film, 1988), Breathing Lessons (1988, Pulitzer Prize), and A Patchwork Planet (1998). Several focus on eccentric middle-class people living in chaotic, disunited families in Baltimore
<span class="word-self">Annespan> duke de Montmorency
born March 15, 1493, Chantilly, France died Nov. 12, 1567, Paris French soldier and constable of France. Named for his godmother, Queen Anne of Brittany, he served three kings Francis I, Henry II, and Charles IX in war and peace. He fought in numerous wars in northern Italy and southern France against Emperor Charles V and in campaigns against the Huguenots. In 1529 he helped negotiate the Peace of Cambrai between France and Charles V. He was created constable of France in 1538, and he became a duke and peer in 1551. Wounded at the Battle of Saint-Denis, he died two days later
<span class="word-self">Annespan> of Austria
Wife of Louis XIII of France and regent (1643-1661) for her son Louis XIV. born Sept. 22, 1601, Valladolid, Spain died Jan. 20, 1666, Paris, France Queen consort (1615-43) of Louis XIII of France and regent (1643-51) for her son Louis XIV. Daughter of Philip III of Spain and Margaret of Austria, Anne married the 14-year-old Louis XIII in 1615. He treated her coolly, and the powerful cardinal de Richelieu attempted to limit her influence over her husband. After Louis XIII died and she was declared sole regent, she strove to ensure that her son would succeed to the absolute power Richelieu had won for Louis XIII. Together with her first minister, Cardinal Mazarin, she faced the series of revolts known as the Fronde. Her regency ended in 1651, when Louis XIV was proclaimed of age to rule
<span class="word-self">Annespan> of Brittany
born Jan. 25, 1477, Nantes, France died Jan. 9, 1514, Blois Duchess of Brittany and twice queen consort of France. After succeeding to her father's duchy in 1488, Anne allied herself with Maximilian I of Austria. She was then forced to break with him and in 1491 marry Charles VIII of France, thus beginning the process of the union of Brittany with the French crown. After Charles's death (1498), she married his successor, Louis XII. Throughout her life Anne devoted herself to safeguarding Brittany's autonomy within the kingdom
<span class="word-self">Annespan> of Cleves
Queen of England (January-July 1540) as the fourth wife of Henry VIII. a European princess of the duchy of Cleves, who became the fourth wife of the English king Henry VIII in 1540. They were divorced after six months (1515-1557). born Sept. 22, 1515 died July 16, 1557, London, Eng. Fourth wife of Henry VIII of England. Henry married Anne, whom he found homely, to form an alliance with her brother William, duke of Cleves, a leader of the Protestants of western Germany. The alliance, arranged by Thomas Cromwell, seemed necessary because it appeared that the major Roman Catholic powers, France and the Holy Roman Empire, intended to attack Protestant England. When that threat dissipated, the marriage became a political embarrassment and was annulled by an Anglican convocation in 1540
<span class="word-self">Annespan> of Green Gables
a children's novel by L. M. Montgomery about a girl called Anne Shirley who is adopted by an older lady and her brother and goes to live on Prince Edward Island in Canada, during the late 1800s
Diary of <span class="word-self">Annespan> Frank
the diary (=book in which you write down your thoughts, experiences etc each day) written by Anne Frank when she and her family were hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam during World War II. It was published after her death in a concentration camp, and it has been made into a play and film
Geraldine <span class="word-self">Annespan> Ferraro
born Aug. 26, 1935, Newburgh, N.Y., U.S. U.S. politician. She received her law degree from Fordham University Law School in 1960 and was admitted to the New York bar in 1961. She practiced law in New York until 1974, when she became assistant U.S. district attorney. In 1978 she was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives as a Democrat. In 1984 the Democratic Party nominated her for vice president on a ticket with Walter Mondale; she thereby became the first woman to be nominated for vice president by a major U.S. political party. In 1992 and 1998 she ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate
Katherine <span class="word-self">Annespan> Porter
born May 15, 1890, Indian Creek, Texas, U.S. died Sept. 18, 1980, Silver Spring, Md. U.S. writer. She worked as a journalist in Chicago and Denver, Colo., before leaving in 1920 for Mexico, the setting of several of her stories. Her collections include Flowering Judas (1930), her first and most popular; Pale Horse, Pale Rider (1939), a set of three novellas; and Collected Short Stories (1965, Pulitzer Prize, National Book Award). Her stories have a richness of texture and complexity of character delineation usually achieved only in the novel. Ship of Fools (1962) is her only novel
Marie -<span class="word-self">Annespan> de Cupis de Camargo
born April 15, 1710, Brussels, Spanish Netherlands died April 20, 1770, Paris, Fr. French ballerina. She made her Paris Opéra debut in 1726 and went on to dance in 78 ballets and operas before her retirement in 1751. Admired for her speed and agility, she executed jumping steps previously performed only by male dancers, shortening her skirts and removing the heels from her slippers to enable her do so. Her name was adopted in 1930 by a British ballet group, the Camargo Society
Marie-<span class="word-self">Annespan>- Charlotte Corday d'Armont
born July 27, 1768, Saint-Saturnin, near Séez, Normandy, France died July 17, 1793, Paris French political activist. A noblewoman from Caen, she moved to Paris to work for the Girondin cause in the French Revolution. Horrified at the excesses of the Reign of Terror, she sought an interview with Jean-Paul Marat, one of its leaders. On July 13, 1793, she stabbed him through the heart while he was in his bath. Arrested on the spot, she was convicted by the Revolutionary Tribunal and guillotined
Princess <span class="word-self">Annespan>
the second child and only daughter of the British queen, Elizabeth II. Her official title is The Princess Royal (1950-). Anne, Princess
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>
The style in English architecture and furniture typical of the reign of Queen Anne (1702-1714). the queen of Great Britain and Ireland from 1702 to 1714 and the daughter of James II (1665-1714)
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan> is Dead
this is old news!
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan> style
A style of architecture and furniture reviving elements of Queen Anne design, popular especially in England in the late 19th century. Style of English decorative arts that reached its apex during the reign (1702-14) of Queen Anne. The most distinctive feature of Queen Anne furniture is the cabriole leg, shaped in a double curve (the upper part convex, the lower concave) and ending in either a claw-and-ball or paw foot. The Queen Anne chair is identifiable by a splat back curved to fit the hollow of the spine. The wood used was almost exclusively walnut, often embellished with marquetry, inlay, veneering, and lacquerwork. Ornamentation motifs include scallop shells, scrolls, Asian figures, and animals
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>'s War
(1702-1713) one of the French and Indian wars, second of a series British and French colonial wars fought in North America (U.S. History)
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>'s War
(1702-13) Second in a series of wars between Britain and France for control of North America. It was the American phase of the War of the Spanish Succession. American colonial settlements along the New York and New England borders with Canada were raided by French forces and their Indian allies. The British capture of Port Royal (1710) resulted in French-held Acadia's becoming the British province of Nova Scotia. Under the Treaty of Utrecht (1713), Britain also acquired Newfoundland and the Hudson Bay region from France
Queen <span class="word-self">Annespan>'s lace
A widely naturalized Eurasian herb (Daucus carota var. carota) having white, nonfleshy, fusiform compound umbels of small white or yellowish flowers. Also called wild carrot. or wild carrot Bristly biennial (Daucus carota) of the parsley family, native to Eurasia but now found almost worldwide. An ancestor of the cultivated carrot, it grows 5 ft (1.5 m) tall and has divided, long, feathery leaves. Flat-topped clusters (umbels) of white or pink flowers have a single dark-purple flower in the center and resemble lace. The enlarged root is edible but very bitter, and the ribbed fruits have sharp spines
<span class="word-self">annespan>
Sister Anne Sister of Fatima, the seventh and last of Bluebeard's wives
<span class="word-self">annespan>
Women in labor, Cabinet Makers, Horsemen, Housekeepers, Housewives
queen <span class="word-self">annespan>
A style of Dutch-influenced furniture developed in England in the early part of the 18th century Characterized by extensive use of upholstery, marquetry, Oriental fabrics; simple, graceful lines and cabriole legs
queen <span class="word-self">annespan>
A term used here to describe furniture styles of the early 18th century: Queen Anne reigned between 1702 and 1714; the styles continued until the 1720's
queen <span class="word-self">annespan>
The style period from 1700-1730 Characterized by the introduction of the cabriole leg and sinuous curves The English Queen Anne period was earlier and shorter than the American period of the same name
queen <span class="word-self">annespan>
English decorative style during the reign of Queen Anne (early seventeen hundreds) typified by furniture with curved backs and legs, and Chinese-inspired claw-and ball feet and lacquer work
queen <span class="word-self">annespan>
A major furniture style of the 18th century, a period rich in innovative design Graceful and elegant, the style (named after the 18th century English monarch) is characterized by curved lines such as cabriole legs, broken scroll pediments and rounded aprons in tables and lowboys
queen <span class="word-self">annespan>
Popular in the late nineteenth century, Queen Anne style focused on a combination of English motifs and displayed a mixture of different textures and materials
Türkisch - Englisch

Definition von anne- im Türkisch Englisch wörterbuch

<span class="word-self">annespan>
{i} mother

He never fails to write to his mother every week. - O her hafta annesine yazmaktan geri kalmaz.

This child's mother is an announcer. - Bu çocuğun annesi bir sunucu.

<span class="word-self">annespan>
{s} maternal

Maternal love is greater than anything else. - Anne sevgisi her şeyden daha büyüktür.

My mother's father is my maternal grandfather. - Annemin babası, anne tarafından dedemdir.

<span class="word-self">annespan>-baba
parents
<span class="word-self">annespan>
{i} mum

My mum likes tea very much. - Annem çayı çok sever.

You speak like your mum. - Annen gibi konuşuyorsun.

<span class="word-self">annespan>
{i} mummy

Mummy, what is Santa Claus's address? I want to send him a letter. - Anne, Noel Babanın adresi nedir? Ona bir mektup göndermek istiyorum.

Look Mummy, I can read! - Bak anne, okuyabiliyorum!

<span class="word-self">annespan>
mom

Mom is older than Dad. - Annem babamdan daha yaşlı.

Mom made a cake for my birthday. - Annem doğum günüm için bir pasta yaptı.

<span class="word-self">annespan> baba
parents
<span class="word-self">annespan> tarafından
matrilineal
<span class="word-self">annespan> ve baba
parents

She married without her parents' knowledge. - O, anne ve babasının bilgisi olmadan evlendi.

She was well brought up by her parents. - O, anne ve babası tarafından iyi yetiştirildi.

<span class="word-self">annespan>, baba
parents
<span class="word-self">annespan>
{i} mammy

How many eggs did mammy buy? - Annen kaç tane yumurta aldı?

Mammy, you are an exploiter! - Anne, sen bir sömürücüsün!

<span class="word-self">annespan> gibi davranmak
mother
<span class="word-self">annespan>
mama

Mama had a crippled face. - Anne felçli bir yüze sahipti.

Mama, Tom won't gimme back my toy! - Anne, Tom benim oyuncağımı geri vermeyecek!

<span class="word-self">annespan> (ile ilgili)
maternal
<span class="word-self">annespan> adayı
expectant mother
<span class="word-self">annespan> adayı
pregnant
<span class="word-self">annespan> karnındaki bebek
fetus
<span class="word-self">annespan> karnındaki yavru
embryo
<span class="word-self">annespan> olmak
become mother
<span class="word-self">annespan> olmak
become a mother
<span class="word-self">annespan> oğul
mother and son
<span class="word-self">annespan> sevgisi
motherliness
<span class="word-self">annespan> sevgisi
motherly love
<span class="word-self">annespan> sevgisi
maternal drive
<span class="word-self">annespan> sevgisi
maternal love
<span class="word-self">annespan> sevgisi
maternal instincts
<span class="word-self">annespan> sütü
(Tıp) human milk
<span class="word-self">annespan> sütü ile beslenme
(Tıp) breast feeding
<span class="word-self">annespan> tarafı
maternal
<span class="word-self">annespan> ve oğlu
mother and son
<span class="word-self">annespan> ve çocuk
mother and child
bekar <span class="word-self">annespan>
single mother
hamile <span class="word-self">annespan>
expectant mom
vekil <span class="word-self">annespan>
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) surrogate mother
<span class="word-self">annespan>
momma
<span class="word-self">annespan>
old lady
<span class="word-self">annespan> gibi bakmak
mother
<span class="word-self">annespan>
ma
<span class="word-self">annespan>
mother, ma, mum, mummy, momma, mommy, mom, mammy
<span class="word-self">annespan>
mamma

Your mamma's so fat, she'd break London Bridge. - Senin annen o kadar şişmanki, Londra Köprüsü'nü çökertiyordu.

<span class="word-self">annespan> karnı
mother's womb
<span class="word-self">annespan> kızlık soyadı
mother's maiden name
baba <span class="word-self">annespan>
father mother
üvey <span class="word-self">annespan>
stepmother

A few years ago, on Mother's Day, I gave my stepmother a locket as a present. - Birkaç yıl önce, anneler gününde, bir madalyonu üvey anneme hediye olarak verdim.

The little child was subjected to violence from his stepmother. - Küçük çocuk üvey annesinden şiddet gördü.

<span class="word-self">annespan>
mum; old woman
<span class="word-self">annespan>
mam

Mammy, you are an exploiter! - Anne, sen bir sömürücüsün!

Mama, is it okay if I go swimming? - Yüzmeye gidebilir miyim, anne?

<span class="word-self">annespan>
mater

Maternal love is greater than anything else. - Anne sevgisi her şeyden daha büyüktür.

Mary is on maternity leave. - Mary annelik iznindedir.

<span class="word-self">annespan>
old woman
<span class="word-self">annespan>
{i} maw
<span class="word-self">annespan> adayı olmak
be an expectant mother
<span class="word-self">annespan> adayı olmak
mum to be
<span class="word-self">annespan> adı
mother's day
<span class="word-self">annespan> baba adı
parents names
<span class="word-self">annespan> baba katili
parricide
<span class="word-self">annespan> baba korkusu
fear of parents
<span class="word-self">annespan> baba sevgisi
parental love
<span class="word-self">annespan> babanın duyduğu korku
parental fear
<span class="word-self">annespan> babası çalışan çocuk
latchkey child
<span class="word-self">annespan> babası çalışan çocuk
door key child
<span class="word-self">annespan> babasız
parentless
<span class="word-self">annespan> babasızlık
parentless
<span class="word-self">annespan> babaya saygı
filial piety
<span class="word-self">annespan> gibi
maternally
<span class="word-self">annespan> gibi
motherlike
<span class="word-self">annespan> hayvan
dam
<span class="word-self">annespan> kökenli
(Dilbilim) matronymic
<span class="word-self">annespan> olmak
to become a mother
<span class="word-self">annespan> olmak isteyen
(Argo) clucky
<span class="word-self">annespan> sevgisi
mother love
<span class="word-self">annespan> soyundan gelen
matrilinear
<span class="word-self">annespan> sütü
suck
<span class="word-self">annespan> tarafından
maternally
<span class="word-self">annespan> tarafından akraba
enate
<span class="word-self">annespan> tarafından olan
maternal
<span class="word-self">annespan> tarafından olan
enatic
<span class="word-self">annespan> tarafıyla ilgili
enatic
<span class="word-self">annespan> tavuğun civcivlerini çağırması
chuckle
<span class="word-self">annespan> ve bebek
mom and baby
<span class="word-self">annespan> ve çocuk ilişkileri
mother-child relationship
<span class="word-self">annespan> yoksunluğu sendromu
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) maternal deprivation syndome
<span class="word-self">annespan> öldürme
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) matricide
<span class="word-self">annespan> ölümü
(Hukuk) maternal mortality
<span class="word-self">annespan>, baba ve çocuktan oluşan aile
nuclear family
<span class="word-self">annespan>, baba ve çocuktan oluşan aile
a mother and their children
<span class="word-self">annespan>, baba ve çocuktan oluşan aile
family unit consisting of a father
bebek emziren <span class="word-self">annespan>
nursing mother
evlât edinen <span class="word-self">annespan> baba
adoptive parents
süt <span class="word-self">annespan>
foster mother
süt <span class="word-self">annespan>
wet nurse
süt <span class="word-self">annespan>
nursing mother
öz <span class="word-self">annespan>
one's own mother
üvey ana/<span class="word-self">annespan>
stepmother
üvey <span class="word-self">annespan> baba
foster parent
üvey <span class="word-self">annespan> gibi
stepmotherly