ada kavşak

listen to the pronunciation of ada kavşak
التركية - الإنجليزية
roundabout
A short, close-fitting coat or jacket worn by men or boys, especially in the 19th century
A detour
{a} ample, extensive, indirect, loose
A fairground carousel
Circuitous; going round; indirect; as, roundabout speech
Indirect, circuitous or circumlocutionary
(A) A Pict's camp “His desire of his companion a Pict's camp, or Roundabout ”- Sir W Scott: The Antiquary, chap i
Where two or more roads meet with an island in the middle
a short close-fitting jacket worn by men and boys especially in the 19th century
A type of junction common in Britain Its main feature is a circular, one way roadway onto which all the roads meeting at the junction terminate Traffic approaching the roundabout gives right of way to traffic already on it It then circulates the roundabout until the road it wishes to exit on In Britain roundabouts are always clockwise, but for right-hand driving the direction must be reversed Contrary to popular belief, roundabouts have higher capacity and better safety records than traffic-light coordinated junctions, because of their self-regulating nature and the impossibility to 'run' one Sometimes called "rotaries" in America See roundabout interchange; magic roundabout; mini-roundabout
{i} merry-go-round (British); indirect road or method, detour; rotary, traffic circle (British); close fitting jacket worn by men and boys during the 19th century
A roundabout at a fair is a large, circular mechanical device with seats, often in the shape of animals or cars, on which children sit and go round and round
marked by obliqueness or indirection in speech or conduct; "the explanation was circuitous and puzzling"; "a roundabout paragraph"; "hear in a roundabout way that her ex-husband was marrying her best friend"
Encircling; enveloping; comprehensive
If you go somewhere by a roundabout route, you do not go there by the shortest and quickest route. He left today on a roundabout route for Jordan and is also due soon in Egypt
A dance performed in a circle
Brit A traffic circle
large mechanical apparatus with seats for children to ride on
British terminology for a carousel English carousels moved in a clockwise direction as opposed to American carousels which ran counterclockwise
ada kavşak
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