precepts

listen to the pronunciation of precepts
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von precepts im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

five
{i} beş

Buraya taşındığımızdan beri beş yıl geçti. - It is five years since we moved here.

Bir, üç ve beş tek sayılardır. - One, three, and five are odd numbers.

precept
{i} talimat
five
beşi

Başkan Lincoln bu belgelerin tüm beşini yazdı. - President Lincoln wrote all five of these documents.

Bizim ev beşimize yetecek kadar geniş. - Our house is large enough for five of us.

precept
ana kural
precept
temel
precept
ilke
precept
mahkeme emri
precept
temel prensip
five
iskambilde beşli
precept
eğitim vermek
five
beş parmak denilen deniz hayvanı
five
{i} beş, beş rakamı (5, V)
five
spor beş kişilik takım
five
beş sayısı iskambil beşli
five
beş rakamı

Bir sayısal tarih olarak yazıldığında Mart 14, 2015, pi'nin ilk beş rakamına karşılık gelir- yüz yılda bir kez rastlantı! - When written as a numerical date, March 14, 2015 is 3/14/15, corresponding to the first five digits of pi (3.1415) - a once-in-a-century coincidence!

five
beş kat

Büyük babam benim beş katım kadar yaşlıdır. - My grandfather is five times as old as I am.

Kitaplarını beş kategoriye ayırdı. - He grouped his books into five categories.

five
(isim) beş
five
fivefingers beşparmakotu
five
five and dime tuhafiye mağazası
five
{i} isk. beşli. five-and-ten-cent store/ten-cent store/dime store/five-and-ten ucuz eşya satılan mağaza
precept
{i} kural

Örnek en iyi kuraldır. - Example is the best precept.

precept
{i} ahlaki kural, ilke
precept
{i} yönetmelik
precept
{i} kaide
precept
{i} emir
precept
{i} yönerge
Englisch - Englisch
a principal or instruction intended especially as a general rule of action
Teachings regarding personal conduct, which are both ethical guidelines and, more broadly, aspects of reality itself At both jukai and tokudo ceremonies, sixteen precepts (kai) are received
rules or statements advising or laying down a principle or principles or a course of action regarding conduct; directions meant as a rule or rules for conduct
Commands or orders given to individuals or communities in particular cases; they establish law for concerned parties Preceptive documents are issued by the pope, departments of the Roman Curia and other competent authority in the Church
The income which the County Council requires from the collection funds of the district councils
Plural of precept
five-
five
precept
This is the amount of Council Tax income county councils, police authorities, the Metropolitan Police, parish councils and some fire authorities need to provide their services The amounts for all local authorities providing services in an area appear on one Council Tax bill which comes from the billing authority
precept
{n} a command, instruction, rule, law
Book of Precepts
composition by RamBam that includes a list of the mitzvot
observing the precepts
fulfilling of the mitzvot, keeping of the Jewish religious laws
precept
Any commandment, instruction, or order intended as an authoritative rule of action; esp
precept
A precept is a general rule that helps you to decide how you should behave in particular circumstances. an electoral process based on the precept that all men are born equal. = principle. a rule on which a way of thinking or behaving is based (praeceptum, from praecipere )
precept
A rule or principle, especially one governing personal conduct
precept
n A rule or principle imposing a particular standard of action or conduct
precept
a command respecting moral conduct; an injunction; a rule
precept
a doctrine that is taught; "the teachings of religion"; "he believed all the Christian precepts"
precept
rule of personal conduct
precept
The income which the Council requires a District Council to raise on its behalf from Council Tax
precept
A command in writing; a species of writ or process
precept
To teach by precepts
precept
{i} order, directive, instruction; rule, law; command; commandment, mandate; maxim, saying, adage
precepts

    Türkische aussprache

    prisepts

    Aussprache

    /ˈprēˌsepts/ /ˈpriːˌsɛpts/

    Etymologie

    [ 'prE-"sept ] (noun.) 14th century. Middle English, from Latin praeceptum, from neuter of praeceptus, past participle of praecipere to take beforehand, instruct, from prae- + capere to take; more at HEAVE.
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