torching

listen to the pronunciation of torching
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
(Otomotiv) torklama
torch
{i} meşale

Onların birkaç adım arkasında bir meşale ile aydınlanmış başka bir grup insan geldi. - A few steps behind them came another group of people, illumined by a torch.

Meşaleyi kim tutuyor? - Who is holding the torch?

torch
{i} İng. el feneri, fener
torch
el feneri

Karanlıkta yürüyen kör bir adama el feneri tutma. - Do not show a torch to a blind man walking in the dark.

torch
fener

Karanlıkta yürüyen kör bir adama el feneri tutma. - Do not show a torch to a blind man walking in the dark.

torch
el lambası
torch
(Mekanik) asetilen alevi
torch
(Mekanik) şaloma
torch
(Mekanik) hamlaş
torch
(Botanik, Bitkibilim) sığırkuyruğu
torch
üfleç
torch
şalümo
torch
şalome
torch
(Aydınlatma) cep ışıklığı
torch
alev makinesi
torch
Ateşe vermek

5 tonnes of contraband ivory has been torched in a ceremony in Kenya.

torch
torç
torch
torch singer melankolik aşk şarkıları söyleyen kimse
torch
{i} cep feneri
torch
torch race eski Yunanlılarda koşucuların elde tuttukları meşaleleri birbirine vererek yaptıkları menzil yarışı
torch
{i} asetilen lâmbası
torch
cep feneri flashlight, Brit
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
The ignition and flare-up of a tree or small group of trees, usually from bottom to top
The burning of fuel at the end of the exhaust pipe or stacks of an aircraft engine due to excessive richness of the fuel/air mixture
The burning of the foliage of a single tree or a small group of trees from the bottom up
Fire burning principally as a surface fire that intermittently ignites the crowns of trees or shrubs as it advances
present participle of torch
torch
A torch is a small electric light which is powered by batteries and which you can carry in your hand
torch
{n} a large waxlight, flambeau, link, staff
torch
burn maliciously, as by arson; "The madman torched the barns"
torch
a light carried in the hand; consists of some flammable substance
torch
A stick with a flame on one end used as a light source
torch
If you say that someone is carrying the torch of a particular belief or movement, you mean that they are working hard to ensure that it is not forgotten and continues to grow stronger. This group aims to carry the torch for the millions who demonstrated and the thousands who died. to deliberately make a building, vehicle etc start to burn
torch
Operational code name for the Allied landings in North West Africa - November 1942
torch
For our purposes, I will ignore all but the liquid fueled "torches", as well as those lantern-like torches known as "smudge pots" used as safety markers, etc "Torch" was used as the name of the type of light that commonly had a wall-hung fount shaped like a frying pan, with a long downwards tube with a 90 deg bend at the bottom leading to a burner that protruded abot 18 to 24" away from the wall For "home" use, these gravity feed lights burned either gasoline/petrol or kerosene/paraffin with an open flame, with no chimney or shade The same type of lamp was referred to in Australia as a "stall lantern", used to both heat and light outdoor stalls in markets, etc
torch
a burner that mixes air and gas to produce a very hot flame
torch
A torch is a long stick with burning material at one end, used to provide light or to set things on fire. They lit a torch and set fire to the chapel's thatch
torch
A torch is a device that produces a hot flame and is used for tasks such as cutting or joining pieces of metal. The gang worked for up to ten hours with acetylene torches to open the vault. see also blowtorch
torch
To set fire to, especially using a torch (1) above
torch
A portable source of electric light
torch
a light carried in the hand; consists of some flammable substance burn maliciously, as by arson; "The madman torched the barns
torch
If you say that someone is carrying a torch for someone else, you mean that they secretly admire them or love them. He has always carried a torch for Barbara
torch
tall-stalked very woolly mullein with densely packed yellow flowers; ancient Greeks and Romans dipped the stalks in tallow for funeral torches
torch
An apparatus for mixing Oxy-fuels in controlled proportions for cutting and welding
torch
{i} piece of wood that is lit on fire to provide light, lamp; flashlight, small portable light powered by a battery; (Slang) arsonist, one who intentionally lights fires, one who maliciously burns property
torch
a small portable battery-powered electric lamp
torch
A device used for fusing sprayed coatings; it mixes and controls the flow of gases
torch
If someone torches a building or vehicle, they set fire to it deliberately. The rioters torched the local library
torch
Nickname for Jimmy Martino, first baseman whose game-time smoking habits (not his stellar play) earned him the moniker "the Torch "
torch
{f} set on fire, ignite, set ablaze; intentionally light fires, set on fire maliciously
torch
A device used in the TIG (GTAW) process to control the position of the electrode, to transfer current to the arc, and to direct the flow of the sheilding gas
torch
A light or luminary formed of some combustible substance, as of resinous wood; a large candle or flambeau, or a lamp giving a large, flaring flame
torch
British for "flashlight" - In scuba, it's an underwater battery powered light source
torch
ignition and subsequent envelopment in flames, usually from bottom to top, of a tree or small group of trees
torch
A campaign item used from the mid 19th century to the very early 20th century in which a wick, saturated with oil from a small self-contained reservoir is ignited for illumination of a night-time parade
torching

    Турецкое произношение

    tôrçîng

    Произношение

    /ˈtôrʧəɴɢ/ /ˈtɔːrʧɪŋ/
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