archeology

listen to the pronunciation of archeology
الإنجليزية - التركية
{i} arkeoloji

Geçmişin sırlarını arkeoloji ortaya çıkarıyor. - Archeology reveals the secrets of the past.

(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) arkeoloji (fou)
{i} kazıbilim
i., bak. archaeology
archaeology
kazıbilim
archaeology
{i} arkeoloji

Hiç arkeoloji okudun mu? - Have you ever studied archaeology?

Tom arkeolojide çalışır. - Tom works in archaeology.

الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Alternative spelling of archaeology
Study of human cultures through the recovery and analysis of their material relics
The process of study of past human cultures through analyzing material remains
A knowledge of ancient art, customs, the science that studies the extinct relics of ancient times
The study of material evidence remaining from previously existing human cultures
the systematic study of past human life and culture by the recovery and examination of remaining material evidence
n the scientific study of past human life and activities
Greek: archaîos, "old"; logos, "word, discussion of, ration"
see archaeology. an American spelling of archaeology
the branch of anthropology that studies prehistoric people and their cultures
Same as Archæology, etc
{i} study of ancient cultures through their artifacts
mainly, US, alternative spelling of archaeology
archaeology
The study of the past through material remains. Often focused upon the life and culture of ancient peoples, but also applied to the more recent past. In American usage, one of the four sub-disciplines of anthropology

{3} “Archaeology”, as the investigation of that which renders necessary a certain form of thought, implies an excavation of unconsciously organized sediments of thought. Unlike a history of ideas, it doesn’t assume that knowledge accumulates towards any historical conclusion. Archaeology ignores individuals and their histories. It prefers to excavate impersonal structures of knowledge.Archaeology is a task that doesn’t consist of treating discourse as signs referring to a real content like madness. It treats discourses, such as medicine, as practices that form the objects of which they speak.

maritime archeology
Alternative spelling of maritime archaeology
archaeology
the branch of anthropology concerned with the systematic investigation of the relics of man
archaeology
The scientific study of the material remains of ancient cultures
archaeology
{i} study of ancient cultures through their artifacts
archaeology
The scientific study of the physical evidence of past human societies recovered through the excavation Archaeologists not only attempt to discover and describe past cultures, but also to formulate explanations for the development of cultures
archaeology
study of material culture
archaeology
(also Archeology) The scientific study of PHYSICAL evidence of past human societies recovered through excavation
archaeology
-The branch of anthropology that seeks to reconstruct the daily life and customs of peoples who lived in the past and to trace and explain cultural changes
archaeology
The scientific study of the material remains of the past and of the life and culture of ancient peoples. One of the four sub-disciplines of anthropology
archaeology
Archaeology is the study of the societies and peoples of the past by examining the remains of their buildings, tools, and other objects. + archaeological ar·chaeo·logi·cal one of the region's most important archaeological sites. + archaeologist archaeologists ar·chae·olo·gist The archaeologists found a house built around 300 BC, with a basement and attic. the study of ancient societies by examining what remains of their buildings, graves, tools etc (archéologie, from archaeologia , from , from archaio- (from archaios; ARCHAIC) + -logia ). Scientific study of material remains of past human life and activities. These include human artifacts from the very earliest stone tools to the man-made objects that are buried or thrown away in the present day. Archaeological investigations are a principal source of modern knowledge of prehistoric, ancient, and extinct cultures. The field emerged as an academic discipline in the late 19th century, following centuries of haphazard antiquarian collecting. Among the archaeologist's principal activities are the location, surveying, and mapping of sites and the excavation, classification, dating, and interpretation of materials to place them in historical context. Major subfields include classical archaeology, the study of ancient Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations; prehistoric archaeology, or general archaeology; and historical archaeology, the study of historic-period remains to augment the written record. See also anthropology; coin collecting; stone-tool industry
archaeology
Study of man's past and his cultural remains
archaeology
the study of past human cultures through the analysis of their material and physical remains
archaeology
The scientific discipline responsible for recovering, analyzing, interpreting, and explaining the unwritten portion of the prehistoric and historic past
archaeology
the branch of anthropology that studies prehistoric people and their cultures
archaeology
(also spelled ARCHEOLOGY): The scientific study of the physical evidence of past human societies recovered through the excavation Archaeologists not only attempt to discover and describe past cultures, but also to formulate explanations for the development of cultures
archaeology
The study of human societies that emphasizes the interaction between human behaviour and artifacts
archaeology
The science of studying material evidence to find out about human cultures of the past
archaeology
The scientific study of the remains of past human life and activities A person who studies archaeology is called an archaeologist
archaeology
- Study of past cultures through material remains
archaeology
The science of unearthing sites containing remains of ancient habitation, with the goal of learning everything such sites have to offer about culture, society, ecology, intellectual life and religion; modern archaeology employs the tools of history, anthropology, geology, and biology to recover the hidden past
archaeology
The scientific study of historic or prehistoric peoples and their cultures by analysis of their artifacts, inscriptions, monuments, and other such remains
archaeology
The study of the material remains of the past, ranging from the earliest bones and stone tools to things that are buried or thrown away in the present day
archaeology
A subfield of anthropology that studies the human cultural past and the reconstruction of past cultural systems
archaeology
social science of the study of objects such as fossils, bones, tools, and remains of structures to learn about past human life and activity
archaeology
– a method of the discovery, study and reconstruction of past human cultures from material remains such as artifacts and sites
archaeology
The scientific discipline responsible for recovering, analyzing, interpreting, and explaining the unwritten portion of the historic and prehistoric past (McGimsey and Davis 1977: 109)
archaeology
The science concerned with the recovery, analysis, description and explanation of the remains of past human cultures
archaeology
The study of ancient cultures
archaeology
(also sometimes spelled Archeology) The scientific study of the physical evidence of past human societies recovered through the excavation Archaeology not only attempts to discover and describe past cultures, but also to formulate explanations for the development of cultures
archaeology
the study of artifacts
archaeology
- The study of human antiquities
marine archeology
the archeology of underwater sites
archeology

    الواصلة

    ar·che·o·lo·gy

    التركية النطق

    ärkiälıci

    النطق

    /ˌärkēˈäləʤē/ /ˌɑːrkiːˈɑːləʤiː/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    (noun.) 1837. French archéologie, from Late Latin archaeologia antiquarian lore, from Greek archaiologia, from archaio- + -logia -logy.
المفضلات