some one

listen to the pronunciation of some one
English - Turkish
biraz bir
someone
birisi

Birisi onun kolundan tuttuğunda o korkudan çığlık attı. - She screamed with horror as someone took hold of her arm.

Bir yabancı omzuma arkadan dokundu. Beni başka birisiyle karıştırmış olmalı. - A stranger tapped me on the shoulder from behind. He must have mistaken me for someone else.

someone
biri

Kaybedecek bir şeyi olmayan birine meydan okuma. - Don't challenge someone who has nothing to lose.

Bir yabancı omzuma arkadan dokundu. Beni başka birisiyle karıştırmış olmalı. - A stranger tapped me on the shoulder from behind. He must have mistaken me for someone else.

someone
bir kimse

Bugün belirli bir kimse müthiş kırılgan oluyor. - A certain someone is being awfully fragile today.

O, şüpheleneceğin bir kimse değildi. - He wasn't someone you'd suspect.

someone
şahsiyet
someone
kimse

Neden kimse Tom'a yardım etmedi? - Why didn't someone help Tom?

Neden kimseye söylemedin? - Why didn't you tell someone?

someone
önemli kimse
English - English

Definition of some one in English English dictionary

cut one some slack
To be lenient with; to give grace to someone after a mistake
someone
some person

Is someone there?.

someone
If you say that a person is someone or somebody in a particular kind of work or in a particular place, you mean that they are considered to be important in that kind of work or in that place. `Before she came around,' she says, `I was somebody in this town'. be someone to be or feel important
someone
{i} person, human, human being
someone
A partially specified but unnamed person
someone
pron. some person, somebody
someone
a human being; "there was too much for one person to do"
someone
You use someone or somebody to refer to a person without saying exactly who you mean. Her father was shot by someone trying to rob his small retail store I need someone to help me If somebody asks me how my diet is going, I say, `Fine'
some one

    Turkish pronunciation

    sʌm hwʌn

    Pronunciation

    /ˈsəm ˈhwən/ /ˈsʌm ˈhwʌn/

    Etymology

    [ 's&m, for 2 without str ] (adjective.) before 12th century. Middle English som, adjective and pronoun, from Old English sum; akin to Old High German sum some, Greek hamE somehow, homos same; more at SAME.

    Videos

    ... going to send some one to Mars. ...
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