konrad

listen to the pronunciation of konrad
İngilizce - Türkçe

konrad teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı

plunger
(Askeri) MİL: Kuyruktan doldurulan bir silahta; ateşleme iğnesini vuruş vaziyetine getiren tertibat, toplarda da aynı işi gören tertibat
plunger
fırlatıcı
plunger
plançer
plunger
(Avcılık) kılavuz
plunger
dalıcı piston
plunger
dalma piston
plunger
dalıcı
plunger
{i} kumarbaz
plunger
{i} dalgıç
plunger
(isim) dalgıç, dalma pistonu, tulumba pistonu, büyük oyuncu, kumarbaz, spekülatör
plunger
{i} tulumba pistonu
plunger
(İnşaat) subap makarası, planjer
plunger
kumarbaz/piston/pompa
plunger
{i} lavabo pompası
plunger
{i} büyük oyuncu
Almanca - İngilizce
plunger
Kurt
Konrad der Rote
Conrad the Red
Konrad der Staufer
Conrad of Hohenstaufen
İngilizce - İngilizce
Ackermann Konrad Ernst Adenauer Konrad Beilstein Friedrich Konrad Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski Henlein Konrad Lorenz Konrad Zacharias Witz Konrad Zuse Konrad
{i} family name; male first name
Konrad Adenauer
born Jan. 15, 1876, Cologne, German Empire died April 19, 1967, Rhöndorf, W.Ger. German statesman, first chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany). Elected to the Cologne city council (1906), he served as the city's lord mayor (1917-33). He was elected to the Prussian Staatsrat (state council) in 1920 and served as its speaker (1928-33). He lost his posts when the Nazis came to power, and in 1944 he was sent to a concentration camp. As World War II drew to a close, he played an important role in the formation of the Christian Democratic Union. As chancellor from 1949, Adenauer stressed individualism under the rule of law. His fear of Soviet expansion made him a strong supporter of NATO. He worked hard to reconcile Germany with its former enemies, especially France. He retired his post in 1963
Konrad Ernst Ackermann
(baptized Feb. 4, 1712, Schwerin, Mecklenburg died Nov. 13, 1771, Hamburg) German actor-manager. After training with a theatre company that specialized in German adaptations of French plays, he led a troupe on tour throughout Europe in the 1750s. He became known for domestic drama and for playing roles that combined the comic and the sentimental. In 1765 he opened a theatre in Hamburg, considered the first German national theatre, and later turned its management over to his stepson, Friedrich L. Schröder (1744-1816), who brought Shakespeare to the German stage. See also actor-manager system
Konrad Henlein
born May 6, 1898, Maffersdorf bei Reichenberg, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary died May 10, 1945, Plzen, Czech. Sudeten German politician. In 1933 he became leader of the Sudeten German Home Front, the second strongest party in the Czech parliament. After a revolt broke out in the Sudetenland in 1938, the government suspended his party for treasonable activities, and Henlein fled to Germany. After the Munich agreement ceded the Sudetenland to Germany, he was appointed commissioner for the territory. While in Allied custody at the end of World War II, he committed suicide
Konrad Lorenz
{i} Konrad Zacharias Lorenz (1903-1989), Austrian zoologist and ornithologist who co-founded (together with Nikolaas Tinbergen) modern ethology
Konrad Lorenz
born Nov. 7, 1903, Vienna, Austria died Feb. 27, 1989, Altenburg Zoologist and founder (with Nikolaas Tinbergen) of modern ethology. While still a schoolboy he nursed sick animals from the nearby zoo. In 1935 he first elucidated and demonstrated the phenomenon of imprinting in ducklings and goslings. He later examined the roots of human aggression (in the best-selling On Aggression, 1963) and the nature of human thought. His other popular works include King Solomon's Ring (1949) and Man Meets Dog (1950). He shared a 1973 Nobel Prize with Tinbergen and Karl von Frisch
Konrad Witz
born 1400, Rottweil, Baden-Württemberg died 1445, Basel or Geneva, Swiss Confederation German-born Swiss painter. In 1434 he entered the painters' guild in Basel, where he worked most of his life. Little else is known of his life. His masterpiece, The Miraculous Draft of Fishes (1444), from an altarpiece for the cathedral of Geneva, exemplifies such precise realism that the light reflected off the water's surface is carefully distinguished from the light reflected off the stones beneath the shallow water. He was one of the first German painters to show the influence of early Netherlandish art and one of the first European artists to incorporate realistic landscapes into religious paintings
Konrad Zacharias Lorenz
{i} (1903-1989) Austrian zoologist and ornithologist who co-founded (together with Nikolaas Tinbergen) modern ethology
Konrad Zacharias Lorenz
born Nov. 7, 1903, Vienna, Austria died Feb. 27, 1989, Altenburg Zoologist and founder (with Nikolaas Tinbergen) of modern ethology. While still a schoolboy he nursed sick animals from the nearby zoo. In 1935 he first elucidated and demonstrated the phenomenon of imprinting in ducklings and goslings. He later examined the roots of human aggression (in the best-selling On Aggression, 1963) and the nature of human thought. His other popular works include King Solomon's Ring (1949) and Man Meets Dog (1950). He shared a 1973 Nobel Prize with Tinbergen and Karl von Frisch
Konrad Zuse
born June 22, 1910, Berlin, Ger. died Dec. 18, 1995, Hünfeld German engineer. In 1941 he constructed the first fully operational program-controlled electromechanical binary calculating machine, or digital computer, called the Z3. The machine predated Howard H. Aiken's Harvard Mark I but was destroyed by bombing during World War II. In 1945 he designed Plankalkül, one of the first attempts at a high-level programming language, which later influenced the development of ALGOL
Friedrich Konrad Beilstein
born Feb. 17, 1838, St. Petersburg, Russia died Oct. 18, 1906, St. Petersburg Russian chemist. From 1866 to his retirement he taught at St. Petersburg's Technical Institute. His Handbuch der organischen Chemie ("Handbook of Organic Chemistry"; 1st ed., 1880-83) fully described 15,000 organic compounds. The fourth edition (27 vol., 1937) is periodically supplemented, and remains indispensable for workers in organic chemistry