davenport

listen to the pronunciation of davenport
English - Turkish
küçük süslü yazı masası
sedir
divan
{i} kanepe

Tom kanepede kıvrılmıştı. - Tom curled up on the davenport.

{i} yazı masası
{i} kanepe, sedir, divan; çekyat
küçük yazıhane
English - English
A surname of Irish origin from the Gaelic Ó Donndubhartaigh
A habitational surname from the town in Cheshire
A writing desk

He crosses to the davenport to get the policies from his briefcase,.

A large sofa, especially a formal one

He blundered into the living-room, lay on the davenport, hands behind his head.

An English habitational surname from the town in Cheshire
{i} city in Iowa; name of several towns in the USA
English Puritan who fled to America in 1637 and helped found a colony at New Haven, Connecticut
An English surname of Irish origin from the Gaelic Ó Donndubhartaigh
Originally a small writing desk In current American use, an upholstered sofa
{i} type of large sofa (in Canada & USA); small decorative desk that has drawers and a slanting surface for writing
A kind of small writing table, generally somewhat ornamental, and forming a piece of furniture for the parlor or boudoir
a large sofa usually convertible into a bed
A small writing desk with a sloped top above a case of drawers
a British term describing a small writing desk
a small decorative writing desk
a city in eastern Iowa on the Mississippi River across from Moline and Rock Island
What your mom called 'the sofa'; a couch
a large sofa usually convertible into a bed a small decorative writing desk a city in eastern Iowa on the Mississippi River across from Moline and Rock Island
Davenports
plural of Davenport
John Davenport
born April 1597, Coventry, Warwickshire, Eng. died March 15, 1670, Boston, Mass. British-American Puritan clergyman. A vicar in London, he moved to Amsterdam in 1633 and served there as co-pastor of the English Church. In 1637 he left for America with Theophilus Eaton ( 1590-1658) and their followers. They founded a colony at Quinnipiac (New Haven) in 1638; Davenport became pastor of the New Haven church, and Eaton was chosen governor. After failing to prevent New Haven's union with the Connecticut colony, Davenport left in 1667 to lead the First Church in Boston
Maxwell Davenport Taylor
born Aug. 26, 1901, Keytesville, Mo., U.S. died April 19, 1987, Washington, D.C. U.S. army officer. He graduated from West Point and helped organize the army's first airborne division early in World War II. He commanded a parachute assault in the Normandy Campaign and in the Battle of the Bulge (1944). He served as commanding general of UN forces in Korea (1953), as U.S. Army chief of staff (1955-59), and as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1962-64). He was appointed ambassador to South Vietnam (1964-65) and was a special consultant to Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson (1965-69). He advocated the maintenance of conventional infantry as a prudent alternative to the use of nuclear weapons in war
davenport
Favorites