matilda

listen to the pronunciation of matilda
Englisch - Türkisch
(Argo) serseri yatağı
matilda of canossa
Canossa of matilda
waltzing matilda
(Edebiyat) Avusturalyanın uzaklarına doğru yürümek. Çoğu Avusturalyalının milli mars saydığı popüler bir Avusturalya şarkısı; eşyalarını bohça yapıp şehir şehir gezerek çalışan bir gezginin hikayesini anlatmaktadır

"...and he sang as he watched and waited till his billy boiled, you'll come a waltzing matilda with me...".

Englisch - Englisch
A female given name

At one time Joan invented other names for her. 'Matilda' brought to mind dingy curtains, gray tent flaps, a slack-skinned old woman. How about Sharon? Lilliane? Elizabeth? Then, Joan didn't know how, the name Matilda became transformed. It started shining like silver. The il in it was silver. But not metallic. In Joan's mind the name gleamed now like a fold of satin.

a bundle of possessions, often tied up in a sack

When a hobo roams through the outback with a matilda on his back, he is said to be waltzing matilda..

female first name
or Maud born 1102, London, Eng. died Sept. 10, 1167, near Rouen, Fr. Daughter of Henry I of England and claimant to the English throne. She married Emperor Henry V in 1114; he died in 1125, and she made a second marriage to Geoffrey Plantagenet. Her brother's death in 1120 left her as Henry I's sole legitimate heir, and Henry named her as his successor in 1127. Stephen of Blois, Henry's nephew, seized the throne on the king's death in 1135, and his army defeated Matilda's supporters in 1141. She continued her resistance and retired to Normandy in 1148. Her son became Henry II of England, and she remained his adviser and oversaw his continental possesions. Matilda of Canossa Matilda the Great Countess Montgomery Lucy Maud
popular among medieval royalty
Matilda of Canossa
Italian Matilde known as Matilda the Great Countess born 1046, Lucca, Tuscany died July 24, 1115, Bondeno, Romagna Countess of Tuscany. A close friend of Pope Gregory VII, she backed him in his struggle against King Henry IV (see Investiture Controversy), and it was at her castle at Canossa that the king performed his barefoot penance before Gregory (1077). After Henry's second excommunication, she was intermittently at war with him until his death (1106), sometimes donning armour to lead her own troops, and she helped finance the pope's military operations and encouraged Henry's son Conrad to rebel against his father (1093). Her unwavering support for the popes of Rome was honoured by her reburial in St. Peter's Basilica in 1634
waltz Matilda
To travel with a swag; that is, with one's belongings wrapped in a cloth
waltzing Matilda
Present participle of waltz Matilda
walk matilda
(deyim) Waltz (or walk) Matilda: carry such a bundle
waltz matilda
(deyim) Waltz (or walk) Matilda: carry such a bundle
Waltzing Matilda
a popular old Australian song which many Australians think of as their national song. It tells the story of a 'swagman' (=a worker who travels around the country carrying his possessions with him)
matilda

    Silbentrennung

    Ma·til·da

    Türkische aussprache

    mıtîldı

    Aussprache

    /məˈtəldə/ /məˈtɪldə/

    Etymologie

    () Name of medieval royalty, Latinized form of Old High German maht,meht "might" + hild "battle".
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