booth

listen to the pronunciation of booth
الإنجليزية - التركية
{i} gişe
gişe/kulübe/dükkan
{i} kulübe

Telefon kulübeleri burada çok az bulunur. - Telephone booths are very scarce around here.

Ben sokağın köşesinde bulunan telefon kulübesindeki telefonu kullanacağım. - I am going to use the telephone in the phone booth at the street corner.

odacık
(Ticaret) stant
salaş
baraka
satış pavyonu
çadır
çardak
{i} (fuarda/sergide) stand
satış pavyonuç
{i} kabin

Tom lokantadaki kabinlerden birinde yalnız oturdu. - Tom sat alone at one of the booths in the diner.

gecekondu
booth area
(Ticaret) stant alanı
booth area
(Ticaret) stand alanı
booths
(Bilgisayar) satış pavyonu fuarda
information booth
müracaat
information booth
danışma
information booth
danışma yeri
projection booth
(Sinema) gösterim odacığı
polling booth
oy verme hücresi
projection booth
projeksiyon odacığı
sales booth
tezgah
telephone booth
alısün kulübesi
ticket booth
bilet gişesi
toll booth
verginli geçiş gişesi
booths
kabinleri
exhibit booth
Ticari fuarlarda firmalara ayrılan alan
information booth
bilgi standında
phone booth
telefon kulübesinden

Sami telefon kulübesinden çıktı. - Sami stepped out of the phone booth.

photo booth
Genellikle büyük kentlerde görülen, içine girip kendi fotoğrafınızı şipşak çekebileceğiniz, fotoğraf kabini
photo booth
fotoğraf kabini
soundproof booth
ses geçirmez oda, seslendirme odası
spray booth
Sprey boyama kabini
toll booth
ücretli geçiş gişesi
toll-booth
toll-kabin
gift booth
hediye standı
mobile booth
taşınabilir kabin
mobile display booth
seyyar teşhir standı
polling booth
oy verme kabini
projection booth
sin. makine dairesi
soundproof booth
seslendirme odası
tanning booth
solaryum makinesi
telephone booth
telefon kulübesi
toll booth
gişe (karayolu)
visit to the tanning booth
solaryuma gitmek
visit to the tanning booth
solaryuma girmek
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
An enclosure just big enough to accommodate one standing person
A small stall for the display and sale of goods
A booth in a restaurant or café consists of a table with long fixed seats on two or sometimes three sides of it. They sat in a corner booth, away from other diners. Booth Edwin Thomas Booth John Wilkes Booth William Tarkington Newton Booth
{n} a place of entertainment, a stall in a fair
A booth is a small area separated from a larger public area by screens or thin walls where, for example, people can make a telephone call or vote in private. I called her from a public phone booth near the entrance to the bar = cubicle
A covered stall or temporary structure in a fair or market, or at a polling place
United States actor and assassin of President Lincoln (1838-1865)
a table (in a restaurant or bar) surrounded by two high-backed benches
A house or shed built of boards, boughs, or other slight materials, for temporary occupation
small area set off by walls for special use
a small shop at a fair; for selling goods or entertainment
{i} stall, kiosk; telephone booth, telephone compartment
small area set off by walls for special use a small shop at a fair; for selling goods or entertainment a table (in a restaurant or bar) surrounded by two high-backed benches United States actor and assassin of President Lincoln (1838-1865)
booth babe
A female model hired to represent a product and interact with consumers at a trade fair or similar event

In my opinion, the absolute worst way to generate artificial interest is the tactic that is commonly known as the booth babe.

booth babes
plural form of booth babe
Booth Tarkington
{i} Newton Booth Tarkington (1869-1946), United States novel writer and playwright
Booth Tarkington
born July 29, 1869, Indianapolis, Ind., U.S. died May 19, 1946, Indianapolis U.S. novelist and dramatist. He became known for satirical and sometimes romanticized pictures of Midwesterners in humorous portrayals of boyhood and adolescence that include the young-people's classics Penrod (1914), Seventeen (1916), and Gentle Julia (1922). The trilogy Growth (1927) includes The Magnificent Ambersons (1918, Pulitzer Prize; film, 1942), which traces the decline of a once-powerful and prominent family. Alice Adams (1921; film, 1923, 1935), a searching character study, is perhaps his most finished novel
booth bunny
model who is hired to work at a booth in a trade show or convention
kissing booth
An area at a carnival where a person kisses people for money. In certain regions of Eastern Europe, oral sex may be substituted for a larger sum
phone booth
A telephone booth
telephone booth
a small enclosure housing a public telephone
toll booth
a booth on a toll road or toll bridge where the toll is collected
voting booth
A small enclosed compartment where a voter may register his vote in private; it may house some voting machine, or just have a pencil for marking a voting slip
photo booth
A very small room that you sit in to have your photograph taken by a machine
Edwin Booth
born Nov. 13, 1833, near Belair, Md., U.S. died June 7, 1893, New York, N.Y. U.S. actor. Born into a noted theatrical family, he played his first starring roles in Boston and New York City in 1857. He became famous as Hamlet, appearing in the role for 100 consecutive nights in 1864-65. When his brother John Wilkes Booth assassinated Pres. Abraham Lincoln, Edwin withdrew from the stage until 1866. In 1869 he opened his own theatre, but mismanagement forced him to sell it in 1873. His interpretations of Hamlet, Iago, and King Lear won great acclaim in England and Germany. He founded the Players' Club in New York in 1888
Edwin Thomas Booth
born Nov. 13, 1833, near Belair, Md., U.S. died June 7, 1893, New York, N.Y. U.S. actor. Born into a noted theatrical family, he played his first starring roles in Boston and New York City in 1857. He became famous as Hamlet, appearing in the role for 100 consecutive nights in 1864-65. When his brother John Wilkes Booth assassinated Pres. Abraham Lincoln, Edwin withdrew from the stage until 1866. In 1869 he opened his own theatre, but mismanagement forced him to sell it in 1873. His interpretations of Hamlet, Iago, and King Lear won great acclaim in England and Germany. He founded the Players' Club in New York in 1888
John Wilkes Booth
(1838-1865) assassin of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, member of the Confederate Army
John Wilkes Booth
the man who shot and killed US President Abraham Lincoln (1838-65). born May 10, 1838, near Bel Air, Md., U.S. died April 26, 1865, near Port Royal, Va. U.S. actor and assassin of Pres. Abraham Lincoln. Born into a family of famous actors, he achieved success in Shakespearean roles but resented the greater acclaim enjoyed by his brother, Edwin Booth. A fanatical believer in slavery and the Southern cause, he made plans with co-conspirators to abduct Lincoln; after several failed attempts, he vowed to destroy the president and his cabinet. On April 14, 1865, he shot Lincoln during a performance at Ford's Theatre. Though he broke his leg jumping from the president's box, he was able to escape on horseback to a Virginia farm. Tracked down, he refused to surrender and was shot, either by a soldier or by himself
Newton Booth Tarkington
born July 29, 1869, Indianapolis, Ind., U.S. died May 19, 1946, Indianapolis U.S. novelist and dramatist. He became known for satirical and sometimes romanticized pictures of Midwesterners in humorous portrayals of boyhood and adolescence that include the young-people's classics Penrod (1914), Seventeen (1916), and Gentle Julia (1922). The trilogy Growth (1927) includes The Magnificent Ambersons (1918, Pulitzer Prize; film, 1942), which traces the decline of a once-powerful and prominent family. Alice Adams (1921; film, 1923, 1935), a searching character study, is perhaps his most finished novel
Newton Booth Tarkington
{i} Booth Tarkington (1869-1946), United States novel writer and playwright
William Booth
a British religious leader who started the Salvation Army (1829-1912). born April 10, 1829, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, Eng. died Aug. 20, 1912, London British religious leader, founder and general (1878-1912) of the Salvation Army. At age 15 he underwent a religious conversion and became a revivalist preacher. In 1849 he went to London, where he became a regular preacher of the Methodist New Connection (1852-61) and then an independent revivalist. Aided by his wife, Catherine Mumford Booth (1829-90), a fellow preacher and social worker, he founded the Christian Mission in 1865, which in 1878 became the Salvation Army. He traveled worldwide to lecture and organize branches of the Army. His proposals for remedying social ills received widespread acceptance and the encouragement of Edward VII
booths
About 1,400 workspaces, each equipped with a computer system, around the perimeter of the Trading Floor where member firms and independent brokers receive orders
booths
plural of booth
booths
At trade shows, a major factor in sales promotion plans To stop traffic, it must be simple and attractive and have good lighting and a large visual (Ch 17)
information booth
stand located in a public area that provides useful information to travelers tourists and visitors
phone booth
A phone booth is a place in a station, hotel, or other public building where there is a public telephone
phone booth
A phone booth is the same as a phone box. = call box, phone box. a small structure that is partly or completely enclosed, containing a public telephone
phone booth
booth for using a telephone
photo booth
a small structure in which you can sit to have photographs taken by a machine
polling booth
voting stall, small cubicle for voting
polling booth
Polling booths are the places where people go to vote in an election. In Darlington, queues formed at some polling booths. = polling station
polling booth
a temporary booth in a polling place which people enter to cast their votes
polling booth
A polling booth is one of the partly enclosed areas in a polling station, where people can vote in private. When you are there, in the polling booth, nobody can see where you put your cross. a small partly enclosed place in a polling station where you can vote secretly in an election
projection booth
room in a movie theater where the movie projector is located
spray booth
An enclosed are in which the vehicle is painted The area is enclosed to protect over spray onto other vehicles and contain the toxic fumes from the paint
spray booth
plant in which coating is sprayed It can be open (if without walls and roof) or closed (if provided only with opening for transit of workpieces) It may have vertical, oblique or horizontal ventilation Moreover, it could be air-conditioned or pressurised (see also PRESSURISATION) Two different systems of entrapment of the overspray are available: humid (e g water screen) or dry (e g filters)
spray booth
means a power-ventilated structure that encloses or accommodates a spraying operation so that spray vapour and residue can be controlled and exhausted (Ontario Fire Code 1996)
telephone booth
booth for using a telephone
telephone booth
A telephone booth is a place in a public building or in the street where there is a telephone that can be used by the public. A small enclosure containing a public telephone. a small structure that is partly or completely enclosed, containing a public telephone = phone booth
ticket booth
box office: the office where tickets of admission are sold
voting booth
cubicle or alcove used by one voter at a time in order to ensure privacy during the voting process
voting booth
a booth in which a person can cast a private vote
voting booth
an enclosed place where you can make your vote secretly British Equivalent: polling booth
booth
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