ııı

listen to the pronunciation of ııı
English - Turkish

Definition of ııı in English Turkish dictionary

III
(Askeri) uyuşturucu kaynaklı hastalık veya yaralanma (incapacitating illness or injury)
ARTS III
(Askeri) Otomatik Radar Taikp Sistemi (Automated Radar Tracking System)
Globemaster III
(Askeri) Globemaster III
le fort fracture; class I, class II, class III
(Diş Hekimliği) maksillo - fasiyel kırıkların üç ana sınıfından biri
le fort fracture; class III
(Diş Hekimliği) burun köprüsünü, orbitayı, maksillanın piramidal çıkıntılarını ve zigomatik kemiğin geri kalan bağlantılarını etkileyen, kraniyofasiyel çıkık
orderwire control unit (Types I, II, and III)
(Askeri) emir-komuta kontrol birliği (Tür I, II ve III)
secure telephone unit III
(Askeri) emniyetli telefon birimi III
English - English

Definition of ııı in English English dictionary

III
number 3 (Roman Numerals)
III
Abd al Rahman III Afonso III Alexander III Amenhotep III Andronicus III Palaeologus Antiochus III Augustus III Cabell Calloway III Casimir III Charles III Christian III Cleomenes III Conrad III Year III Dean John Wesley III Edward III Eugenius III Ferdinand III Frederick III Frederick William III Fyodor III William Henry Gates III George III Gustav III Harald III Sigurdsson Henry III Honorius III Innocent III Ivan III James III John III Ducas Vatatzes John III Sobieski Khama III John Uhler Lemmon III Leo III Makarios III Malcolm III Canmore Otto III Paul III Peter III Philip III Pippin III Ramses III Richard III Robert III Romanus III Argyrus Sancho III Garcés Selim III Sigismund III Vasa Stefan Uros III Thomas Isiah Lord III Thutmose III Tiglath pileser III Robert Edward Turner III Victor Emmanuel III Victor III Vlad III Tepes William III Leopold III Napoleon III Rainier III
S. of III Ch.
An abbreviation used for the Song of the Three Holy Children
Sol III
an alternate name for the Earth (Terra)
World War III
A hypothetical world war following World War II
iron(III) oxide
A name for the chemical compound Fe2O3, iron oxide where iron has a valence of +3. This is the IUPAC preferred nomenclature. The old term was ferric oxide
iron(III) sulfate
The crystalline salt of trivalent iron and sulfuric acid, Fe2(SO4)3
Alexander III
{i} (1845-1894) Russian czar from 1881 to 1894; Orlando Bandinelli (c.1105-1181), pope from 1159 to 1181; Alexander the Great (356-323 BC), king of Macedonia and conqueror of the Greek city-states and the Persian empire
Alexander III
King of Macedonia (336-323) and conquerer of Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, Babylonia, and Persia. His reign marked the beginning of the Hellenistic Age. Pope (1159-1181) who excommunicated Frederick I (1165) and established papal supremacy
Andronicus III Palaeologus
born March 25, 1297, Constantinople died June 15, 1341, Constantinople Byzantine emperor (1328-41). He forced his grandfather Andronicus II Palaeologus to make him coemperor (1325) and then to abdicate (1328). He relied on John VI Cantacuzenus to reform the courts and rebuild the imperial navy. He ceded control of Macedonia to Serbia (1334) and lost land to the Ottoman Turks in Anatolia, but he regained some Aegean islands from the Genoese and reasserted control of Epirus and Thessaly
Darius III
King of Persia (336-330) who was defeated in several battles by Alexander the Great. His murder by a Bactrian satrap effectively ended the Persian Empire
Edward III
King of England (1327-1377) whose reign was marked by the beginning of the Hundred Years' War, epidemics of the Black Death, and the emergence of the Commons as a powerful arm of Parliament
Ferdinand III
Holy Roman emperor (1637-1657) and king of Hungary (1625-1647) and Bohemia (1627-1656). He signed the Peace of Westphalia (1648), thus ending the Thirty Years' War
Frederick William III
King of Prussia (1797-1840) whose long turbulent reign included participation in the Napoleonic Wars and the suppression of democratic movements
George III
King of Great Britain and Ireland (1760-1820) and of Hanover (1815-1820). His government's policies fed American colonial discontent, leading to revolution in 1776
Gustavus III
King of Sweden (1771-1792) who increased royal power, introduced reforms, and waged an unpopular war against Russia (1788-1790)
Harald III Sigurdsson
known as Harald Hardraade or Harald the Ruthless born 1015, Norway died Sept. 25, 1066, Stamford Bridge, Yorkshire, Eng. King of Norway (1045-66). The son of a Norwegian chieftain, he fought against the Danes in 1030, then fled the country, taking service in the Russian and Byzantine armies. He returned in 1045 to take the throne. He struggled unsuccessfully to wrest the Danish throne from Sweyn II (1045-62). He expanded Norway's possessions in the Orkney, Shetland, and Hebrides islands, and he attempted to conquer England in 1066 but was defeated and killed at Stamford Bridge
Harold III
King of Norway (1045-1066) who invaded England in 1066 and was killed in a battle against Harold II
Henry III
King of England (1216-1272) who succeeded his father, King John. His reign was marred by baronial opposition led by Simon de Montfort, whose representative parliament, called in 1265, is considered England's first full parliament. King of France (1574-1589) who helped his mother, Catherine de Médicis, plot the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre (1572). His reign was marked by bitter conflict between Catholics and Huguenots
III
black book
III
raskolnik
John III Ducas Vatatzes
born 1193 died Nov. 3, 1254, Nymphaion Emperor of Nicaea (1222-54). He succeeded Theodore I Lascaris and defeated rivals for the imperial throne in 1223. Two years later he triumphed over Latin forces loyal to his rivals and gained control of Asia Minor. He allied with Ivan Asen II against Epirus (1230) and besieged Constantinople (1235), prompting Asen to go to war with him (1235-37). He acquired territory in Bulgaria (1241) and Epirus (1242) and supported a cultural revival from his capital at Nicaea, paving the way for the eventual reestablishment of the Byzantine Empire. Venerated by his people, he was canonized in the Eastern church
John III Sobieski
Polish Jan Sobieski born Aug. 17, 1629, Olesko, Pol. died June 17, 1696, Wilanów Elective king of Poland (1674-96). Named commander in chief of the Polish army (1668), he distinguished himself by victories over the Cossacks and Turks. His reputation was so great that he was elected king in preference to the Habsburgs' candidate. In 1683 he concluded a treaty with Emperor Leopold I against the Ottoman Turks. When a Turkish army approached Vienna later that year, he rushed there with troops, took command of the entire relief force, and achieved a brilliant victory, briefly restoring the kingdom of Poland-Lithuania to greatness for the last time. He was unsuccessful in a Hungarian campaign (1683-91) to liberate Moldavia and Walachia from Ottoman rule. Later rebellion within his own family, with nobles fighting each other rather than the Turks, led finally to Poland's downfall in the 18th century
King Edward III
a king of England who ruled during the Black Death and the start of the Hundred Years War (1312-77)
King George III
the king of Great Britain and Ireland from 1760 until his death. He was the British king when the US fought to become independent of Britain, and suffered at times from a serious mental illness (1738-1820)
King Henry III
the king of England from 1216 until his death. He fought many wars in Europe, and this made him unpopular with the barons (=men of the highest social class) . Led by Simon de Montfort, they fought against him but eventually lost (1207-72)
King Richard III
the king of England from 1483 until his death. When his brother, King Edward IV, died in 1483, Richard had the job of taking care of Edward's sons, who were still boys. But he put the boys in prison in the Tower of London (the Princes in the Tower). They disappeared and he took the position of king for himself. He was later killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field. In Shakespeare's play Richard III, Richard is shown as a cruel and ugly man, but some writers now believe that he was in fact an effective king and a brave military leader, who was not responsible for the deaths of the princes (1452-85)
Leo III
Pope (795-816) who crowned Charlemagne emperor (800)
Louis Napoleon Bonaparte III
{i} Napoleon III of France (1808-1873), first French president and third emperor (1848-1870), nephew of Napoleon I
Malcolm III Canmore
born 1031 died Nov. 13, 1093, near Alnick, Northumberland, Eng. King of Scotland (1058-93). The son of King Duncan I, he lived in exile in England after Macbeth murdered his father. He defeated and killed Macbeth in 1057 and was crowned king, founding a dynasty that consolidated royal power in Scotland. He gave refuge to the Anglo-Saxon prince Edgar the Aetheling in 1066. Though he recognized William I as overlord in 1072, Malcolm made five raids into England, during the last of which he was killed
Napoleon III
Emperor of the French (1852-1871). A nephew of Napoleon I, he led the Bonapartist opposition to Louis Philippe and became president of the Second Republic (1848). After proclaiming himself emperor (1852), he instituted reforms and rebuilt Paris. His successful imperialist ventures were overshadowed by a failed campaign in Mexico (1861-1867) and the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), which resulted in his deposition
Napoleon III of France
{i} Louis Napoleon Bonaparte III (1808-1873), first French president and third emperor (1848-1870), nephew of Napoleon I
Paul III
Pope (1534-1549) who initiated the Catholic Reformation and accepted (1545) the Jesuit order into the Church
Ptolemy III-XV
Soter II assumed sole rule (88-81), installing his brother's widow, his own daughter, with him. Ptolemy XI Alexander II (r. 80) was the last fully legitimate Ptolemaic king of Egypt. On the orders of Sulla, whose hostage he had been, he took Ptolemy IX Soter II's widow as wife and attempted to rule with her. This being unacceptable to the queen, Ptolemy murdered her and took sole power, for which the people of Alexandria killed him; his rule lasted 19 days. Of the remaining Ptolemies, Ptolemy XIV Theos Philopator II shared power (47-44) with his sister Cleopatra; it was probably she who had him assassinated, to make way for her son by Julius Caesar. Ptolemy XV Caesar, or Caesarion, shared power with his mother from 44; he was killed by Octavian (later Augustus) after Cleopatra's suicide in
Ptolemy III-XV
(r. 246-30 BC) Macedonian kings of the Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt. Ptolemy III Euergetes ("Benefactor") (fl. 246-221) defeated the ruler of the Seleucid dynasty in the Third Syrian War (245-241). Ptolemy IV Philopator ("Father-loving") (r. 221-205) allowed Egypt to decline under his debauched rule. Ptolemy IX Soter II ruled with his mother (116-110, 109-107), until she expelled him and installed his brother Ptolemy X Alexander (r. 107-88). Alexander's unpopularity resulted in his expulsion, and he died at sea in
Ptolemy III-XV
His death marked the Roman conquest of Egypt and the dynasty's end
Rainier III
{i} Rainier Louis Henri Maxence Bertrand de Grimaldi (1923-2005), Prince of Monaco who reigned Monaco from 1949 to his death, husband of Grace Kelly
Richard III
King of England (1483-1485) who claimed the throne after imprisoning the sons of his deceased brother Edward IV. Richard's death at the Battle of Bosworth Field brought an end to the Wars of the Roses
Richard III
{i} (1452-1485) king of England from 1483 to 1485
Romanus III Argyrus
born 968 died April 11, 1034 Byzantine emperor (1028-34). An undistinguished Byzantine patrician, he was compelled by the dying emperor Constantine VIII to marry his daughter Zoe and become his successor. Romanus proved inept in military and financial matters, and his effort to repel Muslim invaders was unsuccessful (1030). He is believed to have been poisoned by his wife
Sigismund III Vasa
Polish Zygmunt Waza born June 20, 1566, Gripsholm, Swed. died April 30, 1632, Warsaw, Pol. King of Poland (1587-1632) and of Sweden (1592-99). Son of King John III of Sweden (1537-1592) and Catherine, daughter of Sigismund I of Poland, he was elected king of Poland in 1587. On his father's death (1592), he accepted the Swedish throne and was crowned in 1594. He left his paternal uncle Charles (later Charles IX) as regent in Sweden and returned to Poland, but Charles later rose in rebellion, defeated Sigismund's army (1598), and deposed Sigismund (1599). Poland and Sweden fought intermittently from 1600 as Sigismund tried to regain the Swedish throne. He invaded Russia in the Time of Troubles and held Moscow (1610-12). In a renewal of the Polish-Swedish conflict in 1621, King Gustav II Adolf seized most of Polish Livonia, which Sweden retained under the terms of a 1629 truce
Valentinian III
Emperor of Rome in the West (425-455) whose reign was marked by numerous raids by Germanic tribes
Victor Emmanuel III
Italian king (1900-1946). He appointed Benito Mussolini prime minister in 1922 and did little to stop Italy's decline into a fascist state. He abdicated in 1946, and the monarchy was formally abolished in 1947
Vlad III Tepes
or Vlad the Impaler born 1431 died 1476 Ruler of Walachia (1448, 1456-62, 1476). He succeeded his father, Vlad II Dracul ("Dragon"). He gained the throne decisively in 1456 with the help of János Hunyadi. He fought the Turkish invasions of Walachia and built many fortifications to hold them back, including the fortress of Poenari with its stairway of 1,400 steps. He was imprisoned for 12 years in Hungary by Matthias I, from whom he had sought aid after being overthrown by the Ottomans. He was killed by an Ottoman-supported prince. Although an effective administrator and military leader, he was notorious for cruel depravities. In establishing his domination over the Walachian nobility, he apparently tortured to death 20,000 men, women, and children by impaling them upright on thin stakes. His epithet Dracula ("Son of the Dragon") was used by Bram Stoker for the Romanian vampire-count in his famous novel
William Henry Gates III
{i} Bill Gates (born 1955), United States computer software designer, chairman and co-founder of Microsoft Inc., one of the world's richest men
William III
King of England, Scotland, and Ireland (1689-1702), Dutch stadholder (1672-1702), and prince of Orange. Married to Mary, daughter of James II, he was asked by the opponents of James to invade England (1688) and was proclaimed joint monarch with Mary (1689) after James fled. William of Orange, King
World War III
WWIII, theoretical future world war characterized by the use of nuclear weapons and massive worldwide devastation
human T-cell lymphotropic virus III
HTLV-III