art%C4%B1rmak

listen to the pronunciation of art%C4%B1rmak
English - Turkish

Definition of art%C4%B1rmak in English Turkish dictionary

art
{i} sanat

Okulda güzel sanatlar okuyor. - She is studying fine art at school.

Sanat herkes tarafından sevilir. - Art is loved by everybody.

art
usül
art collector
Sanat koleksiyoncusu
art
{i} ustalık
art
{i} yaratıcılık
art
{i} ressamlık
art gallery
{i} sergi salonu
art bit
(Bilgisayar) resim tablosu
art forgery
sanat eseri sahteciliği
art
yöntem
art
güzel sanatlar

Sanatçı olmak için bir güzel sanatlar okulunda okumak zorunda değilsiniz. - You don't have to study at a school of fine arts to become an artist.

Okulda güzel sanatlar okuyor. - She is studying fine art at school.

art
sanat ürünü
art
sanat yapıtı
art
yol yordam
art dealer
sanat simsarı
art department
sanat bölümü
art director
sanat yönetmeni
art exhibition
sanat sergisi
art lover
sanatsever
art school
sanat okulu

Tom bir sanat okulunda okurken Mary ile tanıştı. - Tom met Mary while studying at an art school.

Sanatçı olmak için bir sanat okuluna gitmek zorunda değilsin. - You don't have to go to an art school in order to be an artist.

art student
sanat öğrencisi
art and design
Sanat ve tasarım
art class
sanat sınıfı
art collection
sanat koleksiyonu
art current
Sanat akımı
art engineering
sanat mühendisliği
art for art's sake
sanat aşkına sanat
art form
sanat formu
art galery
Sanat galerisi
art galery
resim sergisi
art gallery
Sanat galerisi

Sanat galerisine gitmek istiyorsan bu otobüse bin. - If you want to go to the art gallery, get this bus.

Bir sanat galerisini ziyaret edebilir miyim? - Can I visit an art gallery?

art history
sanat tarihi
art house
Sanat evi
art movement
sanat akımı
art museum
sanat müzesi
art music
sanat müziği
art of conjecturing
tahmin etme sanatı
art of conjecturing
varsayım sanatı
art of delivering speech
hitabet sanatı
art of printing
baskı sanatı
art of war
sanat savaş
art y
sanat y
art-house
Sanat filmleri gösteren sinema
ART
(Askeri) hava ihtiyat teknisyeni (air reserve technician)
Art Nouveau
art nouveau
Art Nouveau
doğal motifler kullanılan sanat türü
art
başölyelik derecesi
art
sanat, karikatür sitesinden çok sayıda sanatsal karikatürü ücretsiz indirebilir, kullanabilirsiniz
art
{i} beceri

Kesinlikle sanatsal becerilerim yok. - I have absolutely no artistic skills.

art
büyücülük
art
BA black art sihir
art
sanatsal

Tüm edebi ve sanatsal çalışmaların kaynağı, tatmin edilmemiş libidodur. - Unsatisfied libido is responsible for producing all art and literature.

Bahçenin sanatsal güzelliği gerçekten şaşırtıcı. - The artistic beauty of the garden is truly amazing.

art
fine arts güzel sa
art
(isim) sanat, yaratıcılık, ressamlık, ustalık, hüner, beceri; bilim dalı; kurnazlık, şeytanlık
art
{i} bilim dalı
art
büyü

Büyük sanatçıların vatanı yoktur. - Great artists have no country.

O öyle büyük bir sanatçı ki hepimiz ona hayranız. - He is such a great artist that we all admire.

art
{i} kurnazlık

Din çok bireyseldir. Neredeyse herkesin gerçekten kendi dini vardır. Dindeki bütünlük bir kurnazlıktır. - Religion is very personal. Practically everyone has really his own religion. Collectivity in religion is an artifice.

art
(Avrupa Birliği) sanat; zanaat
art
{i} şeytanlık
art critic
sanat eleştirmeni

Tom bir sanat eleştirmenidir. - Tom is an art critic.

Tom bir sanat eleştirmeni ve tarihçidir. - Tom is an art critic and historian.

art for art’s sake
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) sanat sanat içindir
art lover
sanat sever, karikatür sitesinden çok sayıda sanatsal karikatürü ücretsiz indirebilir, kullanabilirsiniz
art of sculptor
oymacılık
art printing
(Tekstil) artistik baskı
English - English

Definition of art%C4%B1rmak in English English dictionary

Art
A diminutive of the male given name Arthur
Art Deco
a style of decorative art and architecture originating in the 1920s and 1930s, characterized by bold geometric forms and simple composition
art
Human effort to imitate, supplement, alter, or counteract the work of nature
art
Second-person singular simple present tense indicative of be

How great thou art!.

art
Artwork
art
Aesthetic value
art
Skill that is attained by study, practice, or observation

A physician was immediately sent for; but on the first moment of beholding the corpse, he declared that Elvira's recovery was beyond the power of art.

art
The study and the product of these processes
art
A re-creation of reality according to the artist's metaphysical value judgements
art
A field or category of art, such as painting, sculpture, music, ballet, or literature
art
The conscious production or arrangement of sounds, colours, forms, movements, or other elements in a manner that affects the sense of beauty, specifically the production of the beautiful in a graphic or plastic medium

There is a debate as to whether graffiti is art or vandalism.

art
A nonscientific branch of learning; one of the liberal arts
art
Activity intended to make something special
art collection
A collection of works of art housed together
art film
A cinematic film intended to be an artistic work rather than a commercial film having mass appeal
art films
plural form of art film
art for art's sake
An expression of the belief that art has or should have no economic, social, political or religious functions, that beauty is its only purpose
art form
Any activity or piece of work that has artistic merit

He turned self-pity into an art form!.

art forms
plural form of art form
art galleries
plural form of art gallery
art gallery
a room, group of rooms, or other space where works of art are placed on display, possibly for sale
art glass
decorative glass articles, notably vases, more often coloured or of artistic form or design beyond the requirements of utility
art historian
An expert in the history of art
art historians
plural form of art historian
art history
the study of the history of the visual arts
art house
A cinema that shows art films and foreign films which are not widely distributed

Practically nothing has yet been reported in detail about audiences who attend the art house—a relatively new and growing institution on the American cinematic scene.

art house
A building or gallery in which works of art are collected, displayed, and offered for sale

Hitler had collected most of the paintings from a Jewish-owned art house—Goudstikker of Amsterdam.

art houses
plural form of art house
art imitates life
The observation that a creative work was inspired by true events; based on a true story
art journal
A collection of words and images in a diary that chronicles the ideas, memories, and thoughts of an artist. Pages within an art journal include words, pictures and even embellishments
art movement
Any of many styles of art having an underlying philosophy or goal; many of them have names with an -ism suffix
art movements
plural form of art movement
art movie
Any cinema movie intended to be an artistic work rather than a commercial movie of mass appeal
art music
Music composed with advanced structural and theoretical considerations, as opposed to folk music and pop music

as the invention of the grand piano opened up new possibilities for composers of European art music in the nineteenth century.

art nouveau
A decorative style of art and architecture that used especially the sinuous and flowing lines of plants
art paper
Any type of paper that has a specific use in art

To make window frames, apply gold 33 acrylic paints leaf to craft or art paper, let dry, then cut out frames with a craft knife.

art room
A room in a school set aside for instruction in the arts
art school
A school that specializes in the study of art
art schools
plural form of art school
art student
A student who attends an art school or similar institution
art therapies
plural form of art therapy
art therapy
The use of creative activities related to the visual arts to improve physical, mental, emotional, or spiritual well-being
art union
A raffle run to raise money for a charity
art-house
Of or pertaining to an art house or art houses

Czech movies may soon be as much a staple on the art-house circuit as the effervescent outpourings of France's New Wave.

artificial art
The automatization of art production, for example computer-generated art
art
{f} archaic form of the verb "to be" (replaced by "are" in modern usage)
art
{i} production and expression of esthetics, creation and expression of representations of beauty (as in painting, music, theater, drawing, sculpting, etc.)
art appreciation
study of the basic principles of art and aesthetics; evaluation of the appearance of an artistic work without consideration for its historical or symbolic significance
art
{n} cunning, device, skill, science, trade
Art
pet form of Arthur
Art Blakey
later Abdullah Ibn Buhaina born Oct. 11, 1919, Pittsburgh, Pa., U.S. died Oct. 16, 1990, New York, N.Y. U.S. jazz drummer and bandleader. He worked with Fletcher Henderson's big band before joining Billy Eckstine's forward-looking ensemble (1944-47). Blakey's prodigious technique and thunderous attack assured his role as one of the principal drum stylists in modern jazz. With Horace Silver, Blakey formed the Jazz Messengers in 1954, and the group, with its aggressive blues-inflected approach, became the archetypal hard-bop unit (see bebop)
Art Deco
Art Deco is a style of decoration and architecture that was common in the 1920s and 30s. It uses simple, bold designs on materials such as plastic and glass. art deco lamps. a style of art and decoration that uses simple shapes and was popular in Europe and America in the 1920s and 1930s (Art Déco, from Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs, a show of decorative arts held in Paris in 1925). or Style Moderne Movement in design, interior decoration, and architecture in the 1920s and '30s in Europe and the U.S. The name derives from the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris in 1925. Its products included both individually crafted luxury items and mass-produced wares, but, in either case, the intention was to create a sleek and antitraditional elegance that symbolized wealth and sophistication. Influenced by Art Nouveau, Bauhaus, Cubist, Native American, and Egyptian sources, the distinguishing features of the style are simple, clean shapes, often with a "streamlined" look; ornament that is geometric or stylized from representational forms; and unusually varied, often expensive materials, which frequently include man-made substances (plastics, especially bakelite; vita-glass; and ferroconcrete) in addition to natural ones (jade, silver, ivory, obsidian, chrome, and rock crystal). Typical motifs included stylized animals, foliage, nude female figures, and sun rays. New York City's Rockefeller Center (especially its interiors supervised by Donald Deskey), the Chrysler Building by William Van Alen, and the Empire State Building by Shreve, Lamb & Harmon are the most monumental embodiments of Art Deco
Art Institute of Chicago
Museum in Chicago that houses European, American, Asian, African, and pre-Columbian art. It was established in 1866 as the Chicago Academy of Design and took its current name in 1882. In 1893 it moved to its present building, designed by the architectural firm of Shepley, Rutan, and Coolidge for the World's Columbian Exposition, on Michigan Avenue. The Art Institute, which comprises both a museum and a school, is noted for its extensive collections of 19th-century French painting (Impressionist works and the work of Claude Monet in particular) and 20th-century European and American painting. Among its best-known works are Georges Seurat's A Sunday Afternoon on La Grand Jatte 1884 (1884-86), Grant Wood's American Gothic (1930), and Edward Hopper's Nighthawks (1942)
Art Linkletter
born July 17, 1912, Moose Jaw, Sask., Can. Canadian-born U.S. broadcasting host. He served as emcee for the variety show House Party (1943-67), which involved the audience in spontaneous contests and activities; he created the show's popular segment "Kids Say the Darndest Things." He hosted another audience-participation show, People Are Funny, on radio (1943-59) and television (1954-61). He wrote more than 20 books, including the best-selling Kids Say the Darndest Things (1957), I Wish I'd Said That (1968), and Old Age Is Not for Sissies (1988)
art
The employment of means to accomplish some desired end; the adaptation of things in the natural world to the uses of life; the application of knowledge or power to practical purposes
art
Learning; study; applied knowledge, science, or letters
art
Magical Arts are types of learnt magical expertise (different from abilities) They consists of five techniques which are types of action that can be taken, and ten forms which are types of substance to be acted upon All spells require the use of at least one technique and at least one form
art
photographs or other visual representations in a printed publication; "the publisher was responsible for all the artwork in the book"
art
Cunning; artifice; craft
art
a superior skill that you can learn by study and practice and observation; "the art of conversation"; "it's quite an art"
art
1 audible ringing tone A signal sent back to the calling party to indicate the called number is ringing 2 administrative reporting tool A web-based application for Cisco CallManager that generates reports on performance and service details See also CDR and CMR
art
All illustrations used in preparing a job for printing
art
The black art; magic
art
The skillful application of correct knowledge in the order of making It is a habit residing in the soul of the artist which is ordered toward making rather than mere doing
art
Automated Reasoning Tool, is an expert system software development environment from Inference-Corporation ART provides knowledge engineers with a comprehensive set of knowledge representation and storage techniques and graphics capabilities for building expert systems [DEC]
art
The second person singular, indicative mode, present tense, of the substantive verb Be; but formed after the analogy of the plural are, with the ending -t, as in thou shalt, wilt, orig
art
A recreation of reality according to the artists metaphysical value-judgements
art
A system of rules serving to facilitate the performance of certain actions; a system of principles and rules for attaining a desired end; method of doing well some special work; often contradistinguished from science or speculative principles; as, the art of building or engraving; the art of war; the art of navigation
art
Any photograph, map or illustration used in preparing a job for printing
art
Objects or ideas created by humans which tell/show what we are thinking or feeling   Art may or may not be beautiful   Art may or may not look like something we know (recognize)   Art includes painting, sculpture, architecture, music, performance, dance, and acting (drama)
art
the same word as English hard
art
Êall kinds of illustration copy used in preparing a job for printing Also used to describe the pasteups themselves
art
The arts are activities such as music, painting, literature, cinema, and dance, which people can take part in for enjoyment, or to create works which express serious meanings or ideas of beauty. Catherine the Great was a patron of the arts and sciences. the art of cinema
art
Skill, dexterity, or the power of performing certain actions, acquired by experience, study, or observation; knack; as, a man has the art of managing his business to advantage
art
Cf
art
The application of skill to the production of the beautiful by imitation or design, or an occupation in which skill is so employed, as in painting and sculpture; one of the fine arts; as, he prefers art to literature
art
All treatments or procedures that involve the handling of human eggs and sperm for the purpose of establishing a pregnancy Types of ART include IVF, GIFT, ZIFT, embryo cryopreservation, egg or embryo donation, and surrogate birth
art
An image format (typically called the Johnson-Grace format) with extremely aggressive compression at the expense of quality This format is most frequently seen by AOL users as AOL automatically compresses online images of other formats (like gif or jpeg) into Johnson-Grace images This is why AOL users often do not see web pages at the same quality level as other people, often seeing blurry images where others see clear images (and occasionally even seeing black bars that are not really present in images)
art
A form of human activity created primarily as an aesthetic expression, especially, but not limited to drawing, painting and sculpture
art
a superior skill that you can learn by study and practice and observation; "the art of conversation"; "it's quite an art
art
This is the creative process and production applied to expression of culture
art
Those branches of learning which are taught in the academical course of colleges; as, master of arts
art
Art is the activity or educational subject that consists of creating paintings, sculptures, and other pictures or objects for people to look at and admire or think deeply about. a painter, content to be left alone with her all-absorbing art. Farnham College of Art and Design. art lessons
art
If you describe an activity as an art, you mean that it requires skill and that people learn to do it by instinct or experience, rather than by learning facts or rules. Fishing is an art
art
The termination of many English words; as, coward, reynard, drunkard, mostly from the French, in which language this ending is of German origin, being orig
art
Arts or art is used in the names of theatres or cinemas which show plays or films that are intended to make the audience think deeply about the content, and not simply to entertain them. the Cambridge Arts Cinema
art
Be
art
all kinds of illustration copy used in preparing a job for printing Also used to describe the pasteups themselves
art
(IC) v The integration and manifestation into a state of being which allows a free flowing creative process using personally unique techniques evolved from the technical processes of a discipline
art brut
(French; "raw art") Art produced by people outside the established art world, particularly crude, inexperienced, or obscene works created by the untrained or the mentally ill. The term was coined by Jean Dubuffet, who regarded such works as the purest form of expression. See also naive art
art class
a class in which you learn to draw or paint
art collection
a collection of art works
art conservation and restoration
Maintenance and preservation of works of art, their protection from future damage, deterioration, or neglect, and the repair or renovation of works that have deteriorated or been damaged. Research in art history has relied heavily on 20th-and 21st-century technical and scientific advances in art restoration. Modern conservation practice adheres to the principle of reversibility, which dictates that treatments should not cause permanent alteration to the object
art critic
a critic of paintings
art critic
one who judges and interprets the relative merits of works of art
art criticism
evaluation of the relative merit of works of art
art criticism
Description, interpretation, and evaluation of works of art, manifested in journal reviews, books, and patronage. Art criticism encompasses a wide variety of approaches, from critical commentary to more subjective emotional reactions inspired by viewing works of art. Art criticism as a distinct discipline developed parallel to Western aesthetic theory, beginning with antecedents in ancient Greece and fully taking form in the 18th and 19th centuries. In the 20th century perceptive critics became champions of new artistic movements. Beginning in the 20th and continuing into the 21st century, many critics used social and linguistic, rather than aesthetic, theoretical models. Prominent art critics include Roger Fry, Clive Bell, Clement Greenberg, Harold Rosenblum, Lawrence Alloway, Rosalind Krauss, and Donald Kuspit. See also aesthetics
art dealer
a dealer in works of art requiring esthetic evaluation
art deco
A 1920s style characterized by setbacks, zigzag forms, and the use of chrome and plastic ornamentation New York's Chrysler Building is an architectural example of the style
art deco
In the thirties and fourties, some makers designed fans their fans to look as modern as possible Air conditioning was becoming the standard in buildings and fans had become "old fashioned" The new designs where meant to appeal to a person's sense of style The most famous of these designs were the Emerson Silver Swan and the Robbins & Meyers Modernistic (See the the fan gallery for both!)
art deco
A streamlined, geometric style of home furnishings and architecture popular in the 1920's and 1930's Characteristics include rounded fronts, wood furniture with chrome hardware and, or, glass tops
art deco
The geometric style that succeeded Edwardian jewelry beginning in the teens, and reaching full flower in the mid 1920's This style was characterized by zigzags and sharp angles rather than the curves of the previous era Colored stones were utilized more, and the opaque stones such as jade, onyx and coral were set in geometric shapes Sleek animals such as Borzoi and Greyhound dogs were feautured in some designs The style started out with relatively delicate designs, transitioning from the Edwardian, but more geometric and angular, and progressed to more the more bold and blocky style also called Art Moderne
art deco
An angular style of jewelry dating from the 1920s through the mid to late 1930s, featuring jade, black onyx, and pave-set diamonds
art deco
A style of architectural and furnishing decoration popular in the 1920s and 1930s; characteristics include streamlined, geometric motifs worked in glass, chrome and plastic
art deco
A streamlined, geometric style of architecture and home furnishings popular in the 1920s and 1930s Characteristics include rounded or "waterfall" fronts, wood furniture with chrome hardware and/or glass tops
art deco
A streamlined, geometric style of architecture and home furnishings popular in the 1920's and 1930's Characteristics include rounded or "waterfall" fronts, wood furniture with chrome hardware and/or glass tops
art director
Person who conceives and designs the sets
art director
The person who designs or selects the sets and decor of a film
art director
- The person responsible for the graphic design and creative positioning of an advertisement or campaign; the person in charge of an agency's production department
art director
An experienced specialist who is responsible for the visual creation of print, TV, and collateral material; may or may not supervise others or have client contact
art director
Along with graphic designers and production artists, determines how the ad's verbal and visual symbols will fit together (Ch 3, 11)
art director
the director in charge of the artistic features of a theatrical production (costumes and scenery and lighting)
art editor
a editor who is responsible for illustrations and layouts in printed matter
art exhibition
an exhibition of art objects (paintings or statues)
art for art's sake
artistic movement justifying artistic creation that serves no social or political purpose
art form
If you describe an activity as an art form, you mean that it is concerned with creating objects, works, or performances that are beautiful or have a serious meaning. Indian dance and related art forms. An activity or a piece of artistic work that can be regarded as a medium of artistic expression
art gallery
a building where paintings are shown to the public
art glass
Decorative objects made of usually handblown glass
art historian
expert in art history, expert on the development of art and architecture over time
art history
the academic discipline that studies the development of painting and sculpture
art history
Historical study of the visual arts for the purpose of identifying, describing, evaluating, interpreting, and understanding art objects and artistic traditions. Art-historical research involves discovering and collecting biographical data on artists to establish attribution; determining at what stage in a culture's or artist's development an object was made; weighing the influence the object or artist had on the historical past; and documenting an object's previous whereabouts or ownership (provenance). The analysis of symbols, themes, and subject matter is often of primary concern. In the 20th and 21st centuries art historians became increasingly concerned with the social and cultural context of artists and their work
art house
A movie theater that shows art films. a cinema that shows mainly foreign films, or films made by small film companies
art movement
{i} artistic movement, bunch of artists who agree on general rules and principles; style in art seen in the works of a several of artists
art music
Music composed in a classical tradition and intended as serious art, especially as distinguished from popular or folk music
art nouveau
French for "new art " The term refers to a late 19th-Century style which sprang from a revived interest in the decorative arts and was characterized by flowing lines and stylized forms derived from nature (like curving, twisting trees trunks and branches) Forerunner of Art Deco
art nouveau
An international, late 19th- and early 20th-century decorative style characterized by organic foliate forms, sinuous lines, and non-geometric, "whiplash" curves Art Nouveau originated in Europe in the 1880s, and reached the peak of its popularity ar ound 1900 In America, it inspired, among others, Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933) The name is derived from "La Maison de l'Art Nouveau," a gallery for interior design that opened in Paris in 1896 The German term for Art Nouveau is Jugendstil
art nouveau
A movement that embraced architecture, design, and visual arts throughout Europe It was fashionable between 1890 and 1910, and particularly strong in France, Belgium, Germany, and Austria In Britain, Charles Rennie Mackintosh was an important exponent: in Spain, Antonio Gaudi was the leading figure It attempted to find what was sometimes called a modern style, using natural, organic forms and decorative motifs rather than historically derived elements Marked by ornate use of undulation, such as waves, flames, floweer stalks and flowing hair
art nouveau
The name of the artistic movement of architecture and the decorative arts throughout Europe and the United States between 1890 and the First World War Recently it has been become common to use the term Modernism for the art nouveau movement rejected the styles of the past and turned to nature for inspiration Out of this came the linear and metamorphic character and its typical decorative elegance In architecture, interior design and the applied arts, art nouveau studied the technical and expressive opportunities offered by the new materials of iron, glass and concrete that were being employed b the industrial revolution
art nouveau
> A decorative style predominant in the last two decades of the 19th century into the first decade of the 20th century characterized by asymmetrical, fluid shapes, such as the whiplash curve, and motifs taken from nature; artists whose work is representative of the style include Louis Majorelle, Emile Gallé, Eugène Gaillard, Hector Guimard, and René Lalique
art nouveau
A style that originated in the late 1880s, based on the sinuous curves of plant forms, used primarily in architectural detailing and the applied arts
art nouveau
A flowing style with sinuous curves and naturalistic motifs that was popular from about 1895 to 1905 A common motif was a women's head with flowing hair There are many reproductions on the market today
art nouveau
French for "new art" During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, an art movement and style of decorative painting, sculpture and architecture which is characterized by the use of flowers and leaves in flowing, interlacing lines Henri Toulouse-Latrec and Gustav Klimt were among those greatly influenced by the movement
art nouveau
A late-nineteenth-century decorative style that was based on natural forms It was the first style to reject historical references and create its own design vocabulary, which included stylized curved details
art nouveau
A decorative style of art characterized by organic forms, sinuous lines, and bold curves popular in the late 19th and early 20th century Louis Comfort Tiffany is perhaps the most famous art nouveau glass artist
art nouveau
art movement widespread throughout Europe from around 1880-1910 particularly in the decorative and applied arts characterized by sinous, organic forms and elaborately curving lines see pins
art nouveau
Art Nouveau was a style popular from roughly 1895 until World War I Art Nouveau pieces are characterized by curves and naturalistic designs, especially depicting long-haired, sensual women Louis Comfort Tiffany made archetypal Art Nouveau pieces
art nouveau
A decorative style developed in France between 1890 and 1910 Although the style was not as popular in America as in Europe, Tiffany lamps are an outstanding example of its ornate, flowing lines In recent years, some American manufacturers have designed new lines using Art Noveau's simple, yet sinuous lines with a minimum of ornamentation
art nouveau
a French term meaning 'new art,' refers to a style of architecture, decorative art and some painting and sculpture popular around 1900 Even though the style was then thought of as new art, it was adjusted from older styles of art forms, especially from the Gothic and Rococo styles as well as from arts of Java and Japan The movement was inspired by Celtic manuscripts and the drawings of William Blake
art nouveau
- literally modern style, the bold and flat sinuous motifs abstractly based upon seaweed and other plant forms; this style was popular from 1895 to 1915 and was a rebellion against the derivative style of Historicism; see periods
art nouveau
A romantic furniture and design style borrowing heavily from Gothic style, and its revivals, in being curvilinear Seldom utilizes straight lines, and can be asymetrical Started with the designs of William Morris in England and was therefore origianlly called "le style anglais" and later "le style moderne" in France Influenced and devolped by Toulose-Lautrec, Emil Galle, and Rene Lalique An organic flowing style with gentle and well balance curves and edges
art of drama
art of stage performance, ability to be a believable and impressive actor
art of painting
act of knowing how to create works of art with paint
art paper
a high-quality paper (usually having a filler of china clay)
art paper
This is a generic term given to woodfree coated papers, which has traditionally referred to papers in the upper quality bracket and which have a high polished surface Today the term is less used because of the introduction of more categories in the sector However, ‘Real Art’ is still used for those woodfree coated papers, gloss or matt, which are considered to be of the very highest quality
art paper
Paper, usually of high gloss, coated with china clay
art paper
Glossy, coated paper
art paper
Paper that hase received a coating of china clay and size It has a very smooth surface, which may be matt, but is usually shiny
art paper
The process of coating remains the same as above but instead of board paper is used It generally possesses high finish, smoothness and gloss
art paper
a coated paper often having a high finish used in printing halftones
art paper
A paper evenly coated with a fine clay compound, which creates a hard smooth surface on one or both sides
art paper
A paper coated with fine clay to produce a smooth, hard surface Often used for printing halftones
art paper
Coated, normally woodfree, paper suitable for 4-colour printing
art paper
smooth, coated paper
art restoration
repairing of old or damaged works of art in order to return them to good condition
art runner
A private art dealer who functions as a broker in sales transactions by linking prospective buyers and sellers of works of art. After an exhibition or auction, the art runner moves unsold works from one gallery to another to stimulate sales
art school
place where one is trained in art
art school
a school specializing in art
art song
A lyric song intended to be sung in recital, usually accompanied by a piano
art song
ballad, poem that has a musical quality and is usually recited with musical accompaniment (especially piano accompaniment)
art teacher
someone who teaches art
art therapist
therapist who employs art therapy (use of art as a therapeutic tool in the treatment of various disorders)
Turkish - English

Definition of art%C4%B1rmak in Turkish English dictionary

art arda
sequential
art
rear
art arda
in succession
art niyetle
maliciously
art niyetli
malevolent
art yük
(Tıp) preload
art ünlü
(Dilbilim) back vowel
art arda
consecutive

Next Monday and Tuesday are consecutive holidays. - Gelecek pazartesi ve salı art arda tatil.

Layla was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences. - Leyla art arda iki ömür boyu hapis cezasına çarptırıldı.

art
back, rear, hinder part; sequel, end; back; hind
art arda
following one after another
art arda
serial
art arda
one after another, continually
art arda dizili
tandem
art arda sıralama
sequence
art elden
underhandedly, slyly
art fiksaj
postboarding
art kılavuz
tail-leader
art mirasçı
reversioner
art niyet
ulterior motive

Tom had ulterior motives. - Tom'un art niyetleri vardı.

I had romantic ulterior motives. - Benim romantik art niyetlerim vardı.

art niyet
arriere pensee
art niyet
concealed thought
art niyetle
mala fide
art niyetli
snide

I've had enough of your snide remarks. - Art niyetli uyarılarından usandım.

art nouveau
Art Nouveau
art teker
back wheel
art yakıcı
fuel-injector in a turbojet engine
art yakıcı
afterburner
art yayılım
back emission
art%C4%B1rmak
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