wiesel

listen to the pronunciation of wiesel
Deutsch - Türkisch
[das] gelincik
- {'vi: zıl} s gelincik
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von wiesel im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

weasel
{i} gelincik

Rusçada okşamak, sevgi ile bayağı gelincik sözcükleri eşsesli ve muhtemelen etimolojik olarak ilişkilidirler. - In Russian, the words for caress, endearment and least weasel are homonymous and possibly related etymologically.

Amerikan İngilizcesinde kakımlar, gelinciklerin bir alt kümesidir; İngiliz İngilizcesinde ise öyle değildir. - In American English, stoats are a subset of weasels, while in British English, they aren't.

stoat
kakım

Tom'un uyumada problemi olduğunda, o kakımları saymaya başlar.O, onu çabucak sakin bir hale getirir. Ve o kakımları elliye kadar sayabilmeden önce derin uykuya dalar. - When Tom has trouble sleeping, he starts counting stoats. That quickly brings him into a peaceful mood, and he is fast asleep before he could count the stoats to fifty.

Mavi renk gibi, kakımlar da temel düzeyde bana hitap eden şeylerden biridir. - Like the colour blue, stoats are one of the things that appeal to me on a primal level.

stoat
as
weasel
anlam bozan kelime
stoat
{i} gelincik [(Zooloji) ]
stoat
{i} as [hayv.]
stoat
{i} kakım [(Zooloji) ]
weasel
weasel word kaçamaklı söz
weasel
sansargillerden herhangi bir hayvan
weasel
{i} paletli kar arabası
weasel
{i} (Zooloji) gelincik
weasel
{i} sinsi kimse
weasel
{i} samur
weasel
çakal
weasel
weasel yüzlü
weasel
{i} k.dili. sinsi kimse, kurnaz kimse, çakal. f
weasel
weasel out of sıyrılmak
weasel
{i} sansar

Sansar kötü kokusuyla bilinir. - The weasel is noted for its bad smell.

Deutsch - Englisch
weasel
weasels
stoat

When I'm in a bad mood, I like to think of stoats to cheer myself up. - Wenn ich in schlechter Stimmung bin, denke ich, um mich aufzumuntern, gerne an Wiesel.

Englisch - Englisch
{i} family name; Elie Wiesel (born 1928), Romanian-born United States writer and journalist, Holocaust survivor and winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize, author of "Night," founder of the Elie Wiesel Foundation
Wiesel Elie Eliezer Wiesel Wiesel Torsten Nils
United States writer who survived Nazi concentration camps and is dedicated to keeping alive the memory of the Holocaust (born in 1928)
Elie Wiesel
orig. Eliezer Wiesel born Sept. 30, 1928, Sighet, Rom. Romanian-born U.S. novelist. Living in a small Hasidic community, Wiesel and his family were deported in 1944 to Auschwitz and then to Buchenwald; his parents and sister were killed. All his works reflect his experiences as a survivor of the Holocaust and his attempt to resolve the ethical torment of why it happened and what it reveals about human nature. They include Night (1958), A Beggar in Jerusalem (1968), The Testament (1980), and The Forgotten (1989). A noted lecturer, he was awarded the 1986 Nobel Prize for Peace for his universal condemnation of violence, hatred, and oppression
Elie Wiesel
{i} (born 1928) Romanian-born United States writer and journalist, Holocaust survivor and winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize, author of "Night," founder of the Elie Wiesel Foundation
Elie Wiesel Foundation
organization founded by Elie Wiesel to advance the cause of human rights worldwide by creating forums for the discussion and resolution of urgent ethical issues
Torsten Nils Wiesel
born June 3, 1924, Uppsala, Swed. Swedish neurobiologist. After earning his medical degree in Sweden, he moved to the U.S., where he joined David Hubel in investigating brain function. By analyzing the flow of nerve impulses from the eye in laboratory animals, they detected many structural and functional details of the visual cortex, in the occipital lobes of the cerebral cortex. Their studies of the effects of visual impairments in young animals lent strong support to the view that prompt surgery is crucial to correct certain eye defects in newborn children. The two shared a 1981 Nobel Prize with Roger Sperry
Torsten Wiesel
born June 3, 1924, Uppsala, Swed. Swedish neurobiologist. After earning his medical degree in Sweden, he moved to the U.S., where he joined David Hubel in investigating brain function. By analyzing the flow of nerve impulses from the eye in laboratory animals, they detected many structural and functional details of the visual cortex, in the occipital lobes of the cerebral cortex. Their studies of the effects of visual impairments in young animals lent strong support to the view that prompt surgery is crucial to correct certain eye defects in newborn children. The two shared a 1981 Nobel Prize with Roger Sperry