adler

listen to the pronunciation of adler
Немецкий Язык - Турецкий язык
{'a: dlır} r kartal
[der] kartal
r. 'a: dlır kartal
kartal

Kartal avına doğru dalışa geçti. - Der Adler stürzte sich auf seine Beute.

Kurtlar sürüyle gezer ama kartallar yalnız uçar. - Wölfe ziehen im Rudel umher, Adler aber fliegen allein.

der Adler
kartal

Kartal avına doğru dalışa geçti. - Der Adler stürzte sich auf seine Beute.

Турецкий язык - Турецкий язык
Bireysel psikoloji okulunu kuran ve aşağılık duygusu terimini ilk kez ortaya atan ünlü Avusturyalı hekim
Türkçeye Psikolojik Aktivite, Yaşama Sanatı ve insanı Tanıma Sanatı adlı kitapları da çevrilen, birey psikolojisinin kurucusu, Avusturyalı psikolog
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык

Определение adler в Английский Язык Турецкий язык словарь

eagle
{i} kartal

Bir kartal gökyüzünde uçar. - An eagle flies in the sky.

Tom'un sağ kolunda bir kartal dövmesi vardı. - Tom had an eagle tattooed on his right arm.

Adler's theory
(Tıp) Nevrozların sosyal veya fiziksel bakımlardan duyulan aşağılık duygusu nedeniyle ortaya çıktığını ileri süren teori
eagle
tavşancıl
eagle
(Askeri) taktik avcı uçağı
eagle
bürgüt
eagle
karakuş
eagle
kartal şeklinde veya kartal resmi taşıyan herhangi bir şey eagle owl puhu kuşu gibi bir çeşit baykuş
eagle
eagle ray fulya balığı
eagle
eaglewood tree kartal ağacı
eagle
{i} on dolarlık altın para
eagle
aquilaria agallo
eagle
(Askeri) EAGLE: Havadan havaya görevlerde, muhtelif havadan fırlatmalı silahların kullanımını haiz, çift motorlu, turbojet sesten hızlı, tüm hava koşullarında kullanılan, taktik bir avcı uçağıdır. Eagle havada yakıt alma imkanına sahip ve aynı zamanda uzun menzilli hava üstünlüğü görevlerini yerine getirmeye muktedirdir. F-15 koduyla bilinir
spread eagle
(fiil) gergin kanatlı kartal, aşırı milliyetçilik, şovenizm, el ve ayaklarını birbirine değdirme (buz pateni)
spread eagle
{f} el ve ayaklarını birbirine değdirme (buz pateni)
spread eagle
{f} aşırı milliyetçilik
spread eagle
{f} şovenizm
spread eagle
{f} kolları ve bacakları açarak vücuda X şeklinde görüntü vermek
Немецкий Язык - Английский Язык
eagles

Wolves travel in packs, but eagles fly alone. - Wölfe ziehen im Rudel umher, Adler aber fliegen allein.

The biologist installed a camera inside the eagles' nest. - Der Biologe installierte eine Kamera im Adlerhorst.

eagle
spread eagle
Adler (Sternbild)
Vulture
Adler (Sternbild)
Aquila
Der Adler öffnete seine Flügel und erhob sich in die Lüfte / schwang sich in die
The eagle spread its wings and soared into the air
Echte Adler (Aquila) (zoologische Gattung)
true eagles (zoological genus)
Ganges-Adler (Aquila hastata)
Indian spotted eagle
die Adler
the eagles
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
{i} family name; Alfred Adler (1870-1937), Austrian psychiatrist who developed the concept of the inferiority complex
American educator and philosopher whose numerous published works include How to Read a Book (1940) and The Conditions of Philosophy (1965). Adler Alfred Adler Guido Adler Larry Lawrence Cecil Adler Adler Mortimer Jerome
Alfred Adler
born Feb. 7, 1870, Penzing, Austria died May 28, 1937, Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scot. Austrian psychiatrist. He earned his medical degree in Vienna, and from his earliest years as a physician he stressed consideration of the individual in relation to his total environment. A student and associate of Sigmund Freud (1902-11), he eventually broke with Freud over the importance of early-childhood sexual conflicts in the development of psychopathology. With his followers he developed the school of individual psychology the humanistic study of drives, feelings, emotions, and memory in the context of the individual's overall life plan. Adler advanced the theory of the inferiority complex to explain cases of psychopathology; Adlerian psychotherapy sought to direct patients emotionally disabled by inferiority feelings toward maturity, common sense, and social usefulness. He established the first child guidance clinic in 1921 in Vienna. He taught in the U.S. (at Columbia University and the Long Island College of Medicine) from 1927 until his death. His works include Understanding Human Nature (1927) and What Life Should Mean to You (1931)
Alfred Adler
{i} (1870-1937) Austrian psychiatrist who developed the concept of the inferiority complex
Guido Adler
born Nov. 1, 1855, Eibenschütz, Moravia, Austrian Empire died Feb. 15, 1941, Vienna, Austria Austrian musicologist. After studying music theory and composition at the Vienna Conservatory, he studied music history at the University of Vienna under Eduard Hanslick (1825-1904), whom he succeeded as professor. He worked with Philipp Spitta (1841-94) and Friedrich Chrysander in founding musicology as an academic discipline. Among his distinguished students were Karl Geiringer (1899-1989), Knud Jeppesen (1892-1974), Anton Webern, and Egon Wellesz (1885-1974)
Larry Adler
orig. Lawrence Cecil Adler born Feb. 10, 1914, Baltimore, Md., U.S. died Aug. 7, 2001, London, Eng. U.S. harmonica player. Though he was initially unable to read music, he learned classical compositions by ear and became the first person to perform concert music on the harmonica. His musicality attracted many composers to write especially for him, including Darius Milhaud and Ralph Vaughan Williams. Accused of communist sympathies and blacklisted in the early 1950s, he was unable to find work in the U.S. and took up residence in England
Mortimer J Adler
born Dec. 28, 1902, New York, N.Y., U.S. died June 28, 2001, San Mateo, Calif. U.S. philosopher, educator, and editor. He earned a doctorate in philosophy from Columbia University (1928) and taught philosophy of law from 1930 at the University of Chicago, where with Robert M. Hutchins he promoted the idea of liberal education through regular discussions of the great books. Together they edited the 54-volume Great Books of the Western World (1952); for Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., they edited an annual, The Great Ideas Today (from 1961), and the 10-volume Gateway to the Great Books (1963). In 1969 Adler became director of planning for the 15th edition of Encyclopædia Britannica, published in 1974. His many books include How to Read a Book (1940), How to Think About God (1980), Six Great Ideas (1981), and Ten Philosophical Mistakes (1985)
Mortimer Jerome Adler
born Dec. 28, 1902, New York, N.Y., U.S. died June 28, 2001, San Mateo, Calif. U.S. philosopher, educator, and editor. He earned a doctorate in philosophy from Columbia University (1928) and taught philosophy of law from 1930 at the University of Chicago, where with Robert M. Hutchins he promoted the idea of liberal education through regular discussions of the great books. Together they edited the 54-volume Great Books of the Western World (1952); for Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., they edited an annual, The Great Ideas Today (from 1961), and the 10-volume Gateway to the Great Books (1963). In 1969 Adler became director of planning for the 15th edition of Encyclopædia Britannica, published in 1974. His many books include How to Read a Book (1940), How to Think About God (1980), Six Great Ideas (1981), and Ten Philosophical Mistakes (1985)