papirüs el yazması

listen to the pronunciation of papirüs el yazması
Türkçe - İngilizce
papyrus
A scroll or document written on papyrus
A plant growing along the Nile in Egypt during biblical times It was used as writing material Papyrus scrolls were made by cutting and pressing sections of the papyri plant together at right angles They typical maximum length of a scroll was about 35 feet The scribe, when using papyrus, would often use the natural horizontal fibers of the papyrus plant as guidelines He would take a blunt instrument and score horizontal lines and then score two or more vertical lines as margins for the edge of the sheet or to define columns on it We get the word "paper" from this word Many of the biblical manuscripts were on papyrus
paper made from the papyrus plant by cutting it in strips and pressing it flat; used by ancient Egyptians and Greeks and Romans
A DICOM compatible medical imaging format
A manuscript written on papyrus; esp
A water reed once abundant in Egypt It was processed into a form of paper used for important records
An aquatic plant of the sedge family Papyrus anbquorum, once grew prolifically in Egypt
The Egyptians used this aquatic plant to create a writing sheet by peeling apart the plant's tissue-thin layers and stacking them in overlapping, crosshatched pieces to form a sheet Despite giving us the word "paper," papyrus is not a true paper
{i} paper reed, tall water plant of Egypt; writing material made from the tissue of the papyrus plant; ancient document written on papyrus
[n] an Egyptian plant that was used for making paper The flower of this plant was a popular decoration
A water reed used to make a kind of paper It was the main writing material used in Egypt Papyrus was joined together and rolled up to make scrolls which to the Egyptian was their version of a book
A plant in the sedge family, Cyperus papyrus, native to the Nile river valley
Papyrus is a type of paper made from papyrus stems that was used in ancient Egypt, Rome, and Greece
A papyrus is an ancient document that is written on papyrus. Writing material of ancient times and the plant from which it comes, Cyperus papyrus (sedge family), also called paper plant. This grasslike aquatic plant has woody, bluntly triangular stems and grows to about 15 ft (4.6 m) high in quietly flowing water up to 3 ft (90 cm) deep. The ancient Egyptians used the stem of the plant to make sails, cloth, mats, cords, and principally paper. Paper made from papyrus was the chief writing material in ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome. In the 8th-9th century AD, other plant fibres replaced papyrus in the manufacture of paper. The plant is now often used as a pool ornamental in warm areas or in conservatories
primitive paper, fashioned by cross-weaving the dried, flattened stems of the reed-like papyrus plant
The material upon which the ancient Egyptians wrote
early form of paper composed of pressed strips of sliced reed
A tall rushlike plant (Cyperus Papyrus) of the Sedge family, formerly growing in Egypt, and now found in Abyssinia, Syria, Sicily, etc
A material similar to paper made from the papyrus plant
papirüs el yazması