lev'

listen to the pronunciation of lev'
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von lev' im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

levée en masse
(Askeri) kitle halinde ayaklanma
Türkisch - Türkisch
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Yanma
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Yakma
LEV'A
(Osmanlı Dönemi) (C.: Leveât) Gönül acısı, kalb acısı. Yürek yanıklığı
LEV
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Gr: (Şart edâtı) Dahâ ziyade, olsa bile (manâsına gelir.) "İnne" gibi mâzi mânâsını muzariye çevirmeyip aksine muzâriyi de mâziye çevirir. Temenni edâtı ve vasıl edâtı olur. Meselâ : Lev-câe Aliyyun leraeytühu: Ali gelse idi, elbette görürdüm
Englisch - Englisch

Definition von lev' im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch

Lev.
Book of Leviticus
lev
The currency of Bulgaria, divided into 100 stotinki
Lev
{i} male first name; family name
Lev
Leviticus. Lev Samuilovich Rosenberg Ivanov Lev Ivanovich Kamenev Lev Borisovich Lev Borisovich Rosenfeld Landau Lev Davidovich Lev Nikolayevich Count Tolstoy Lev Davidovich Bronshtein Vygotsky Lev Semyonovich
Lev Borisovich Kamenev
orig. Lev Borisovich Rosenfeld born July 18, 1883, Moscow, Russia died Aug. 24, 1936, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R. Russian political leader. A member of the Bolsheviks from 1903, he worked with Vladimir Ilich Lenin in Europe (1909-14), then returned to Russia, where he was arrested and sent to Siberia. After the Russian Revolution of 1917, he served as head of the Moscow soviet (1919-25). When Lenin became seriously ill in 1922, Kamenev joined Joseph Stalin and Grigory Y. Zinovyev to form the ruling triumvirate, attacking Leon Trotsky. In 1925 Stalin shifted his attack to Kamenev and Zinovyev, removng Kamenev as Moscow party head. In 1926 Kamenev was expelled from the party after conspiring with Zinovyev and Trotsky against Stalin. In 1936 he was tried in the first of the purge trials and confessed to fabricated charges, hoping to save his family. He was executed, and his wife, Trotsky's sister, perished in the Gulag
Lev Davidovich Landau
born Jan. 22, 1908, Baku, Azerbaijan, Russian Empire died April 1, 1968, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R. Soviet physicist. After graduating from Leningrad State University, he studied at Niels Bohr's institute in Copenhagen. He is known for his work in low-temperature physics, atomic and nuclear physics, and solid-state, stellar-energy, and plasma physics. For explaining the phenomenon of liquid helium, he was awarded a 1962 Nobel Prize. For his work in many areas of physics, his name is applied to Landau diamagnetism, Landau levels, Landau damping, the Landau energy spectrum, Landau cuts, and the Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics in Moscow
Lev Ivanov
born Feb. 18, 1834, Moscow, Russia died Dec. 24, 1901, St. Petersburg Russian dancer and choreographer. He joined the Imperial Ballet in St. Petersburg in 1852 and became lead dancer in 1869. In 1885 he was appointed assistant ballet master under Marius Petipa. He is best known for his choreography of The Nutcracker (1892) and parts of Swan Lake (1895), which he based closely on the structure and emotional content of the music rather than emphasizing virtuoso technique
Lev Ivanovich Ivanov
born Feb. 18, 1834, Moscow, Russia died Dec. 24, 1901, St. Petersburg Russian dancer and choreographer. He joined the Imperial Ballet in St. Petersburg in 1852 and became lead dancer in 1869. In 1885 he was appointed assistant ballet master under Marius Petipa. He is best known for his choreography of The Nutcracker (1892) and parts of Swan Lake (1895), which he based closely on the structure and emotional content of the music rather than emphasizing virtuoso technique
Lev Kamenev
orig. Lev Borisovich Rosenfeld born July 18, 1883, Moscow, Russia died Aug. 24, 1936, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R. Russian political leader. A member of the Bolsheviks from 1903, he worked with Vladimir Ilich Lenin in Europe (1909-14), then returned to Russia, where he was arrested and sent to Siberia. After the Russian Revolution of 1917, he served as head of the Moscow soviet (1919-25). When Lenin became seriously ill in 1922, Kamenev joined Joseph Stalin and Grigory Y. Zinovyev to form the ruling triumvirate, attacking Leon Trotsky. In 1925 Stalin shifted his attack to Kamenev and Zinovyev, removng Kamenev as Moscow party head. In 1926 Kamenev was expelled from the party after conspiring with Zinovyev and Trotsky against Stalin. In 1936 he was tried in the first of the purge trials and confessed to fabricated charges, hoping to save his family. He was executed, and his wife, Trotsky's sister, perished in the Gulag
Lev Landau
born Jan. 22, 1908, Baku, Azerbaijan, Russian Empire died April 1, 1968, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R. Soviet physicist. After graduating from Leningrad State University, he studied at Niels Bohr's institute in Copenhagen. He is known for his work in low-temperature physics, atomic and nuclear physics, and solid-state, stellar-energy, and plasma physics. For explaining the phenomenon of liquid helium, he was awarded a 1962 Nobel Prize. For his work in many areas of physics, his name is applied to Landau diamagnetism, Landau levels, Landau damping, the Landau energy spectrum, Landau cuts, and the Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics in Moscow
Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy
{i} Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy (1828-1910), Russian author, writer of "War and Peace
Lev Semyonovich Vygotsky
v. born Nov. 5, 1896, Orsha, Russia died June 11, 1934, Moscow Soviet psychologist. He studied linguistics and philosophy at the University of Moscow before becoming involved in psychological research. While working at Moscow's Institute of Psychology (1924-34), he became a major figure in post-revolutionary Soviet psychology. He studied the role of social and cultural factors in the making of human consciousness; his theory of signs and their relationship to the development of speech influenced psychologists such as A.R. Luria and Jean Piaget. His best-known work, Thought and Language (1934), was briefly suppressed as a threat to Stalinism
Lev Yashin
Soviet soccer goalkeeper
lev
Acronym for Low Emission Vehicle Standards
lev
The monetary unit of Bulgaria
lev
Low-emissions vehicle
lev
Local Exhaust Ventilation equipment required
lev
Abbreviation for Low-Emission Vehicle, first promoted by law in the state of California Not as clean as ULEVs (Ultra-Low Emission Vehicles) or ZEVs (Zero Emission Vehicles)
lev
the basic unit of money in Bulgaria
lev
local exhaust ventilation
lev
Low Emission Vehicle
lev-
Variant of levo-
Bar-Lev line
series of mines that were laid in the Sinai peninsula after the Six Day War
Count Tolstoy Lev Nikolayevich
Russian Lev Nikolayevich, Count Tolstoy born Sept. 9, 1828, Yasnaya Polyana, Tula province, Russian Empire died Nov. 20, 1910, Astapovo, Ryazan province Russian writer, one of the world's greatest novelists. The scion of prominent aristocrats, Tolstoy spent much of his life at his family estate of Yasnaya Polyana. After a somewhat dissolute youth, he served in the army and traveled in Europe before returning home and starting a school for peasant children. He was already known as a brilliant writer for the short stories in Sevastopol Sketches (1855-56) and the novel The Cossacks (1863) when War and Peace (1865-69) established him as Russia's preeminent novelist. Set during the Napoleonic Wars, it examines the lives of a large group of characters, centring on the partly autobiographical figure of the spiritually questing Pierre. Its structure, with its flawless placement of complex characters in a turbulent historical setting, is regarded as one of the great technical achievements in the history of the Western novel. His other great novel, Anna Karenina (1875-77), focuses on an aristocratic woman who deserts her husband for a lover and on the search for meaning by another autobiographical character, Levin. After its publication Tolstoy underwent a spiritual crisis and turned to a form of Christian anarchism. Advocating simplicity and nonviolence, he devoted himself to social reform. His later works include The Death of Ivan Ilich (1886), often considered the greatest novella in Russian literature, and What Is Art? (1898), which condemns fashionable aestheticism and celebrates art's moral and religious functions. He lived like a peasant on his great estate, practicing a radical asceticism. Finding his marriage unbearable, he departed suddenly for the local railway station, where he contracted a fatal pneumonia in the cold