bicycler

listen to the pronunciation of bicycler
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} bisiklete binen kimse
{i} bisikletçi
bicycle
bisiklet

Bu senin bisikletin mi? - Is this your bicycle?

Yeni bir bisiklet almak istiyorum. - I want to buy a new bicycle.

bicycle
bisiklet sür

Mayuko bir bisiklet sürebilir. - Mayuko can ride a bicycle.

Ben bisiklet sürebilirim. - I can ride a bicycle.

bicycle
{f} bisiklete binmek

Ben bisiklete binmek zorundayım. - I must ride a bicycle.

Bisiklete binmekten çok fazla hoşlanmıyorum. - I don't like riding a bicycle very much.

bicycle
(isim) bisiklet
bicycle
bicyclistbisikletle gezen kimse
bicycle
bisikletle gitmek
bicycle
velespit
bicycle
bisiklet kullanarak gitmek
bicycle
çiftteker
bicycle
bisikletle gezmek
Englisch - Englisch
bicyclist, cyclist
One who rides a bicycle
{i} one who rides a bicycle, cycler, cyclist
bicycle
A vehicle that has two wheels, one behind the other, a steering handle, and a saddle seat or seats and is usually propelled by the action of a rider’s feet upon pedals
bicycle
The best possible hand in lowball
bicycle
A bicycle is a vehicle with two wheels which you ride by sitting on it and pushing two pedals with your feet. You steer it by turning a bar that is connected to the front wheel. = bike. to go somewhere by bicycle = bike, cycle cycle. Lightweight, two-wheeled, steerable machine that is propelled by the rider. The wheels are mounted in a metal frame, and the front wheel is held in a movable fork. The rider sits on a saddle and steers with handlebars attached to the fork, propelling the bicycle with two pedals attached to cranks that turn a driving sprocket. A chain transmits power from the driving sprocket to a back-wheel sprocket. A heavy, pedalless form built in 1818 was propelled simply by the rider paddling his feet against the ground. In the early 1840s Scottish blacksmith Kirkpatrick Macmillan (1813-78) built bicycles propelled by pedals, cranks, and drive rods; he is widely credited with having invented the bicycle. Important innovations were introduced by Pierre and Ernest Michaux in France in the early1860s, and by 1865 their company was manufacturing 400 vélocipèdes a year. A lighter version produced in England in 1870 (nicknamed the "penny-farthing") featured a large front wheel and small back wheel. By the 1890s the standard bicycle design was established, and, with the smooth ride enabled by the new pneumatic tires, its popularity exploded. The so-called mountain bike became the standard design by the early 1990s. The bicycle is used worldwide as a basic means of transportation
A bicycler
bicyclist
Bicycle
tricycle
bicycle
The transporting of one set of reproduction materials (programs and commercials) from one place to another usually by messenger, mail or freight Today satellites have replaced bicycling as the primary source of transmitting programs and their commercials
bicycle
{f} ride a bicycle

One shouldn't ride a bicycle on the pavement. - You shouldn't ride a bicycle on the sidewalk.

You shouldn't ride a bicycle on the sidewalk. - One shouldn't ride a bicycle on the pavement.

bicycle
a wheeled vehicle that has two wheels and is moved by foot pedals ride a bicycle
bicycle
It has a saddle seat and is propelled by the rider's feet acting on cranks or levers
bicycle
To travel or exercise using a bicycle
bicycle
Pin hidden behind another pin (barmaid, double wood, one­in­the­dark, sleeper, tandem)
bicycle
Pin hidden behind another pin (barmaid, double wood, one­in­the­dark, sleeper, tandem)
bicycle
A vehicle that has two wheels, one behind the other, a steering handle, and a saddle seat or seats and is usually propelled by the action of a rider's feet upon pedals
bicycle
n sepeda
bicycle
A traveling block used on a cable in skidding logs
bicycle
Same as barmaid
bicycle
A light vehicle having two wheels one behind the other
bicycle
Held to be a "carriage" within a statute forbidding fast driving Taylor v Goodwin, L R , 4 Q B D 228 (1879) In the absence of legislative prohibition, riders of bicycles would seem to have the same rights on highways as those using any other vehicle Cook, Highways See 69 Law Times, 28 (1880)
bicycle
A slang term for a wheel or 5 high straight ie A, 2, 3, 4, 5
bicycle
» A handcuff or theta graph Equivalently, a minimal connected graph with cyclomatic number 2
bicycle
Every device propelled by human power upon which any person may ride, having two tandem wheels, either of which is more than 14 inches in diameter
bicycle
A straight that is A-2-3-4-5
bicycle
Pin hidden behind another pin (barmaid, double wood, one­in­the­dark, sleeper, tandem)
bicycle
A two or three wheeled vehicle designed to be propelled solely by human power, or a two or three wheeled vehicle that is a power assisted pedal cycle
bicycle
a wheeled vehicle that has two wheels and is moved by foot pedals
bicycle
{i} two-wheeled vehicle operated by pedaling
bicycle
A death or injury from a bicycle crash with or without another motor vehicle, pedestrian or stationary object
bicyclers
plural of bicycler
bicycler
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