colón

listen to the pronunciation of colón
English - Turkish
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of colón in Turkish Turkish dictionary

colon
Roma imparatorluğu'nda kuramsal olarak özgür ama fiilen işlediği toprağın kiracısı durumundaki köylü sınıfına verilen ad
English - English
The currency of Costa Rica, divided into 100 céntimos
colon
The punctuation mark "'''[[Appendix: Unsupported titles/Colon|
colon
The final segment of the digestive system, after (distal to) the ileum and before (proximal to) the anus
colon
A rhetorical figure consisting of a clause which is grammatically, but not logically, complete
colon
{n} the point : , the great gut, a member
colon
a port city at the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal
colon
A colon is the punctuation mark : which you can use in several ways. For example, you can put it before a list of things or before reported speech
colon
This symbol is used to set apart a list, precede a definition, or separate the hour and minutes when listing a time It is also used in the salutation part of a business letter
colon
the part of the large intestine between the cecum and the rectum; it extracts moisture from food residues before they are excreted
colon
(koe-lon) A colon is a punctuation mark that separates the main portion of a sentence from what follows, usually some form of list
colon
A punctuation mark used to add extra information to a sentence without using a full stop This can be a list, a statement or a saying Example: Julie read the poem by Walter de la Mere: "Slowly, silently now the moon " Example: The good news was announced yesterday: The baby is a boy
colon
One of the rabble leaders in Hudibras was Noel Perryan, or Ned Perry, an ostler, who loved bear-baiting, but was a very straight-laced Puritan of low morals
colon
The part of the large intestine beginning at and terminating at the end of the sigmoid flexure
colon
punctuation mark used at the end of a complete statement to introduce a list, a long quotation, or an explanation
colon
n the standard character that is called "colon" (: ) See Figure~2--5
colon
] A point or character, formed thus [: ], used to separate parts of a sentence that are complete in themselves and nearly independent, often taking the place of a conjunction
colon
the part of the large intestine between the cecum and the rectum; it extracts moisture from food residues before they are excreted a punctuation mark (: ) used after a word introducing a series or an example or an explanation (or after the salutation of a business letter) a port city at the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal the basic unit of money in Costa Rica; equal to 100 centimos the basic unit of money in El Salvador; equal to 100 centavos
colon
Your colon is the part of your intestine above your rectum. cancer of the colon. Segment that makes up most of the large intestine. Though the two terms are often used interchangeably, the colon technically excludes the cecum (a pouch at the beginning of the large intestine), rectum, and anal canal. It runs up the right side of the abdomen (ascending colon), across it (transverse colon), and down the left side (descending colon); its last section (sigmoid colon) joins the rectum. It has no digestive function but lubricates waste products, absorbs remaining fluids and salts, and stores waste products until excretion. Problems involving the colon include ulcerative colitis, constipation and diarrhea, gas discomfort, megacolon (enlarged colon), and cancer
colon
KO-lun (WAV-32K)
colon
The punctuation mark ": " introducing a quotation or a series of items, or separating clauses
colon
the basic unit of money in El Salvador; equal to 100 centavos
colon
a punctuation mark that begins a formal list, separates closely related main clauses, and marks a formal appositive
colon
the basic unit of money in Costa Rica; equal to 100 centimos
colon
Another term for the large intestine
colon
n the standard character that is called "colon" (: ) See Figure~2--5 @IGindex{comma}
colon
That part of the large intestines which extends from the cæcum to the rectum
colon
a punctuation mark (: ) used after a word introducing a series or an example or an explanation (or after the salutation of a business letter)
colon
[See Illust of Digestion
colon
The large intestine
colon
Used in the ternary conditional expression and after labels
colon
A single line of poetry, sometimes called a stich or stichos
colon
{i} punctuation mark composed of two vertically aligned dots (the mark : ); part of the large intestine between the cecum and rectum (in humans); part of the digestive tract between the stomach and rectum (in animals)
colon
Cola are single clauses after which a breath is taken In order to facilitate reading, some manuscripts are written colometrically with one colon per line A colon was considered to contain between nine and sixteen syllables Several bilingual Greek and Latin manuscripts of the Gospels, Acts, and Epistles have the text arranged colometrically
colon
the large bowel
colon
The main part of the large intestine
colon distention
The enlargement of the splenic flexure which is beyond the limits of normal colonic distention
colon bacillus
{i} type of rod-shaped intestinal bacteria found in the colon of humans and animals (causes infections of the urogenital tract and of neonatal meningitis and diarrhea in very young children)
colon cancer
a malignant tumor of the colon; early symptom is bloody stools
ascending colon
A part of colon adjacent to small intestine
colonic
Of, relating to, affecting or within the colon
colonic
colonic irrigation
colonize
To settle (a species, group of people etc.) in a new place as a colony

The administration finally sent a naval vessel to return the 368 survivors to the United States in 1864. This ended official efforts to colonize blacks.

colonize
To settle (somewhere) with colonists
colóns
plural form of colón
descending colon
A part of colon adjacent to sigmoid colon
redundant colon
A large intestine (colon) that is longer than normal and as a result has repetitive, overlapping loops
sigmoid colon
the S-shaped section of the large intestine between the descending colon and the rectum
transverse colon
A part of colon joining ascending colon and descending colon
colonize
{v} to plant or settle with inhabitants
Cristobal Colon
{i} Christopher Columbus (1451-1506), Italian explorer and navigator who discovered America in 1492
ascending colon
the part of the large intestine that ascends from the cecum to the transverse colon
atonic colon
(Medicine) "lazy colon", lack or absence of muscle tone in the colon which may result in chronic constipation
colonic
{s} of the large intestine, of the colon
colonic
irrigation of the colon for cleansing purposes by injecting large amounts of fluid high into the colon of or relating to the colon
colonize
settle as colonists or establish a colony (in); "The British colonized the East Coast"
colonize
To begin a new colony
colonize
settle as a colony; of countries in the developing world; "Europeans colonized Africa in the 17th century"
colonize
{f} settle, establish colonies, go to and live in a colony (also colonise)
colonize
settle as a colony; of countries in the developing world; "Europeans colonized Africa in the 17th century
colonize
When large numbers of animals colonize a place, they go to live there and make it their home. Toads are colonising the whole place
colonize
To remove to, and settle in, a distant country; to make a colony
colonize
settle as colonists or establish a colony (in); "The British colonized the East Coast" settle as a colony; of countries in the developing world; "Europeans colonized Africa in the 17th century
colonize
When an area is colonized by a type of plant, the plant grows there in large amounts. The area was then colonized by scrub
colonize
colo·nize colonizes colonizing colonized in BRIT, also use colonise1. If people colonize a foreign country, they go to live there and take control of it. The first British attempt to colonize Ireland was in the twelfth century For more than 400 years, we were a colonized people
colonize
To plant or establish a colony or colonies in; to people with colonists; to migrate to and settle in
colonized
inhabited by colonists
colonized
past of colonize
colons
plural of colon
descending colon
the part of the large intestine that descends from the transverse colon to the sigmoid colon
semi-colon
semi-colon semi-colons in AM, usually use semicolon A semi-colon is the punctuation mark ; which is used in writing to separate different parts of a sentence or list or to indicate a pause
sigmoid colon
lower part of the large intestine that connects to the rectum (Anatomy)
sigmoid colon
An S-shaped section of the colon between the descending section and the rectum. Also called sigmoid flexure
sigmoid colon
the s-shaped curve between the descending colon and the rectum
spastic colon
irritable bowel syndrome: recurrent abdominal pain and diarrhea (often alternating with periods of constipation); often associated with emotional stress
transverse colon
the part of the large intestine that extends across the abdominal cavity and joins the ascending to the descending colon
transverse colon
The part of the colon that lies across the upper part of the abdominal cavity
Turkish - English

Definition of colón in Turkish English dictionary

Colon
(Tıp) Kolon.Kalın barsağın rektuma doğru uzanan,Çekum'dan(Cecum) sonraki kısmı. bkz: Large İntestine
Colon Polyps
(Tıp) Kolondaki kalın,etli ve mantar şekilli oluşumlar
Ascending Colon
(Tıp) Karın bölgesinin sağ tarafındaki Kolon(Kalın Barsağın rektumda son bulan uzantısı) parçası
Atonic Colon
(Tıp) Kolonda gerilim veya normal kas tonusunun eksikliği.Bu durum Hirschsprung hastalığı veya laksatiflerin(Müshil) aşırı kullanımından oluşur.Aynı zamanda Lazy Colon (Barsak tembelliği) olarak da adlandırılır.(bkz: Hirschsprung's Disease)
Descending Colon
(Tıp) Kolon'un ,Feçes'in(Dışkı) depolandığı kısmı.Karın boşluğunun sol tarafında bulunur
Lazy Colon
(Tıp) Bakınız.Atonic Colon
Sigmoid Colon
(Tıp) Zigmoid kolon.S Kolon.Kolonun Rektum içine boşaldığı en alt parçası
Spastic Colon
(Tıp) bkz: Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Transverse Colon
(Tıp) Transvers kolon.Kolonun karın boşluğunu sağdan sola çapraz geçen bölümü
iki nokta colon
(punctuation mark)
nokta üst üste punctuation colon
sıra
colón

    Hyphenation

    co·lon

    Turkish pronunciation

    kōlın

    Synonyms

    large bowel

    Pronunciation

    /ˈkōlən/ /ˈkoʊlən/

    Etymology

    [ 'kO-l&n ] (noun.) 14th century. 1. From Latin cōlon (“a member of a verse of poem”) Ancient Greek κῶλον (kōlon, “a member, limb, clause, part of a verse”). 2. From Latin cōlon Ancient Greek κόλον (kolon, “the large intestine, also food, meat, fodder”).
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