gell

listen to the pronunciation of gell
English - Turkish

Definition of gell in English Turkish dictionary

piercing
{s} içine işleyen
piercing
(soğuk) içe işleyen
piercing
tiz
piercing
içe işleyen
piercing
{i} delen
piercing
soğuk

Dışarıda çok sert bir soğuk vardı. - It was piercingly cold outside.

piercing
acı
piercing
(rüzgâr) sert
piercing
(ses) güçlü
piercing
{f} del

Senin çok delici gözlerin var. - You have very piercing eyes.

Tom'un delici bir sesi var. - Tom has a piercing voice.

innit
(Dilbilim) Değil mi? (Konuşma dilinde "ain't it?")

It is pretty dark in here,inn'it?.

piercing
delerek
piercing
(Mühendislik) delme (Mannesman metodu)
piercing
aşırı yüksek çığlık
piercing
Cildin ve altındaki yağ tabakasının ya da kıkırdağın delinmesi ve takı ya da iğne takılması usulü ile gerçekleştirilen vücut süsleme sanatı, pirsing
piercing
{f} del: prep.dele
piercing
(sıfat) delip geçen, delici, keskin, içine işleyen
piercing
(isim) delme
piercing
arayan/keskin/sert
piercing
{f} del: prep.delerek
German - English
innit
right
piercing
shrill
isn't it
ain't it …
English - English

Definition of gell in English English dictionary

gell-mann
United States physicist noted for his studies of subatomic particles (born in 1929)
Murray Gell-Mann
born Sept. 15, 1929, New York, N.Y., U.S. U.S. physicist. He entered Yale University at 15 and earned his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1951. From 1955 he taught at the California Institute of Technology, becoming Millikan professor of theoretical physics in 1967. In 1953 he introduced the concept of "strangeness," a quantum property that accounted for decay patterns of certain mesons. In 1961 he and Yuval Ne'eman (b. 1925) proposed a scheme (the "Eightfold Way") that grouped mesons and baryons into multiplets of 1, 8, 10, or 27 members on the basis of various properties. He speculated that it was possible to explain certain properties of known particles in terms of even more fundamental particles, or building blocks, which he later called quarks. He was awarded a 1969 Nobel Prize