snakes

listen to the pronunciation of snakes
الإنجليزية - التركية
yılanlar
snake
{i} yılan

Yılan yaşıyor mu yoksa öldü mü? - Is the snake alive or dead?

Tatlı dil yılanı deliğinden çıkarır. - Sweet words bring the snake out of its hole.

snakes and ladders
yılanlar ve merdivenler
snake
{f} kıvrıla kıvrıla gitmek
snake
{f} yılan gibi git
Snake
mar

Tom Mary'nin yılanlardan korktuğunu düşünüyor. - Tom thinks that Mary is afraid of snakes.

Tom, Mary'nin yılanlardan korktuğunu söyledi. - Tom said that Mary was afraid of snakes.

north american water snakes
kuzey amerikalı su yılanları
raise snakes
yılan zam
see snakes
sarhoş olup yılanlar gördüğünü sanmak
see snakes
fitil gibi sarhoş olmak
snake
(Askeri) TAHRİP YILANI: Mayın tarlaları arasında geçit açmak veya toprak üstündeki engelleri temizlemek için özel süratte yapılmış infilak hakkı. Bu infilak hakkı, bir engelin yakınına kadar çekilebilecek ve sonra, bir tank tarafından, yerine itilebilecek şekilde yapılmıştır
snake
{i} sinsi ve hain kimse
snake
yılan gibi sessizce ve sinsi sinsi ilerlemek
snake
boru temizlemek için bükülebilen tel
snake
{i} avrupa para birimleri arasındaki dalgalanma
snake
{f} yılan gibi gitmek
snake
sıyırmak
snake
çekip dışarı çıkarmak
snake
{f} yılan gibi kıvrılmak
snake
snake dance Amerika kızılderililerin
snake
{f} yılan gibi sessizce ilerlemek
snake
snake charmer yılan oynatan hokkabaz
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
third-person singular of snake
plural of snake
serpentes
snakes alive
expression of surprise, contempt, outrage, disgust, boredom, frustration
snakes and ladders
A children's luck-based board game played on a numbered grid, the aim of which is to proceed to the end, and in which ladders aid progress and snakes impede it
snakes and ladders
any situation in which people or events go forward and backward, seemingly at random
snakes and ladders
Snakes and ladders is a British children's game played with a board and dice. When you go up a ladder, you progress quickly. When you go down a snake, you go backwards
snakes and ladders
a board game for children who use dice to move counters up ladders and down snakes
Big Bend patchnose snakes
plural form of Big Bend patchnose snake
Snake
An early computer game, later popular on mobile phones, in which the player attempts to manoeuvre a perpetually growing snake so as to collect food items and avoid colliding with walls or the snake's tail
coral snakes
plural form of coral snake
corn snakes
plural form of corn snake
dice snakes
plural form of dice snake
grass snakes
plural form of grass snake
hognose snakes
plural form of hognose snake
hoop snakes
plural form of hoop snake
joint snakes
plural form of joint snake
ladder snakes
plural form of ladder snake
large-headed water snakes
plural form of large-headed water snake
milk snakes
plural form of milk snake
patchnose snakes
plural form of patchnose snake
smooth snakes
plural form of smooth snake
snake
A tool for unclogging plumbing
snake
A treacherous person
snake
A trouser snake; the penis
snake
A legless reptile of the sub-order Serpentes with a long, thin body and a fork-shaped tongue
snake
A tool to aid cable pulling
snake
: To move in a winding path

The river snakes through the valley.

trouser snakes
plural form of trouser snake
twig snakes
plural form of twig snake
snake
{n} a serpent, a sly person
raise snakes
cause a riot, cause a panic
snake
form a snake-like pattern; "The river snakes through the valley"
snake
{i} scaly legless reptile with a long narrow body; person who cannot be trusted, traitorous person; plumber's snake, long flexible wire used for clearing drains
snake
{f} twist or wind like a snake; move like a snake, move in a sinuous manner, glide; drag
snake
To move in a winding path
snake
Any species of the order Ophidia; an ophidian; a serpent, whether harmless or venomous
snake
A Dragon informant
snake
something resembling a snake
snake
To crawl like a snake
snake
a long faint constellation in the southern hemisphere near the equator stretching between Virgo and Cancer
snake
move smoothly and sinuously, like a snake
snake
See Ophidia, and Serpent
snake
Three jumps in a line (See flick-flack )
snake
a tributary of the Columbia River that rises in Wyoming and flows westward; discovered in 1805 by the Lewis and Clark Expedition
snake
To clean using a plumbing snake
snake
A long putt which travels over the undulations of the green
snake
A long cable that is usually used for multiple microphone lines It will almost always have a box for microphones to plug into at one end and plugs that go into the sound mixer at the other end
snake
Something that snakes in a particular direction goes in that direction in a line with a lot of bends. The road snaked through forested mountains = wind. if a river, road, train, or line snakes somewhere, it moves in long, twisting curves snake along/past/down etc. Any member of about 19 reptile families (suborder Serpentes, order Squamata) that has no limbs, voice, external ears, or eyelids, only one functional lung, and a long, slender body. About 2,900 snake species are known to exist, most living in the tropics. Their skin is covered with scales. They have good eyesight, and they continually taste the surrounding air with their tongues. Though they lack any voice, they are capable of hissing. Most live on the ground, but some are arboreal or aquatic, and some are burrowers. They move by muscular contraction, aided by elongated scales on their abdomen. They focus 70% of their mostly solitary existence on tracking, capturing, and digesting their living prey. The construction of their jaws and bodies enables them to swallow large prey whole. Because they are ectotherms (cold-blooded), a single meal can often sustain them for weeks. Mating and laying eggs or bearing live young are brief seasonal activities. About one-tenth of snake species are venomous; some can kill humans with their bite. Others kill their prey by constriction or simply ingesting. Species range from less than 5 in. (12 cm) to over 30 ft (9 m) long. Snakes grow continuously throughout their lives, shedding their outgrown skin at each growth increment. They are found worldwide, but few species are found on islands or in regions with long winters. black snake coral snake garter snake hognose snake indigo snake king snake rat snake sea snake Snake River water snake
snake
limbless scaly elongate reptile; some are venomous something resembling a snake a tributary of the Columbia River that rises in Wyoming and flows westward; discovered in 1805 by the Lewis and Clark Expedition a deceitful or treacherous person move along a winding path; "The army snaked through the jungle"
snake
To wind round spirally, as a large rope with a smaller, or with cord, the small rope lying in the spaces between the strands of the large one; to worm
snake
To drag or draw, as a snake from a hole; often with out
snake
European currency snake
snake
The North Country is not snake country Only three snakes are native to the BWCA, all of the family Colubridæ; the Eastern Garter Snake (Thamnophis sirtalis), Northern Redbelly Snake (Storeria occipitomaculata), and the Northern Ringneck Snake (Diadophis punctatus) None is longer than 26" and none is poisonous From the Old English snaca
snake
a deceitful or treacherous person
snake
A cable - often runing between the stage and control board - that combines multiple lines; used to connect mics, instruments and monitors to a mixer
snake
A multi-conductor audio cable that usually carries microphone or line-level signals Usually used to carry the microphone signals from a stage to the mixing console located at the front of house
snake
A snake is a long, thin reptile without legs
snake
move along a winding path; "The army snaked through the jungle"
snake
To steal slyly
snake
A moveable patch panel with cable Usually, a box with many XLR connectors on it that terminates in a multipair cable of undetermined length, which then terminates into a fan-out of corresponding connectors Basically, many microphone cables rolled into one
snake
move smoothly and sinuously, like a snake form a snake-like pattern; "The river snakes through the valley
snake
limbless scaly elongate reptile; some are venomous
snakes

    التركية النطق

    sneyks

    النطق

    /ˈsnāks/ /ˈsneɪks/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'snAk ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English snaca; akin to Old Norse snakr snake, Old High German snahhan to crawl.
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