scrolls

listen to the pronunciation of scrolls
Englisch - Türkisch
kaydırır
scroll
kaydırmak
scroll
tomar şeklinde süs
scroll
(Mimarlık) salyangoz
scroll
tomar
scroll
parşömen tomarı
scroll
liste
scroll
(Bilgisayar) kaydırma

Bence, iyi tasarlanmış bir web sitesi yatay kaydırma gerektirmemeli. - In my opinion, a well-designed website shouldn't require horizontal scrolling.

scroll
(Arkeoloji) sarmal
scroll
{i} kemanın kıvrık ucu
scroll
(Bilgisayar) sarma
scroll
(Bilgisayar) kayarak
scroll
(Mimarlık) bezeme kıvrımı
scroll
(Mimarlık) kıvrım
scroll
(Bilgisayar) kayma
scroll
uzun ve kıvrımlı kâğıt belge
scroll
kaydır

Sayfanın altına doğru kaydırın. - Scroll down to the bottom of the page.

Bence, iyi tasarlanmış bir web sitesi yatay kaydırma gerektirmemeli. - In my opinion, a well-designed website shouldn't require horizontal scrolling.

scroll
tomar şeklinde sarmak
scroll
makinalı oyma testeresi
scroll
{i} helezoni kıvrım
scroll
kaydırmak Sarma
scroll
tomar şeklinde süslerle tezyin etmek
scroll
tomar gibi sarılmak
scroll
(İnşaat) kıvırmak
scroll
tomara kaydetmek
scroll
kemamn kıvrık ucu
scroll
{i} süslü yazı
scroll
scroll saw şerit testere
Englisch - Englisch
third-person singular of scroll
Scrolls are the supportive and decorative members shaped like a scroll or curl which are connected to posts, rails, and each other on many brass (especially traditional) headboards and footboards
plural of , scroll
scroll
To move in or out of view horizontally or vertically

The rising credits slowly scrolled off the screen.

scroll
a skew surface
scroll
To change one's view of data on a computer's display, typically using a scroll bar or a scroll wheel

She scrolled the offending image out of view.

scroll
A mark or flourish added to a person's signature, intended to represent a seal, and in some States allowed as a substitute for a seal. Alexander Mansfield Burrill
scroll
Scroll-shaped end of a violin
scroll
{n} a writing wrapped up, roll, wreath
Dead Sea Scrolls
ancient Hebrew manuscripts discovered near the Dead Sea
Dead Sea Scrolls
The papyrus scrolls and scroll fragments discovered between 1947 and 1960 at sites along the Dead Sea, mostly dating from the last two centuries , containing passages from books of the Hebrew Scriptures and from apocryphal biblical books, as well as sectarian writings. They are of great importance for reconstructing the compilation of the Hebrew Scriptures and for understanding Jewish culture in the era immediately preceding the birth of Jesus. a collection of ancient Jewish scrolls (=rolls of paper containing writing) from around the time of Christ. They contain the oldest copies of parts of the Old Testament of the Bible, and were found near the Dead Sea between 1947 and 1956. Caches of ancient, mostly Hebrew, manuscripts found at several sites on the northwestern shore of the Dead Sea (1947-56). The writings date from between the 3rd century BC and the 2nd century AD and total 800-900 manuscripts in 15,000 fragments. Many scholars believe that those deposited in 11 caves near the ruins of Qumrn belonged to a sectarian community whom most scholars believe were Essenes, though other scholars suggest Sadducees or Zealots. The community rejected the rest of the Jewish people and saw the world as sharply divided between good and evil. They cultivated a communal life of ritual purity, called the "Union," led by a messianic "Teacher of Righteousness." The Dead Sea Scrolls as a whole represent a wider spectrum of Jewish belief and may have been the contents of libraries from Jerusalem hidden during the war of AD 66-73. They also cast new light on the emergence of Christianity and the relationship of early Christian and Jewish religious traditions. See also Damascus Document
dead sea scrolls
The scrolls and manuscript fragments found at about half a dozen sites in the vicinity of the Dead Sea The most famous of these sites is Qumran
dead sea scrolls
Biblical and other religious manuscripts dating from the second century b c e to the first century c e , found in caves near Qumran on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea
dead sea scrolls
In 1947 an Arab shepherd boy discovered manuscripts which pre-dated Christ Many of these manuscripts were of the Old Testament, apocryphal material, and records of the Essene community
dead sea scrolls
A collection of scrolls dating to the first century B C E found in caves near the Dead Sea; they are generally thought to be linked with the settlement at Qumran, and with a Jewish religious group called the Essenes See Conclusion
dead sea scrolls
These are ancient writings, on scrolls, found by an Arab boy in 1947 in caves near the Dead Sea It is not known for certain who wrote them, when, and where The Jewish community that used these writings was situated in the forbidding ravine of Qumran at the northern end of the Dead Sea
dead sea scrolls
A collection of more than 800 manuscripts written on parchment, papyrus, and copper over 2,000 years ago The Dead Sea Scrolls were found in 1947 in what is now Israel The Scrolls contain many different kinds of texts, including the oldest known portions of the Old Testament of the Bible
dead sea scrolls
   a group of manuscripts that were found in 1947 in caves near the Dead Sea, at a place called wadi Qumran (Qumran gulch) The scrolls appear to have been the library of an Essene settlement, which flourished at the site from the late second century B C until it was destroyed by the Romans in 68 A D The importance of the scrolls for biblical studies is twofold They include Hebrew manuscripts of biblical books that are several centuries older than those previously known, and they shed new light on Jewish beliefs and practices around the time of Jesus See Essenes
dead sea scrolls
The name given to mainly parchment and papyrus scrolls written in Hebrew, Aramaic, or Greek, and discovered in eleven caves along the northwestern coast of the Dead Sea between 1947 and 1956, generally dating from 250 B C to A D 68 and assigned to an Essene community located at the archaeological site known as Khirbet Qumran (Soulen, Handbook of Biblical Criticism)
dead sea scrolls
Considered by most scholars to have been written between mid-third century B C to 68 A D , these biblical manuscripts were discovered on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea by an Arab farmer Excavation of 11 caves began in 1947 and was completed in 1960 Many scholars regard the ancient leather and papyrus scrolls as the greatest 20th century find, because they represent more than 500 religious books and shed insight on pivotal centuries of both Judaism and Christianity
dead sea scrolls
A group of over 800 manuscripts found between 1947 and 1956 in various caves on the northwestern shore of the Dead Sea The bulk of the manuscripts were discovered in eleven caves near a (probable) Essene settlement at Qumran, and include biblical, parabiblical, apocryphal and sectarian writings as well as some documentary texts (practice alphabets, deeds, contracts, letters)
dead sea scrolls
(Old Testament) a collection of written scrolls (containing nearly all of the Old Testament) found in a cave near the Dead Sea in the late 1940s; "the Dead Sea Scrolls provide information about Judaism and the Bible around the time of Jesus
scroll
Move through a list of items in a window by operating the scrollbars with the mouse cursor
scroll
Roman architectural ornament is largely of some scroll pattern
scroll
An ornament formed of undulations giving off spirals or sprays, usually suggestive of plant form
scroll
{f} create curves or spirals, cut into spirals or curves; move on-screen text or images horizontally or vertically so new information appears on one side of the screen as older information disappears from the other side (Computers)
scroll
A roll of paper or parchment; a writing formed into a roll; a schedule; a list
scroll
To move displayed text vertically up and down the screen You may also scroll horizontally
scroll
To look at the parts of the page that fall below (or above) what you see on your screen The long bar at the far right of this screen is a scroll bar The small square in it will allow you to scroll through the rest of this page Just place your mouse pointer over the square, hold down the left click button on the mouse and slide the square up or down You will see this page move You are now scrolling
scroll
To cause text or graphics to move up, down, or across the screen so that a line of text or graphics appears at one edge of the screen for each line that moves off the opposite edge
scroll
Since most computer monitors are not big enough to display an entire Web page (or any computer file), one has to scroll to see the whole file Scroll bars appear at the right side and bottom of a document to allow you to scroll
scroll
a document that can be rolled up (as for storage) move through text or graphics in order to display parts that do not fit on the screen; "Scroll down to see the entire text
scroll
a round shape formed by a series of concentric circles
scroll
To move through the contents of an electronic document in order to see things not currently displayed It is normally done by using a scroll bar
scroll
To look at the parts of the page that fall below (or above) of what you see on your screen The long bar at the far right of this screen is a scroll bar The small square in it will allow you to scroll through the rest of this page Just places your mouse pointer over the square, hold down the left click button on the mouse and slide the square up or down You will see this page move
scroll
{i} roll of paper or parchment with writing on it; ornamental design resembling a scroll; object shaped like a spiral; roster, list
scroll
the movement of text as it rolls up or down the screen
scroll
A mark or flourish added to a person's signature, intended to represent a seal, and in some States allowed as a substitute for a seal
scroll
Same as Skew surface
scroll
If you scroll through text on a computer screen, you move the text up or down to find the information that you need. I scrolled down to find `United States of America'. to move information on a computer screen up or down so that you can read it scroll through
scroll
Some of the functions may have more data than can be displayed on one screen These are referred to as "scrollable" screens as the user can scroll backward and forward through the data by pressing the F7 and F8 keys, respectively
scroll
A mark or flourish added to a persons signature, intended to represent a seal, and in some States allowed as a substitute for a seal. [U.S.] Burrill
scroll
To move text or graphics up or down in order to see parts of the file that cannot fit on the viewing area of a screen
scroll
a document that can be rolled up (as for storage)
scroll
To move all or part of the screen material up to down, left or right, to allow new information to appear
scroll
To move a document or directory in its window so that a different part of it is visible To scroll a window, use the scroll arrows, scroll bars, or scroll boxes found along the side or bottom of the window
scroll
move through text or graphics in order to display parts that do not fit on the screen; "Scroll down to see the entire text"
scroll
To move text or graphics up or down, or left or right, in order to see parts of the file that cannot fit on the screen
scroll
An ornament formed of undulations giving off spirals or sprays, usually suggestive of plant form. Roman architectural ornament is largely of some scroll pattern
scroll
To see a long Web page, you need to click in the vertical scroll bar on the extreme right of your browser window When you first arrive on a Web page, you see only the top part, and you won't see anything else until you scroll
scroll
To view consecutive lines of data on the display screen The term scroll means that once the screen is full, each new line appears at the edge of the screen and all other lines move over one position For example, when you scroll down, each new line appears at the bottom of the screen and all the other lines move up one row so that the top line disappears The term vertical scrolling refers to the ability to scroll up or down Horizontal scrolling means that the image moves left or right
scroll
to change ones view of data on a computers display using a scroll bar or a scroll wheel
scroll
A scroll is a painted or carved decoration made to look like a scroll. a handsome suite of chairs incised with Grecian scrolls
scroll
To hold your cursor arrow on the arrows or bar along the bottom or right side of the screen This moves the screen up or down so that you can read a complete document
scroll
Term used for moving the screen by clicking in the scroll bar on the right side of the window
scroll
A feature of a graphics display, a browser or a computer terminal whereby information that is too voluminous to be displayed simultaneously in an available window can be moved through that window under the user's control The user thereby interactively "roams" through the information
scroll
  In a display device, to move the display window of the screen vertically to view the contents of a stored document   Note: Scrolling may be performed continuously or incrementally (188)
scroll
to cause text or graphics to move up, down, or across a computer display screen Search Engines - a service that searches for particular keywords in Internet documents and returns a list of documents where they can be found Search - to examine a computer file, disk, database, or network for particular information Server - a computer in a network that stores application programs and data files accessed by the other computers in the network Software - computer programs and applications, such as word processing or database packages, that can be run on a particular computer system (often used before a noun)
scroll
to look at the parts of the page that fall below or above what you see on your screen; the long bar at the far right of this screen is a scroll bar; the small square in it will allow you to scroll through the rest of this page; just place your mouse pointer over the square, hold down the left click button on the mouse and slide the square up or down; you will see this page move; you are now scrolling
scroll
To move through text or graphics (up, down, left, or right) in order to see parts of the file or list that cannot fit on the screen
scroll
A scroll is a long roll of paper or a similar material with writing on it. Ancient scrolls were found in caves by the Dead Sea
scroll
Moving up or down within a document in your screen Use scroll bar at right Click on arrow down or arrow up Drag the scroll button down or up Or click on the page up or page down icons at the bottom of the bar If you need to scroll left or right, use the scroll bar at the bottom
scroll
In olden times, paper scrolls would be unfurled at the bottom and rolled up at the top to see a new page Scrolling the screen is similar: the document is moved up or down through the window, or left or right, so that a different part of it can be seen
scroll
See under Skew
the Hidden Scrolls
Hebrew scrolls that were discovered in the regions of the Dead Sea, books of explanations that were written in the days of the second temple and then concealed
the five scrolls
third section of the Hebrew Bible, five books of the Holy Writings (Song of Songs, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes and Esther)
scrolls

    Türkische aussprache

    skrōlz

    Aussprache

    /ˈskrōlz/ /ˈskroʊlz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'skrOl ] (noun.) 15th century. Middle English scrowle, blend of rolle roll and scrowe scrap, scroll.
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