çubukla maden arama

listen to the pronunciation of çubukla maden arama
التركية - الإنجليزية
dowsing
The skill of divining for underground sources of water, items, objects or answers both practical and spiritual by means of a divining rod or an item such as the pendulum, or even by deviceless techniques
Using pendulum or rod to communicate with the body consciousness Same mechanism as in muscle testing or applied kinesiology
The ability to find underground water, oil, coal, minerals, archaeological sites, or lost or missing persons and objects using a divining rod or pendulum
To be able to find underground water and/or underground minerals
A non-scientific method similar to water divining in which a dowser uses a simple instrument - typically a Y-shaped hazel twig, or a copper rod, or a coathanger - to detect and locate buried features such as wells and walls See Bosing
The practice of seeking water or other substances (usually liquid) with the aid of a forked stick or similar pointing device, as believed by some practitioners to derive from supernatural power
A form of divination using a forked rod or bent wire often used to find objects, people, or things A person holds the dowsing instrument and is "lead" around by it until the object is, allegedly, found
Using a tool (pendulum, L-rods, Y-rod, bobber) to obtain answers to yes/no questions
To use a divining rod to search for underground water or minerals An act which, generally, a 'dowsing rod' or 'divining rod' is employed to locate subterranean water, ore, oil, etc or other concealed items by following the direction in which the rod turns in the users hand
A method of divination, most commonly using either a pendulum or dowsing rods, this technique can be used to find anything from a lost item of jewellery to an underground water source
a method of locating subtle energies through the use of hand-held tools such as metal rods, forked tree branches, and pendulums of various types
present participle of dowse
Occult practice used for finding water, minerals, or other hidden substances. A dowser generally uses a Y-shaped piece of hazel, rowan, or willow wood (also called a dowser or a divining rod). The dowser grasps the rod by its two prongs and appears, while walking, to be receiving transmissions from beneath the earth. If the rod quivers violently or points downward, some buried substance has been located. First practiced in Europe during the Middle Ages, dowsing is most often used to find water but may also be employed to locate precious metals, buried treasure, archaeological remains, or even dead bodies
Searching for underground items, particularly water, using a dowsing rod held in the hands, which reacts by moving when the item is passed Rods include forked twigs, L-shaped strips of metal and more sophisticated tools with delicate balance Recently, energy dowsing has become popular, but is still generally regarded as unproven
searching for underground water or minerals by using a dowsing rod
{i} searching for underground water or minerals with a dowsing rod
çubukla maden aramak
dowse
çubukla maden arama
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