Roads
Sorunu sor hemen cevaplansın.
roads teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- demirleme yeri {i}
- dış liman {i}
- liman ağzı {i}
- road
- yol
Amerika'da arabalar yolun sağ tarafını kullanırlar.
-In America cars drive on the right side of the road.
Çamurlu yol, yeni ayakkabılarımı mahvetti.
-The muddy road has ruined my new shoes.
- rough roads
- engebeli yollarda
- road
- liman/yol
- road
- otoyol
Bu yol orada otoyola katılır.
-This road joins the highway there.
Amerika'da nereye giderseniz gidin, yollar ve otoyollar vardır.
-There are roads and freeways wherever you go in America.
- road
- (Askeri) kara yolu
Tom'un bir kara yolu seyahatine gideceğini düşünüyordum.
-I thought Tom would go on a road trip.
Piknik alanına kara yolu ile kolayca ulaşılabilir.
-The picnic area is easily accessible by road.
- road
- {i} karayolu
Kamp bölgesi karayoluyla ulaşılabilir değil.
-The campsite isn't accessible by road.
Demiryolu karayoluna paralel.
-The railroad is parallel to the road.
- road
- cadde
Bu kaldırım caddenin karşısındakinden daha dar.
-This sidewalk is a lot narrower than the one across the road.
O, caddeyi geçerken görüldü.
-He was seen crossing the road.
- road
- road metal yol yapmaya mahsus kırık taş Out of the road Yoldan çe
- road
- road hog bütün yolu işgal eden şöför veya arabacı
- concrete roads
- (İnşaat) beton yollar
- road
- uyulan ilke
- road
- şose
- cross roads
- kavşak
- road
- demirleyecek yer
- road
- dış liman
- all roads lead to rome
- bütün yollar rome yol
- all roads lead to rome
- (deyim) Bütün yollar Romaya çıkar
- cross roads
- çapraz yollar
- dirt roads
- toprak yollar
- granger roads
- granger yollar
- road
- yolun
- access roads
- irtibat yolları
- access roads
- yaklaşım yolları
- hit the roads
- trafiğe çıkmak
- road
- demiryolu
Demiryolu karayoluna paralel.
-The railroad is parallel to the road.
Demiryolu bu noktada yolu geçer.
-The railway crosses the road at this point.
- road
- {i} maden geçidi
- road
- demirleyecekdış liman
- road
- road cart iki tekerlekli binek arabası
- road
- {i} demiryolu [amer.]
- road
- demirleme yeri
- road
- sık sık çoğ
- road
- demirleyecek
- upkeep of roads
- yolların bakım ve tamiri
- urban roads
- şehir içi yollar
İlgili Terimler
roads teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Generally this includes any travelways used by motorized vehicles In GIS habitat analysis roads refers to travelways that are driveable by 2-wheel drive vehicles on a year-round basis Low quality roads may also have some impact on wolf habitat, but are often more difficult to accurately measure and assess
- a partly sheltered anchorage
- Resource Organisation And Discovery in Subject based services A UK funded project whose aim is to develop discovery software for Internet resources
- Plural of road
- Resource Organisation and Discovery in Subject-based services
- A roads
- plural form of A road
- B roads
- plural form of B road
- all roads lead to Rome
- different paths can take one to the same goal
- frontage roads
- plural form of frontage road
- road
- A path chosen in life or career
Where, then, is the road to peace?.
- road
- a partly sheltered area of water near a shore in which vessels may ride at anchor
There delivering their fraught, they went to Scandaroone; rather to view what ships was in the Roade, than any thing else .
- road
- A way used for travelling between places, usually surfaced with asphalt or concrete. Modern roads, both rural and urban, are designed to accommodate many vehicles travelling in both directions
- road
- a railway; a single railway track
- road
- An underground tunnel in a mine
- slip roads
- plural form of slip road
- toll roads
- plural form of toll road
- road
- Vehicle or vehicle and pedestrian route without a significant amount of pedestrian activity generated by adjoining buildings and public spaces Compare street
- road
- {n} a way for travelling on, anchorage some distance from shore
- Hampton Roads
- Channel in the U.S. through which the James, Elizabeth, and Nansemond rivers flow into Chesapeake Bay. About 4 mi (6 km) wide and 40 ft (12 m) deep, it has been an important military base since colonial days. In 1862 it was the scene of the Battle of the Monitor and Merrimack. The port cities of Newport News, Norfolk, and Portsmouth comprise the Port of Hampton Roads, one of the busiest U.S. seaports
- Hampton Roads Conference
- (Feb. 3, 1865) Informal and unsuccessful peace talks at Hampton Roads, Va. , during the American Civil War. Pres. Abraham Lincoln agreed to meet with the Confederate vice president, Alexander H. Stephens, to reach a peace settlement. Lincoln's terms called for a reunion of the nation, emancipation of the slaves, and disbanding of Confederate troops. Since Stephens had been authorized to accept independence only, no settlement was reached
- all roads lead to Rome
- everything ends up at the same place, all ways eventually lead to the same place
- building roads
- creating and paving new roads
- cruise the roads
- travel from place to place without a set destination
- department for maintenance and improvement of roads and parks
- municipal department in charge of overseeing the upkeep and the cultivation of all the roads and parks in the area
- granger roads
- Certain railroads whose traffic largely consists in carrying the produce of farmers or grangers; specifically applied to the Chicago & Alton; Chicago, Burlington & Quincey; Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific; Chicago, Milwaukee & St
- granger roads
- Paul; and Chicago & Northwestern, railroads
- hampton roads
- a naval battle of the American Civil War (1862); the indecisive battle between the Monitor and the Merrimac a channel in southeastern Virginia through which the Elizabeth River and the James River flow into Chesapeake Bay
- road
- Skid road in skidder or high-lead logging Cleared path along which logs are hauled to the landing with one setting of the rigging
- road
- an open way (generally public) for travel or transportation
- road
- Any linear break in the forest canopy that is 25 to 300 ft (8 to 90 m) wide
- road
- a way or means to achieve something; "the road to fame"
- road
- Guards - Advance troops sent ahead of a military unit to detect enemy forces and protect the main force
- road
- a way or means to achieve something; "the road to fame" an open way (generally public) for travel or transportation
- road
- A journey, or stage of a journey
- road
- a vehicular access way serving more than two lots
- road
- {i} avenue, street, paved or packed surface designed for travel, hard paved or packed surface for vehicles; route; path, way; means to attain something; roadstead, protected area for ships to anchor; railway, train track; mine tunnel
- road
- – A motor vehicle travelway over 50 inches wide, unless designated and managed as a trail A road may be
- road
- or Roadstead: a stretch of sheltered water near land where ships may ride at anchor in all but very heavy weather; often rendered as 'roads', and does not refer to the streets of a particular port city but rather its anchorage, as in 'St Helens Roads', the designated anchorage for shipping located between St Helens (Isle of Wight) and Portsmouth, or 'Funchal Roads' at the island of Madeira (see Elizabeth Macquarie's 1809 Journal)
- road
- -A motor vehicle travelway over 50 inches wide, except those designated and managed as a trail A road may be classified, unclassified, or temporary
- road
- working for a short time in different places; "itinerant laborers"; "a road show"; "traveling salesman"; "touring company"
- road
- By extension, the path or route one takes; an effort
- road
- An inroad; an invasion; a raid
- road
- If you say that someone is on the road to something, you mean that they are likely to achieve it. The government took another step on the road to political reform
- road
- must always link two nodes Road sides and borders are separated bij a black line, and borders between Lanes bij a grey line Turns have only a visual representation and no influence on the behaviour of road users, because these have no acceleration (they don't slow down in turns)
- road
- means a surface right-of-way for purposes of travel by land vehicles used in surface coal mining and reclamation operations or coal exploration A road consists of the entire area within the right-of-way, including the roadbed, shoulders, parking and side areas, approaches, structures, ditches, and surface The term includes access and haulroads constructed, used, reconstructed, improved, or maintained for use in surface coal mining and reclamation operations or coal exploration, including use by coal hauling vehicles to and from transfer, processing or storage areas The term does not include ramps and routes of travel within the immediate mining area or within spoil or coal mine waste disposal areas
- road
- If you are on the road, you are going on a long journey or a series of journeys by road. He hoped to get a new truck and go back on the road
- road
- {s} occurring over public roads; working for a short period of time in different locations
- road
- The figures include the activity of goods vehicles over 3 5 tonnes gross weight and small commercial vehicles up to that weight The estimates for goods vehicles are derived from the Continuing Survey of Road Goods Transport (CSRGT) and, for small commercial vehicles, ad hoc surveys in 1976, 1987 and 1992/93 and interpolation for the intervening and subsequent years
- road
- taking place over public roads; "road racing"
- road
- A road is a long piece of hard ground which is built between two places so that people can drive or ride easily from one place to the other. There was very little traffic on the roads We just go straight up the Bristol Road Buses carry 30 per cent of those travelling by road road accidents
- road
- Public roadways
- road
- Anywhere (except your home) where a show can be promoted Submitted by Karl Kuenning RFL from Roadie Net
- road
- the end of the road: see end. Traveled way on which people, animals, or wheeled vehicles move. The earliest roads developed from paths and trails and appeared with the invention of wheeled vehicles, around 3000 BC. Road systems developed to facilitate trade in early civilizations; the first major road extended 1,775 mi (2,857 km) from the Persian Gulf to the Aegean Sea and was used 3500-300 BC. The Romans used roads to maintain control of their empire, with over 53,000 mi (85,000 km) of roadways extending across its lands; Roman construction techniques and design remained the most advanced until the late 1700s. In the early 19th century invention of macadam road construction provided a quick and durable method for building roads, and asphalt and concrete also began to be used. Motorized traffic in the 20th century led to the limited-access highway, the first of which was a parkway in New York City (1925). Superhighways also appeared in Italy and Germany in the 1930s. In the 1950s the U.S. interstate highway system was inaugurated to link the country's major cities. Burma Road Silk Road Stilwell Road Ledo Road Hampton Roads Hampton Roads Conference
- road
- The contiguous linear distance of the line separating the lot from a "road," as defined in this Ordinance
- road
- The road to a particular result is the means of achieving it or the process of achieving it. We are bound to see some ups and downs along the road to recovery
- road
- A narrow strip of land made suitable for travel between places. Modern roads are usually paved to accommodate wheeled vehicles
- road
- A place where one may ride; an open way or public passage for vehicles, persons, and animals; a track for travel, forming a means of communication between one city, town, or place, and another
- road
- A place where ships may ride at anchor at some distance from the shore; a roadstead; often in the plural; as, Hampton Roads
- road
- an area that is open to or used by the public and is developed for, or has as one of its main uses, the driving or riding of motor vehicles
- road
- If you hit the road, you set out on a journey. I was relieved to get back in the car and hit the road again
- winding roads
- roads that are crooked and indirect
İlgili Terimler
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