anvil

listen to the pronunciation of anvil
English - Turkish
{i} örs

Üzengi örs ve iç kulak arasında, orta kulakta bir kemiktir. - The stirrup is a bone in the middle ear, between the anvil and the inner ear.

Ayakkabı tamircisi yeni bir örs arıyor. - The cobbler is looking for a new anvil.

(Anatomi) örskemiği
(Avcılık) ateşleme destek pimi
örs kemiği
(isim) örs
(Askeri) ÖRS: Bir kapsül içinde bulunan sert madeni kısım. Ateşleme iğnesinin kapsül üzerine çarpmasıyla infilak maddesi, örs üzerinde sıkışıp ateş alır
(Tıp) anvil
(Avcılık) mesnet
anvil cloud
örs biçiminde bulut
anvil chisel
demirci keskisi
anvil cloud
(Meteoroloji) örs bulutu
anvil cutter
demirci keskisi
hand anvil
el örsü
English - English
An incus bone in the inner ear
A heavy iron block used in the blacksmithing trade as a surface upon which metal can be struck and shaped
{n} an iron block for smith's work
Tops of thunderstorms may spread out, forming the shape of an anvil
Anvil is the common name given tothe small incus bone, which is the second of the three bones (ossicles) that work in series in the middle ear to transmit sound to the inner ear Also see under H (Hammer, Anvil and Stirrup)
a heavy block of iron or steel on which hot metals are shaped by hammering
One of the three small bones in the middle ear
Usually a heavy supporting surface over which metal is hammered Anvils have a traditional form composed of a squarish base, flat face, and tapered horn Anvils are made of an iron body and hardened steel face They are also being cast in one piece of steel that is then heat treated
Popular term for incus See anvil cloud
An iron or steel block used as a table on which metals are worked or forged Where an iron block is used the working face is generally made of steel It is usual to provide a hole about 11/4in square for holding working tools such as hardies, fuller blocks, etc Anvils are used in a shipyard by blacksmiths, angle smiths and flange turners
A rock that was used as a level base for chipping other stone into tools, blades or projectile points Typically part of a flint knapper's toolkit
the ossicle between the malleus and the stapes
The spreading of the upper portion of a cumulonimbus cloud into an anvil-shaped plume usually of fibrous or smooth appearance Strong or severe thunderstorms often have thicker anvils with the side and bottom having a cumuliform or slowly boiling appearance in the immediate vicinity of the parent cumulonimbus
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A fan of ice clouds (cirrus) at the top of a thunderstorm cloud (cumulonimbus)
* A metallic point against which the explosive compound of a primer is driven into by the firing pin, striker,or hammer of a firearm to produce a detonation to egnite the gunpowder
The upper portion of a cumulonimbus cloud that becomes flat and spread-out, sometimes for hundreds of miles downstream from the parent cloud It may look smooth or fibrous, but in shape, it resembles a blacksmith's anvil It indicates the mature or decaying stage of a thunderstorm
the rendering of the Hebrew word , "beaten," found only in Isa 41: 7
A portion of the primer pocket or primer which provides resistance to the crushing action of the firing pin which causes the printing mixture to detonate
The mandrel passes through the anvil The anvil "holds" the insert, giving the mandrel something to pull against in order to set (collapse) the rivet nut
a fan of ice cloud at the top of a cumulonimbus
The flat, spreading top of a Cb (cumulonimbus), often shaped like an anvil Thunderstorm anvils may spread hundreds of miles downwind from the thunderstorm itself, and sometimes may spread upwind (back-sheared anvil)
one of three bones of hearing in the middle ear that help transmit sound waves from the outer ear to the cochlea Also called incus
The flat, spreading top of a Cumulonimbus Cloud (Cb) Thunderstorm anvils may spread hundreds of miles downwind from the thunderstorm itself, and sometimes may spread upwind
The gauging member of a snap gauge when constructed as a fixed, non-adjustable block, or as the integral jaw of the gauge
An iron block, usually with a steel face, upon which metals are hammered and shaped
the incus
{i} heavy block on which metal is hammered
An anvil is a heavy iron block on which hot metals are beaten into shape. a heavy iron block on which pieces of hot metal are shaped using a hammer. Iron block on which metal is placed for shaping, originally by hand with a hammer. The blacksmith's anvil is usually of wrought iron (sometimes of cast iron), with a smooth working surface of hardened steel. A projecting conical beak, or horn, at one end is used for hammering curved pieces of metal. When power hammers are used, the anvil is supported on a heavy block, which in turn rests on a strong foundation of timber and masonry or concrete. See also smithing
Anything resembling an anvil in shape or use
To form or shape on an anvil; to hammer out; as, anviled armor
anvil cloud
A tall, distinctively anvil-shaped thundercloud
anvil clouds
plural form of anvil cloud
between the hammer and the anvil
Having the choice between two unpleasant or distasteful options; in a predicament or quandary

Yet for a time the nation was again placed between the democracy of the levellers and the despotism of the Stuarts, — between the hammer and the anvil.

on the anvil
Refers to anything in the making, being created, or in production, especially in the metalworking field
An anvil
stithy
An anvil
incus
anvils
plural of anvil
between hammer and anvil
in a very difficult or precarious position, between a rock and a hard place
Turkish - English
(Tıp) anvil
anvil

    Hyphenation

    an·vil

    Turkish pronunciation

    änvıl

    Pronunciation

    /ˈanvəl/ /ˈænvəl/

    Etymology

    () Middle English anfilt, anfelt, anvelt, from late Old English anfilte, from earlier onfilti, from Proto-Germanic *anafeltaz (compare Dutch aanbeeld, Low German Amfolt, Anfilts, Anefilt, Old High German anafalz), compound of *ana- 'on' and *feltaz 'beaten' (compare German falzen 'to groove, fold, welt', Swedish dialect filta 'to beat'), from Proto-Indo-European *pelhₐ-to 'shaken, beaten' (compare Irish lethar 'leather', Latin pultāre, pulsāre 'to beat, strike', Ancient Greek pállein 'to toss, brandish, swing', pelemizein 'to shake', pólemos 'quarrel, fight'). More at felon.
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