andrews

listen to the pronunciation of andrews
İngilizce - Türkçe

andrews teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı

andrews file system
Andrews Dosya Sistemi
family name
soyadı

Soyadınızın yazılışı nasıl? - What's the spelling of your family name?

Çin'de önce soyadımızı sonra adımızı koyarız. - In China, we put our family name first, then our name.

Andrew
{i} İskoçya'nın koruyucu azizi
Andrew
(isim) İskoçya'nın koruyucu azizi
Andrew
ıskoçya'nın koruyucu azizi
family name
aile adı

Aile adınızı nasıl hecelersiniz? - How do you spell your family name?

Aile adınızın yazılımı nasıl? - What's the spelling of your family name?

İngilizce - İngilizce
A patronymic surname derived from Andrew
Andrews Dame Julie Andrews Roy Chapman Hendricks Thomas Andrews Millikan Robert Andrews Saint Andrews Saint Andrews University of Spaatz Carl Andrews
a surname
{i} family name
United States naturalist who contributed to paleontology and geology (1884-1960)
Andrew
A patronymic surname
Andrew
A male given name

Lloyd was a piss-ant name. Andrew was better because Andrew was one of the twelve apostles, and anybody with a twelve-apostle name was a good guy. If you were reading a book - which Parker rarely did - and you ran across a guy named Luke, Matthew, Thomas, Peter, Paul, James, like that, you knew right off he was supposed to be a good guy. - - - He would have preferred to be called Andrew, which was his true and honorable middle name.

Merry Andrews
plural form of Merry Andrew
St Andrews
A city in Scotland, named after St. Andrew the Apostle. It is the home of golf
Andrew
given name, male
Andrew
The first Apostle in the New Testament
Andrew
Hungarian Endre born 1175 died Oct. 26, 1235 King of Hungary (1205-35). His reign was marked by controversy with the landed nobility, who drained royal funds and reduced Hungary to a state of near anarchy. Rebellious nobles murdered his first wife, Gertrude of Meran, in 1213. Andrew led a Crusade to the Holy Land in 1217. On his return he agreed to the Golden Bull of 1222, limiting royal rights, guaranteeing justice, promising improved coinage, and giving nobles the right to resist royal decrees. His daughter was St. Elizabeth of Hungary. Andrew II Andrew Saint Borden Lizzie Andrew Carnegie Andrew Dalhousie James Andrew Broun Ramsay marquess of Dorsey Thomas Andrew Downing Andrew Jackson Robert William Andrew Feller Andrew Samuel Griffith Grove Andrew S. Jackson Andrew Johnson Andrew Law Andrew Bonar Lloyd Webber Andrew Marvell Andrew Mellon Andrew William Mitscher Marc Andrew Moynihan Berkeley George Andrew Munsey Frank Andrew Andrew Russell James Andrew Rushing Schally Andrew Victor Spitz Mark Andrew Tetley Jr. Glenford Andrew Andrew Warhola Wyeth Andrew Newell Young Andrew
Andrew
Junior NR staff Article poster, contributor, and all-around funny guy Following in the footsteps of the great Danny by switching from Clarinet to Tenor Sax
Andrew
Fishermen, Gout, Scotland, Single Women
Andrew
A disciple of John the Baptist (John 1: 35-40) who, according to John's Gospel, became the first of Jesus' followers and brought his brother Peter to Jesus (John 1: 41-42) Mark gives another version of this calling (Mark 1: 16-18; see also John 6: 5; 12: 22)
Andrew
{i} male first name; rare female first name; family name; one of the 12 apostles of Jesus; city in Iowa (USA); town in Illinois (USA); county in Montana (USA)
Andrew
gout
Carl Andrews Spaatz
known as Tooey Spaatz born June 28, 1891, Boyertown, Pa., U.S. died July 14, 1974, Washington, D.C. U.S. air-force officer. He flew as a combat pilot during World War I. During World War II he commanded the U.S. Strategic Air Forces in Europe (1944), directing the strategic bombing of Germany. In 1945, though personally opposed to using atomic bombs against cities, he directed the atomic bombing of Japan under orders of Pres. Harry Truman. In 1947 he became the first chief of staff of the independent Air Force
Dame Julie Andrews
orig. Julia Elizabeth Wells born Oct. 1, 1935, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, Eng. British-U.S. actress and singer. She made her London debut at 12 in a revue and her New York City stage debut in The Boy Friend (1954). A major star of the Broadway musical, she originated the roles of Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady (1956) and Guinevere in Camelot (1960). She also starred in films such as Mary Poppins (1964, Academy Award), and Victor/Victoria (1982), one of several films she made with her husband, director Blake Edwards. In 2000 she was made a Dame of the British Empire
Julie Andrews
{i} (born 1935) English actress and singer who is famous for her role in "Mary Poppins" and "The Sound of Music
Robert Andrews Millikan
born March 22, 1868, Morrison, Ill., U.S. died Dec. 19, 1953, San Marino, Calif. U.S. physicist. He received his doctorate from Columbia University and taught physics at the University of Chicago (1896-1921) and the California Institute of Technology (from 1921). To measure electric charge, he devised the Millikan oil-drop experiment. He verified Albert Einstein's photoelectric equation and obtained a precise value for the Planck constant. He was awarded a 1923 Nobel Prize
Robert Andrews Millikan
{i} United States physicist who isolated the electron and measured its charge, winner of the 1923 Nobel Prize in Physics for his measuring the charge of the electron
Roy Chapman Andrews
born Jan. 26, 1884, Beloit, Wis., U.S. died March 11, 1960, Carmel, Calif. U.S. naturalist, explorer, and author. In 1906 he joined the staff of the American Museum of Natural History, where he would spend much of his working life. There he assembled one of the best collections of cetaceans in the world before turning his attention to Asiatic exploration. He led expeditions to Tibet, southwestern China, and Burma (1916-17); northern China and Outer Mongolia (1919); and Central Asia. Important discoveries included the first known dinosaur eggs, skeleton parts of Baluchitherium (the largest known land mammal), and evidence of prehistoric human life. His many books for the general public include Across Mongolian Plains (1921) and This Amazing Planet (1940)
Saint Andrews
City (pop., 1995 est.: 15,000) and seaport, Fife council area, eastern Scotland. It was formerly the ecclesiastical capital of Scotland; its religious traditions began in the 6th century AD, when St. Kenneth is believed to have formed a Celtic religious community there. It received a charter in 1160 and was one of the principal towns in Scotland in the Middle Ages. In 1472 its archbishop was recognized as the primate of Scotland, and it took part in the important events of the Scottish Reformation. A popular seaside resort, it is noted for its golf courses and for the University of St. Andrews
St Andrews
a city in eastern Scotland known especially for its old university and its golf courses
Thomas Andrews Hendricks
born Sept. 7, 1819, near Zanesville, Ohio, U.S. died Nov. 25, 1885, Indianapolis, Ind. U.S. politician. He practiced law in Indiana before serving in the U.S. House of Representatives (1851-55) and Senate (1863-69); he was later governor (1873-77). Though loyal to the Union, he opposed many aspects of the Union's military effort during the American Civil War; he also opposed the Reconstruction program imposed on the South after the war. He favoured leniency toward white supremacists in the South and opposed all legislation aimed at assisting freedmen. He was the Democratic Party nominee for vice president in 1876 (as the running mate of Samuel Tilden) and again in 1884, when he was elected with Grover Cleveland. He died shortly after taking office
University of Saint Andrews
Oldest university in Scotland, founded in 1411 on the outskirts of St. Andrews. The university buildings include St. Salvator's College (1450), St. Leonard's College (1512; merged with St. Salvator's in 1747), and the University Library (1612). A third college, St. Mary's (1537), has always taught theology exclusively. The medical and dental school became independent as the University of Dundee in 1967
andrew
(New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of Peter; patron saint of Scotland
st andrews's cross
shrubby plant having yellow to apricot flowers with four petals arranged in a cross; southeastern United States: New York to Texas
andrews

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    An·drews

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    /ˈanˌdro͞oz/ /ˈænˌdruːz/

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    ... And then a few days later, I was there greeting the caskets coming into Andrews Air Force ...