recess.

listen to the pronunciation of recess.
İngilizce - Türkçe
{i} ara

Ben kısa bir ara rica etmek istiyorum. - I would like to request a short recess.

Toplantı, kısa bir aradan sonra iki saat içinde tekrar toplanacak. - The meeting will reconvene in two hours after a brief recess.

{i} girinti
{i} mola

Mola sırasında biraz kahve içelim. - Let's have some coffee during recess.

Bizim on ikiden bire kadar öğle yemeği için bir saatlik bir molamız var. - We have an hour's recess for lunch from twelve to one.

gizli yer
tatile girmek
(Tıp) resesüs
gen
(duvarda) oyuk
boşluk
çukur
(Mekanik) oluk
yuva
okul tatili
paydos
ara verme
dinlenmek

Dinlenmek ister misin? - Would you like to take a recess?

duvarda girinti
yerleştirmek
paydos etmek
duvar girintisini koymak
ara vermek
niş
iç taraf
(Mühendislik) oluk, oyuk, girinti
(Tekstil) Girinti (Girintisiz silindir = İçi dolu silindir)
tatil yapmak
{i} (rîses') gen. çoğ. gizli yer, iç taraf
ara ver/oy/yerleştir
dinlenme

Dinlenmek ister misin? - Would you like to take a recess?

{i} (rîses') girinti, oyuk
gizliduvar girintisini koymak
(Tıp) Çukur, çukurcuk, recessus
{i} yatak
{f} boşluğa yerleştirmek
{i} tatil

Sözde bir durgunluk içinde olmamıza rağmen bu Altın Hafta tatilinde rekor sayıda insan yurt dışında seyahat ediyor. - Even though we're supposedly in a recession, people are traveling abroad in record numbers this Golden Week holiday.

Öğrenciler şimdi bir tatile giriyorlar. - The students are having a recess now.

{f} tatil olmak
oyuk/paydos/tatil
dinlenme anı
{f} (rîses') girinti yapmak, oymak
{f} girinti yapmak
{i} kovuk
{f} yer açmak
{i} teneffüs, ara; paydos; tatil
{f} (toplantıya) ara vermek
{f} oymak
İngilizce - İngilizce
A break, pause or vacation

Spring recess offers a good chance to travel.

To inset into something, or to recede

Recess the screw so it does not stick out.

Remote, distant (in time or place)

Thomas Salusbury: Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems: I should think it best in the subsequent discourses to begin to examine whether the Earth be esteemed immoveable, as it hath been till now believed by most men, or else moveable, as some ancient Philosophers held, and others of not very recesse times were of opinion;.

To take or declare a break

Class will recess for 20 minutes.

A shallow depression drilled in wood to allow the head or threaded end of a through-bolt to be flush with the wood surface
{n} a retirement, retreat, secret place
an enclosure that is set back or indented a small concavity make a recess in; "recess the piece of wood"
– An interlude between sessions where pupils can relax and play games outside of the school buildings
A depression in a flat surface
A place of retirement, retreat, secrecy, or seclusion
Intermission in a daily session Intermission from one day to the next; day-to-day recess from one calendar day to the next
The period between sessions of Parliament
A temporary interruption during a day’s proceedings that does not interrupt unfinished business The rules in each house direct matters to be taken up and disposed of at the beginning of each legislative day The House usually adjourns from day to day The Senate often recesses, thus meeting on the same legislative day for several calendar days or even weeks at a time
  A temporary break during a floor session or a period when no legislative sessions are held
A decree of the imperial diet of the old German empire
A withdrawing or retiring; a moving back; retreat; as, the recess of the tides
An inset, hole, space or opening
put into a recess; "recess lights
A temporary termination of a meeting Recesses are called for short breaks (e g , for lunch or dinner) or occasionally at the close of a daily session to allow the legislative day to continue into the next calendar day (See ADJOURNMENT )
Marks a temporary end to the business of the Congress, and sets a time for the next meeting
an enclosure that is set back or indented
Part of a room formed by the receding of the wall, as an alcove, niche, etc
When formal meetings or court cases recess, they stop temporarily. The hearings have now recessed for dinner Before the trial recessed today, the lawyer read her opening statement
Temporary halt to proceedings, with a time set for proceedings to resume
an enclosure that is set back or indented a small concavity make a recess in; "recess the piece of wood" put into a recess; "recess lights
In a room, a recess is part of a wall which is built further back than the rest of the wall. Recesses are often used as a place to put furniture such as shelves. a discreet recess next to a fireplace
(1) An official pause in a committee hearing or floor session that halts the proceedings for a period of time but does not have the finality of adjournment
Secret or abstruse part; as, the difficulties and recesses of science
Intermission during a daily Session, usually for caucus or committee meetings
a pause from doing something (as work); "we took a 10-minute break"; "he took time out to recuperate"
a state of abeyance or suspended business
A time of play, usually, on a playground
Concludes legislative day, with a set time for reconvening--usually more than three days of adjournment
An indentation into the housing
Temporary delay in proceedings
a small concavity
A brief adjournment ordered by the judge (see Adjournment; compare Continuance)
make a recess in; "recess the piece of wood"
(1) An official pause of any length in a committee hearing or Floor Session that halts the proceedings for a period of time but does not have the finality of adjournment
Intermission in a legislative day
the period between sessions of Parliament, but in ordinary usage the word is often used to describe the periods between the main sitting periods each year, as in the winter recess
{i} break from proceedings, intermission, pause in activity; niche, indentation in a wall, alcove; scheduled break in the middle of a school day
a space in a room where part of a wall is set back from the main part
Remission or suspension of business or procedure; intermission, as of a legislative body, court, or school
an arm off of a larger body of water (often between rocky headlands)
The state of being withdrawn; seclusion; privacy
A sinus
Intermission in a daily session
put into a recess; "recess lights"
ending a legislative session with a set time to reconvene
To make a recess in; as, to recess a wall
—Adjournment by the House or Senate for at least three days, with a set time for reconvening
This is a temporary time when the trial or hearing is not in session A recess can be for minutes, hours, days or even weeks return to index
{f} take a break from proceedings, take a pause from activities; make a niche, set back from the surface
close at the end of a session; "The court adjourned"
The recesses of something or somewhere are the parts of it which are hard to see because light does not reach them or they are hidden from view. He emerged from the dark recesses of the garage
A recess is a break between the periods of work of an official body such as a committee, a court of law, or a government. The conference broke for a recess
If you refer to the recesses of someone's mind or soul, you are referring to thoughts or feelings they have which are hidden or difficult to describe. There was something in the darker recesses of his unconscious that was troubling him. if a government, law court etc recesses, it officially stops work for a period of time