battles

listen to the pronunciation of battles
English - Turkish
savaşlar

Somme savaşı insanlık tarihinde en kanlı savaşlarından biriydi. - The battle of the Somme was one of the bloodiest battles in human history.

Askerin savaşlardan kalan hiç yara izi yoktu. - The soldier never got scars from battles.

battle
muharebe

O, muharebede yaralandı. - He was wounded in battle.

battle
{i} savaş

Birçok asker savaşta kötü yaralardan acı çekti. - Many soldiers suffered terrible wounds in the battle.

Savaş alanında defalarca kefeni yırttı. - He cheated death many times on the battlefield.

battle
{f} mücadele etmek, çok uğraşmak
battle
savaş,v.savaş: n.savaş
battle
{i} çatışma

Kısa bir çatışmadan sonra kasabayı ele geçirdik. - We seized the town after a short battle.

Tom silahlı çatışmadan sağ salim kaçtı. - Tom escaped the gun battle alive and well.

battle
{i} dalaş
battle
herhangi bir kampanyada kullan
battle
teber
battle
{i} mücadele, büyük uğraş
battle
battle cruiser ağır kruvazör
battle
battle cenk baltası
battle
(Askeri) MEYDAN MUHAREBESİ, MUHAREBE: Taraflardan birinin veya her ikisinin kati sonuç aradığı, genel ve devamlı bir savaş
battle
{f} savaşmak, dövüşmek
battle
savaşmak
battle
battle array harp safı
battle
savaşa katılmak
battle
{f} mücâdele etmek
battle
{i} mücâdele

Japonyanın savaş sırasında açlığa karşı sürekli bir mücadele verdiğini söyleyebiliriz. - We can say that Japan was fighting a constant battle against hunger during the war.

Greenpeace çevreyi korumak için büyük bir mücadele veriyor. - Greenpeace is fighting an uphill battle to save the environment.

battle
battle cry savaş narası
battle
argo huysuz kocakarı
battle
meydan muharebesi
battle
meydan savaşı
battle
kavga

Gerçekten bir kavga istemiyorum. - I really don't want a battle.

battle
mücadele

Alzheimer hastalığı ile uzun bir mücadeleden sonra Tom geçen kış vefat etti. - Tom passed away last winter after a long battle with Alzheimer's disease.

Greenpeace çevreyi korumak için büyük bir mücadele veriyor. - Greenpeace is fighting an uphill battle to save the environment.

battle
çarpışma

Sen bütün çarpışmaları kazanabilirsin ama savaşı kaybedebilirsin. - You can win all the battles yet lose the war.

battle
mücadele etmek
battle
savaşım

Ben kendi savaşımı veriyorum. - I fight my own battles.

battle
vuruşma
battle
çarpışmak
battle
müsademe
English - English
Bull Run Battles of Custoza Battles of El Alamein Battles of Isonzo Battles of the Jena and Auerstedt Battles of Lexington and Concord Battles of Saratoga Battles of Seven Days' Battles Trenton and Princeton Battles of Ypres Battles of
Third person singular simple present of to battle
Plural of battle
battles of the sexes
plural form of battle of the sexes
Battles of Bull Run
Two engagements of the American Civil War fought at a stream near Manassas, Va. The first battle (also called First Manassas) was fought on July 21, 1861, between 37,000 Union troops under Gen. Irvin McDowell (1818-85) and 35,000 Confederate troops under P.G.T. Beauregard and Joseph Johnston. In this first major encounter of the war, the Union assault was beaten back and the army retreated to Washington, D.C. The second battle took place on Aug. 29-30, 1862, between a Confederate force of more than 56,000 under Robert E. Lee and a Union army of more than 70,000 under John Pope. To prevent the Union army from being joined by the Army of the Potomac, Lee sent troops under Stonewall Jackson to march around Pope's right flank. Lee's attack forced the Union troops to withdraw as far as Washington, D.C. Casualties numbered 15,000 for the North and 9,000 for the South. Both battles strengthened the South's resolve and caused the North to review its military leadership and strategy
Battles of Custoza
Two attempts at Custoza, Italy, to end Austrian control over northern Italy. In the first battle (July 24, 1848), an Austrian army under Joseph Radetzky defeated the Sardinians, led by Charles Albert. In the second battle (June 24, 1866), as part of an Italian effort to acquire Austrian-held Venetia, a disorganized Italian army of 120,000 men, led by Victor Emmanuel II, was defeated by an 80,000-man Austrian force. Despite its defeats, Italy subsequently obtained Venetia in the Treaty of Vienna (1866)
Battles of El Alamein
(June-July 1942; October 23-November 6, 1942) Two battles between British and Axis forces in Egypt in World War II. Axis forces under Erwin Rommel began a drive eastward along the North African coast in early 1942. Though initially checked by the British, they managed to reach El Alamein on June
Battles of El Alamein
The first engagement ended in mid-July with Rommel still there, blocked and on the defensive. In October British forces under Bernard Law Montgomery began a devastating attack from El Alamein, routing Rommel's vastly outnumbered forces. By November 6 the British had driven the Germans back into Libya
Battles of Jena and Auerstedt
(1806) Military engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, fought between French troops and Prussians and Saxons. In 1806 Frederick William III of Prussia signed a secret alliance with Russia and joined the Third Coalition against Napoleon. As the Prussian army moved through Saxony to meet its Russian allies, it was forced to face a French attack from the rear. The Prussians split their forces between Auerstedt and Jena, and on October 14 Napoleon swept the Prussian troops off the field at Jena. At the same time, a secondary French force under Louis Davout defeated a Prussian army more than twice its size at Auerstedt. Napoleon completed his conquest of Prussia in six weeks
Battles of Lexington and Concord
(April 19, 1775) Initial skirmishes between British soldiers and American colonists that marked the beginning of the American Revolution. En route from Boston to seize the colonists' military stores at Concord, Mass., the British force of 700 was met at Lexington by 77 local minutemen (see minuteman) alerted by Paul Revere and others. Which side fired the first shot is unclear, and resistance soon ended. The British moved on to nearby Concord, where they were met by more than 300 American patriots and were forced to withdraw. On their march back to Boston, they were continually harried by colonists firing from behind barns, trees, and roadside walls. Deaths totaled 273 British and 95 Americans
Battles of Saratoga
(1777) Engagements in the American Revolution. British troops under John Burgoyne marched from Canada to join with other British troops, and, after camping at Saratoga, N.Y., engaged the Continental Army under Horatio Gates at the First Battle of Saratoga (September 19), also known as the Battle of Freeman's Farm. Failing to break the American lines, the British faced a counterattack led by Benedict Arnold at the Second Battle of Saratoga (October 7), or the Battle of Bemis Heights. With his forces reduced to 5,000 men, Burgoyne began to retreat, but Gates, with 20,000 men, surrounded the British at Saratoga and forced their surrender (October 17). The American victory induced the French to offer open recognition and military aid
Battles of Trenton and Princeton
(1776-77) Engagements won by the Continental Army in the American Revolution. Defeats in New York forced the army under George Washington to retreat through New Jersey into Pennsylvania. On Dec. 25, 1776, Washington led a force of 6,000 troops across the ice-filled Delaware River to surprise the 1,400-man British-Hessian force at Trenton, N.J., and captured 900 troops. A British force of 7,000 troops under Charles Cornwallis arrived to force the American army into retreat. At night Washington led his men around the British to defeat an outpost at Princeton, causing Cornwallis to retreat to New Brunswick and enabling Washington to lead his troops into winter quarters near Morristown. The victories restored American morale and renewed confidence in Washington
Battles of Ypres
Three costly battles in World War I in western Flanders. In the first battle (Oct. 12-Nov. 11, 1914), the Germans were stopped on their march to the sea, but the Allied forces were then surrounded on three sides. The second battle (April 22-May 25, 1915) marked the Germans' first use of poison gas as a weapon. In the third and longest battle (July 31-Nov. 6, 1917), also called the Battle of Passchendaele, the British were initially successful in breaking through the left wing of the German lines. The seasonal rains soon turned the Flanders countryside into an impassable swamp, but Gen. Douglas Haig persisted in his offensive. On November 6 Haig's troops, including the Canadian Corps, occupied the ruins of Passchendaele, barely five miles from the start of the offensive. Total Allied and German casualties exceeded 850,000, including the deaths of 325,000 British soldiers
Battles of the Isonzo
(1915-17) Twelve battles along the Isonzo River on the eastern sector of the Italian front in World War I. The Isonzo River, running just inside Austria, is flanked by rugged peaks that the Austrians had fortified before Italy's entry into the war in 1915. Luigi Cadorna (1850-1928) led all the attacks against Austria, but the Italians could not penetrate the formidable natural barriers. Finally they struck with 51 divisions and dislodged the Austrians, but the Germans sent reinforcements and took the offensive, ending in the Battle of Caporetto
Battle
A habitational surname from places in England that have been sites of a battle
Battle
a town in East Sussex
battle
A division of an army; a battalion

The cavalry, by way of distinction, was called the battle, and on it alone depended the fate of every action. - William Robertson.

battle
: To assail in battle; to fight
battle
: To join in battle; to contend in fight; as, to battle over theories
uphill battles
plural form of uphill battle
battle
{i} combat, fight, war
battle
{f} fight, engage in combat
battle
You can use battle to refer to someone's efforts to achieve something in spite of very difficult circumstances. the battle against crime She has fought a constant battle with her weight Greg lost his brave battle against cancer two years ago. = fight
battle
To battle with an opposing group means to take part in a fight or contest against them. In American English, you can also say that one group or person is battling another. Thousands of people battled with police and several were reportedly wounded The sides must battle again for a quarter-final place on December 16 They're also battling the government to win compensation
battle
A battle is a violent fight between groups of people, especially one between military forces during a war. the victory of King William III at the Battle of the Boyne. after a gun battle between police and drug traffickers. men who die in battle
battle
A battle is a conflict in which different people or groups compete in order to achieve success or control. a renewed political battle over Britain's attitude to Europe. the eternal battle between good and evil in the world. a macho battle for supremacy = struggle
battle
{v} to contend in fight, dispute warmly
battle
{n} a combat, engagement, main body
Seven Days' Battles
(June 25-July 1, 1862) American Civil War battles that prevented Union capture of Richmond, Va. In a series of attacks and counterattacks by both sides, the Confederate army under Robert E. Lee forced Union troops under George B. McClellan to retreat from a position 4 mi (6 km) east of the Confederate capital to a new base on the James River. The Union failure to take Richmond and the withdrawal of the Army of the Potomac ended the Peninsular Campaign. Casualties were estimated at 16,000 for the Union and 20,000 for the Confederates
battle
Michael
battle
battle or contend against in or as if in a battle; "The Kurds are combating Iraqi troops in Nothern Iraq"; "We must combat the prejudices against other races"; "they battled over the budget
battle
a fight between two opposing sides during a war
battle
The main body, as distinct from the van and rear; battalia
battle
See Battel, a
battle
To join in battle; to contend in fight; as, to battle over theories
battle
Fertile
battle
If one group or person battles it out with another, they take part in a fight or contest against each other until one of them wins or a definite result is reached. You can also say that two groups or two people battle it out. In the Cup Final, Leeds battled it out with the old enemy, Manchester United
battle
If one person or group does battle with another, they take part in a battle or contest against them. You can also say that two people or groups do battle. the notorious Montonero guerrilla group who did battle with the army during the dirty war
battle
a set of related tactical engagements that last longer and involve larger forces than an engagement (FM 3-0)
battle
an energetic attempt to achieve something; "getting through the crowd was a real struggle"; "he fought a battle for recognition"
battle
A mode of playing two players Both players' arrows begin overlapped in the center at the bottom of the screen and branch outwards to the appropriate player's side Introduced in 4th mix
battle
Dagor (Ndak-)
battle
To battle means to try hard to do something in spite of very difficult circumstances. In British English, you battle against something or with something. In American English, you battle something. Doctors battled throughout the night to save her life. a lone yachtsman returning from his months of battling with the elements In Wyoming, firefighters are still battling the two blazes. = fight + battler battlers bat·tler If anyone can do it, he can. He's a battler and has a strong character. see also pitched battle, running battle
battle
a hostile meeting of opposing military forces in the course of a war; "Grant won a decisive victory in the battle of Chickamauga"; "he lost his romantic ideas about war when he got into a real engagement"
battle
(99/12/30) not "How are you?" but : How's the battle? How's your battle this year? What's up? What's new? Any good news? How's life? Are you winning? (reference : Monday Nikkei 99/12/20 s41)
battle
A struggle; a contest; as, the battle of life
battle
A general action, fight, or encounter, in which all the divisions of an army are or may be engaged; an engagement; a combat
battle
If you say that something is half the battle, you mean that it is the most important step towards achieving something. Choosing the right type of paint for the job is half the battle
battle
If you are fighting a losing battle, you are trying to achieve something but are not going to be successful. The crew fought a losing battle to try to restart the engines. on a day when the sun is fighting a losing battle against the lowering clouds
battle
If you say that someone has lost the battle, but won the war, you mean that although they have been defeated in a small conflict they have won a larger, more important one of which it was a part. If you say that someone has won the battle but lost the war, you mean that they have won the small conflict but lost the larger one. The strikers may have won the battle, but they lost the war. Actium Battle of Adrianople Battle of Battle of Hadrianopolis Adwa Battle of Battle of Adowa Aegospotami Battle of Agincourt Battle of Antietam Battle of Atlantic Battle of the Austerlitz Battle of Balaklava Battle of Bannockburn Battle of Blenheim Battle of Borodino Battle of Bosworth Field Battle of Bouvines Battle of Boyne Battle of the Brandywine Battle of the Britain Battle of Buena Vista Battle of Bulge Battle of the Bunker Hill Battle of Cannae Battle of Caporetto Battle of Carrhae Battle of Cerro Gordo Battle of Chaeronea Battle of Chancellorsville Battle of Châteauguay Battle of Chattanooga Battle of Chickamauga Battle of Chippewa Battle of Contreras Battle of Copenhagen Battle of Crécy Battle of Culloden Battle of Dien Bien Phu Battle of Dorylaeum Battle of Fallen Timbers Battle of Flodden Battle of Fredericksburg Battle of Friedland Battle of Gaugamela Battle of Germantown Battle of Gettysburg Battle of Granicus Battle of the Hastings Battle of Ipsus Battle of Issus Battle of Jutland Battle of Karbala' Battle of Kings Mountain Battle of Königgrätz Battle of Battle of Sadowa Kosovo Battle of Kursk Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa Battle of Battle of Al Uqab Lechfeld Battle of Leipzig Battle of Battle of the Nations Lepanto Battle of Leyte Gulf Battle of Little Bighorn Battle of the Magenta Battle of Maldon Battle of Manila Bay Battle of Manzikert Battle of Marathon Battle of Marengo Battle of Marne First Battle of the Marne Second Battle of the Marston Moor Battle of Midway Battle of Mobile Bay Battle of Monitor and Merrimack Battle of the Munda Battle of Naseby Battle of Navarino Battle of Nemea Battle of New Orleans Battle of Nicopolis Battle of Nile Battle of the Novara Battle of Pharsalus Battle of Philippine Sea Battle of the Plataea Battle of Poitiers Battle of Poltava Battle of Pydna Battle of Qadisiyyah Battle of Quebec Battle of Roncesvalles Battle of Battle of Roncevaux Salamis Battle of Sedan Battle of Shiloh Battle of Solferino Battle of Somme Battle of the Stalingrad Battle of Tannenberg Battle of Thames Battle of the Thapsus Battle of Thermopylae Battle of Ticonderoga Battle of Tippecanoe Battle of Tours/Poitiers Battle of Trafalgar Battle of Tsushima Battle of Ulm Battle of Varna Battle of Verdun Battle of Wagram Battle of Waterloo Battle of White Mountain Battle of Wilderness Battle of the Zama Battle of
battle
Magic Mastery-Deeper training in your school of magic opens up more spells from your school for you to use (Sorcerer) Level 1- Cost: 500XP Level 2- Cost: 750XP Level 3- Cost: 1,125XP Level 4- Cost: 1,500XP Must have 75 Intelligence Level 5- Cost: 2,250XP Level 6- Cost: 3,375XP Level 7- Cost: 5,000XP Must have 100 Intelligence Level 8- Cost: 7,500XP Level 9- Cost: 11,250XP Level 10- Cost: 14,000XP Must have 150 Intelligence
battle
To assail in battle; to fight
battle
an open clash between two opposing groups (or individuals); "the harder the conflict the more glorious the triumph"--Thomas Paine; "police tried to control the battle between the pro- and anti-abortion mobs"
battle
n a fight between opposing armed forces
battle
(v) To compete, usually with freestyle rapping, sometimes with DJing, breakdancing or graffiti In terms of performance, the winner is the one who pulls the biggest audience
battles

    Turkish pronunciation

    bätılz

    Pronunciation

    /ˈbatəlz/ /ˈbætəlz/

    Etymology

    [ 'ba-t&l ] (noun.) 13th century. Middle English batel, from Old French bataille battle, fortifying tower, battalion, from Late Latin battalia combat, alteration of battualia fencing exercises, from Latin battuere to beat.

    Videos

    ... I know that the american people are not interested in refighting old battles ...
    ... It used to be, battles were fought on battlegrounds.  No more.  They’re fought in cities.  And ...
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