lippe

listen to the pronunciation of lippe
Deutsch - Türkisch
n {'lipı} e dudak
[die] dudak
hicran
dudak

Tutmak istediğim el senin elin.Duymak istediğim kalb senin kalbin. Öpmek istediğim dudaklar senin dudakların. Ve bedenime yakın olmasını istediğim beden senin bedenin. Seni özlüyorum! - Es ist deine Hand, die ich halten möchte. Dein Herz, das ich hören möchte. Deine Lippen, die ich küssen möchte. Und dein Körper, den ich ganz nah an meinem spüren möchte! Ich vermisse dich.

Türkisch - Türkisch
Almanya'da Ren'in kolu olan bir ırmak
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von lippe im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

lip
{i} ağız
lip
(Tıp) Dudağa benzer herhangi bir yapı veya oluşum (Vulvayı çevreleyen büyük veya küçük dudaklardan her biri)
lip
nefesli sazların ağızlığı
lip
nefesli sazın ağıza yerleştirilme şekli
lip
öpmek

Gözlerini kapadı, dudaklarını sıktı ve öpmek için öne eğildi. - She closed her eyes, pursed her lips and leaned forward for a kiss.

lip
dudaklarla dokunmak
lip
edepsizlik
lip
lip
anat
lip
(Tıp) (o) Yağ
lip
ağıza almak
lip
(Tıp) Dudak ağzı üstten ve alttan çevreleyen iki adet etli oluşumdan her biri
lip
lep
lip
dudak

Liköre dokunan dudaklar benimkine dokunmayacaklar. - Lips that touch liquor shall not touch mine.

Eğer söyleyeceğin bir şey yoksa, dudaklarını kapalı tut. - If you have nothing to say, keep your lips sealed.

lip
erin
lip
{i} küstahlık
lip
{i} kenar
Englisch - Englisch
Former German state. It lay between the Teutoburg Forest and the Weser River, and its capital was Detmold. A lordship in medieval times, it became a county in the 16th century. Dynastic divisions in the early 17th century resulted in two counties, Lippe and Schaumburg-Lippe. In 1720 it was made a principality. A member of the German Confederation in 1815, it became part of the German Empire in 1871 and of the Weimar Republic in 1918. In 1947 it was incorporated into North Rhine-Westphalia
Lippe River
River, western Germany. Rising on the western edge of the Teutoburg Forest, it follows a westerly course of 155 mi (250 km) and enters the Rhine River near Wesel. Once used for the transport of coal, timber, and agricultural produce, it now supplies water to the Ruhr region canal system
Schaumburg-Lippe
Former German state. Schaumburg was the ancestral seat of a line of counts recorded from the early 12th century. The line died out in 1640 and the lands were partitioned. It joined the German Confederation in 1815 and the German empire in 1871. It joined the Weimar Republic in 1918 as a free state; in 1946 it was merged into the state of Lower Saxony