domal

listen to the pronunciation of domal
English - Turkish

Definition of domal in English Turkish dictionary

dome
{i} kubbe

On aylık çok sıkı bir çalışmadan sonra, bazen ısıtılmamış bir kubbede gece boyunca çalışarak, Clyde Tombaugh Pluto adını verdiği bir nesne keşfetti. - After ten months of very hard work, sometimes working through the night in an unheated dome, Clyde Tombaugh discovered an object he named Pluto.

dome
kümbet
dome
konak
dome
(Jeoloji) doma
dome
dom

Tokyo Dome için telefon numarası nedir? - What's the number for the Tokyo Dome?

Hiç Tokyo Dome'de bulundun mu? - Have you ever been to the Tokyo Dome?

dome
kapak kitap
dome
(Askeri) Bak. "spray dome"
dome
tepe
dome
{i} büyük ve güzel ev
dome
başın üst kısmı
dome
{i} dosya kapağı
dome
kubbe biçimindeki tabii oluşum
dome
{i} tepe zirvesi
dome
kubbe ile örtmek
dome
kafa/saray/kubbe
dome
{i} kapak (kitap)
dome
kubbe şekli vermek
Turkish - Turkish
Barbunyaya benzer fasulye
English - English
of, or relating to an astrological house
Pertaining to a house
dome
Slang for head
dome
Anything shaped like an upset bowl, often used as a cover, e.g. a cake dome
dome
A common structural element of architecture that resembles the hollow upper half of a sphere
dome
{n} an arched roof, cupola, building, house
dome
A steep-sided mass of viscous (doughy) lava extruded from a volcanic vent, often circular in plane view and spiny, rounded, or flat on top Its surface is often rough and blocky as a result of fragmentation of the cooler, outer crust during growth of the dome
dome
informal terms for a human head
dome
a hemispherical roof a stadium that has a roof a concave shape whose distinguishing characteristic is that the concavity faces downward
dome
The shelter housing a telescope The dome roof has a motorized slit that opens and can rotate 360 degrees to expose any portion of the sky We use Ash Domes for our large telescopes, and a specially constructed dome of our own design for the robotic telescope
dome
A dome is a round roof. the dome of St Paul's cathedral
dome
A closure that has a rounded top surface
dome
a hemispherical roof
dome
The most difficult architectural form to construct, the dome is designed by rotating the arch 360 deg around its central vertical axis The result is a semi-spherical cap that rests upon a cylinder or the top of a pendentive
dome
A roof with a partial-spherical shape
dome
an endogenic feature of positive relief (it sticks out from the surface), generally with shallow sides It is formed by pressure from below
dome
A building; a house; an edifice; used chiefly in poetry
dome
Decision; judgment; opinion; a court decision
dome
a concave shape whose distinguishing characteristic is that the concavity faces downward
dome
{i} curved hemispherical roof or ceiling, cupola, anything shaped like a dome
dome
An arch rotated about its vertical axis to produce a structure shaped like an inverted bowl
dome
The mound of water spray thrown up into the air when the shock wave from an underwater detonation of a nuclear (or atomic) weapon reaches the surface
dome
A curved roof enclosing a circular space; a three-dimensional arch
dome
1 structural geology An uplift that is circular or elliptical in map view, with beds dipping away in all directions from a central area 2 topography A general term for any dome-shaped landform
dome
a vault with double curvature
dome
The top part of the insulator Also used as an embossing location designator when written as (Dome) and used to indicate the embossing that follows is on the dome See also: Crown, F-Skirt, R-Skirt, F-Crown, R-Crown
dome
A cupola formed on a large scale
dome
A structure consisting of a partial sphere (usually about half of a sphere) used to enclose space Domes are commonly used for homes, greenhouses, or to enclose equipment such as radar
dome
A hemispherical vault
dome
The high, central stable portion of an ice sheet with low rates of accumulation and slow ice movement
dome
A hemispherical roof; in Ukrainian churches, the shape is varied to the characteristic Baroque "onion" shape Symbolizes the heavens
dome
A prism formed by planes parallel to a lateral axis which meet above in a horizontal edge, like the roof of a house; also, one of the planes of such a form
dome
A round or oval bulge on the Earth's surface, containing the oldest section of rock in its raised, central part See also basin drainage basin The area from which water flows into a stream Also called a watershed
dome
The top part of the insulator
dome
- A closure which has a rounded top surface
dome
An uplifted area of sedimentary rocks with a downward dip in all directions; often caused by molten rock material pushing upward from below The sediments have often eroded away, exposing the rocks that resulted when the molten material cooled
dome
a stadium that has a roof
dome
A curved roof structure, more or less hemispherical in shape, covering an area
dome
An arched roof or ceiling of even curvature erected on a circular or square base Domes can be segmented, semicircular, pointed or bulbous Often decorated with stained or painted glass Adds light, color and drama to a room or foyer
dome
a vertical shaft in a cave as viewed from the bottom; formed by water dripping or flowing straight down through vertical cracks See pit
dome
Any erection resembling the dome or cupola of a building; as the upper part of a furnace, the vertical steam chamber on the top of a boiler, etc
dome
A rounded forehead
dome
round shaped vault It may be laid over a tambour, wells or sprandels
dome
A dome is any object that has a similar shape to a dome. the dome of the hill. In architecture, a hemispherical structure evolved from the arch, forming a ceiling or roof. Domes first appeared on round huts and tombs in the ancient Middle East, India, and the Mediterranean in forms, such as solid mounds, adaptable only to the smallest buildings. The Romans introduced the large-scale masonry hemisphere. A dome exerts thrust all around its perimeter, and the earliest monumental examples (see Pantheon) required heavy supporting walls. Byzantine architects invented a technique for raising domes on piers, making the transition from a cubic base to the hemisphere by four pendentives. Bulbous or pointed domes were widely used in Islamic architecture. The design spread to Russia, where it gained great popularity in the form of the onion dome, a pointed, domelike roof structure. The modern geodesic dome, developed by R. Buckminster Fuller, is fabricated of lightweight triangular framing that distributes stresses within the structure itself. Dome of the Rock salt dome Teapot Dome scandal
domal

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'dOm ] (noun.) 1513. French, Italian, & Latin; French dôme dome, cathedral, from Italian duomo cathedral, from Medieval Latin domus church, from Latin, house; akin to Greek domos house, Sanskrit dam.
Favorites