sırıkla itmek (sandal)

listen to the pronunciation of sırıkla itmek (sandal)
Turkish - English
{f} punt
To make a highly speculative investment or other commitment, or take a wild guess
To propel a punt or similar craft by means of a pole
To stake against the bank, to back a horse, to gamble or take a chance more generally
A point in the game of faro
{n} a small flat-bottomed boat
The act of punting the ball
An indentation in the base of a wine bottle
A thin glass rod which is temporarily attached to a larger piece in order to better manipulate the larger piece
The dome shaped indentation in the bottom of a wine bottle
A bet or wager
When a team kicks the ball because they can't score
The punt was the unit of money used in the Irish Republic before it was replaced by the euro. The round-trip fare to Havana is 550 Irish punts . The punt was also used to refer to the Irish currency system. the cost of defending the punt against speculators. In ancient Egyptian and Greek geography, the southern coast of the Red Sea and adjacent coasts of the Gulf of Aden, corresponding to modern coastal Ethiopia and Djibouti. Visited by Egyptian expeditions as early as 2200 BC, it was a place of ancient legend and fable and Egypt's source for incense, ivory, and ostrich feathers. During the reign of Queen Hatshepsut, an expedition was sent to Punt, and the queen had the details of the journey recorded on the walls of the Deir el-Bahri temple near Thebes. Only in the late 4th century BC were the trade routes to Punt opened to the Greeks
propel with a pole; "pole barges on the river"; "We went punting in Cambridge"
an open flat-bottomed boat used in shallow waters and propelled by a long pole propel with a pole; "pole barges on the river"; "We went punting in Cambridge"
A pontoon; a narrow shallow boat propelled by a pole
when a player 10 yards behind the center catches a snap, drops it and kicks it before it hits the ground; an opponent tries to catch and advance it the other way
A semimythical land that the Egyptian texts refer to as a source for trade Its exact location is still unclear, but it was south of Egypt, perhaps in modern day Somalia
sırıkla itmek (sandal)
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