poultry

listen to the pronunciation of poultry
English - Turkish
{i} kümes hayvanlarının eti
(Çiftçilik) kanatlı kümes hayvanları
kümes hayvanları

Ben et, kabuklu deniz ürünleri, kümes hayvanları ya da et suyu yemem. - I don't eat meat, shellfish, poultry or gravy.

poultry yard tavuklara mahsus avlu
kümes hayvan

Ben et, kabuklu deniz ürünleri, kümes hayvanları ya da et suyu yemem. - I don't eat meat, shellfish, poultry or gravy.

poultry house kümes
(isim) kümes hayvanları
poultry farm tavuk çiftliği
topluluk
poultry husbandry
tavukçuluk
poultry industry
kümes hayvanları endüstrisi
poultry products
kümes hayvanları ürünleri
poultry rearing
tavukçuluk
poultry sector
tavukçuluk sektörü
poultry farm
tavuk çiftliği

Bana tavuk çiftliğinin er ya da geç iflas edeceğini bildiren bir mektup gönderdi. - He sent me a letter to the effect that his poultry farm would go bankrupt sooner or later.

poultry house
kümes
poultry raising
kümes hayvancılığı
poultry yard
kümes
poultry farming
kümes hayvanları yetiştiriciliği
poultry house
Tavuk çiftliklerinde tavuk yetiştirmek için kullanılan büyük, kapalı mekân
poultry yard
Tavuk çiftliği
poultry louse
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) tavukbiti
poultry yard
(Tarım) tavuk avlusu
intensive poultry keeping
yoğun tavuk barındırma
cage for poultry
hayvan kafesi
intensive poultry keeping
(Tarım) yoğun tavuk barmdırma
English - English
a street in the City between Cheapside and Cornhill
domestic fowl (chickens, ducks, turkeys and geese) raised for food (either meat or eggs)
the meat from a domestic fowl
You can refer to chickens, ducks, and other birds that are kept for their eggs and meat as poultry. Meat from these birds is also referred to as poultry. The menu features roast meats and poultry
a domesticated gallinaceous bird though to be descended from the red jungle fowl
Domestic fowls reared for the table, or for their eggs or feathers, such as cocks and hens, capons, turkeys, ducks, and geese
flesh of chickens or turkeys or ducks or geese raised for food
{i} domestic fowl, birds that are cultivated for their eggs or meat
pullail
pultesse
pultise
pullen
poultry farming
Raising birds commercially or domestically for meat, eggs, and feathers. Chickens, ducks, turkeys, and geese are the birds of primary commercial importance. Guinea fowl and squabs are chiefly of local interest. Though chickens have been domesticated for at least 4,000 years, their meat and eggs have been mass-production commodities only since 1800
poultry keeper
one who manages a hen house, one who raises and cares for fowl
Schechter Poultry Corporation v. United States
(1935) Decision of the Supreme Court of the United States that abolished the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA; see National Recovery Administration), a cornerstone of the New Deal. By unanimous vote, the court held that Congress had exceeded its authority by delegating too much legislative power to the president and industrial groups. It also found that NIRA's "codes of fair practice" went beyond the regulation of interstate commerce in attempting to control intrastate activity. NIRA's successor, the National Labor Relations Act (1935), proved acceptable to the court
domestic poultry
poultry raised for egg-laying or to be eaten
egg and poultry industry
field of the hen-roost
poultry

    Hyphenation

    poul·try

    Turkish pronunciation

    pōltri

    Pronunciation

    /ˈpōltrē/ /ˈpoʊltriː/

    Etymology

    [ 'pOl-trE ] (noun.) 14th century. From French poulet ("chicken", as in dish) Latin pullus ("chick")
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