depthless

listen to the pronunciation of depthless
الإنجليزية - التركية
derinliği olmayan yada ölçülemeyen
depth
{i} derinlik

Bence Dünya'nın derinliklerinde daha fazla altın olmalı. - I think there must be much gold in the depths of the Earth.

Hacimi hesaplamak için uzunluğu genişlikle ve derinlikle çarp. - To calculate the volume, multiply the length by the width by the depth.

depth
derinliği

Nehrin derinliğini ölçtük. - We measured the depth of the river.

Biz nehrin derinliğini ölçüyoruz. - ׁWe're measuring the depth of the river.

depth
koyuluk
depth
bolluk
depth
yoğunluk
depth
derinli
depth
depth charge su altındaki herhangi bir hedefe özellikle denizaltılara atılan patlayıcı madde
depth
öz nüve depths of degradation
depth
{i} ahlâk azlığı
depth
depth of winter kışın ortası
depth
karakış
depth
kep
depth
{i} dip
depth
{i} derin yer
depth
umman
depth
(Askeri) DERİNLİK: Bir düzlem, nokta veya cismin bir deniz göl veya nehir yüzeyi altındaki düşey mesafesi
depth
{i} bilinçaltı
depth
{i} en derin nokta
depth
depths denizin derinlikleri
depth
rezalet
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Having no depth, or having a depth that is impossible to determine
{s} shallow; of unmeasurable depth
Having no depth; shallow
Of measureless depth; unfathomable
depth
The total palette of available colors
depth
The intensity, complexity, strength, seriousness or importance of an emotion, or situation

The depth of the crisis had been exaggerated.

depth
A very remote part

In the depths of the night,.

depth
The vertical distance below a surface; the amount that something is deep

Measure the depth of the water in this part of the bay.

depth
The deepest part. (Usually of a body of water.)

The burning ship finally sunk into the depths.

depth
The distance between the front and the back, as the depth of a drawer or closet
depth
The most severe part

in the depths of winter.

depth
The lower of the two ranks of a value in an ordered set of values
depth
deepness
depth
{n} deepness, a deep piece, highth, skill
depth
Profoundness; extent or degree of intensity; abundance; completeness; as, depth of knowledge, or color
depth
The property of appearing three-dimensional
depth
Cumulative frequency counting in from the nearer end
depth
The ``depth'' of a window or pixmap is the number of bits per pixel it has The depth of a graphics context is the depth of the drawables it can be used in conjunction with for graphics output
depth
Measurement inside the hull from the underside of the deck to the top of the keel
depth
An earthquake begins at a given point (hypocenter) which is defined bya position on the surface of the earth (epicenter) and a depth belowthis point (focal depth) This depth is given as kilometers (km) below mean sea-level
depth
extent downward or backward or inward; "the depth of the water"; "depth of a shelf"; "depth of a closet"
depth
{i} distance from top to bottom; deepness; profundity
depth
Depth describes the resonance or sensual power behind the sensations that drive the taste of the coffee It is a tricky and subjective term, but it tries to get at the way certain coffees open up and support their sensations with a sort of ringing, echoing power, whereas others simply present themselves to the palate and then stand pat or even fade
depth
the intellectual ability to penetrate deeply into ideas
depth
The depth where the earthquake begins to rupture This depth may be relative to mean sea-level or the average elevation of the seismic stations which provided arrival-time data for the earthquake location The choice of reference depth is dependent on the method used to locate the earthquake
depth
The depth of a situation is its extent and seriousness. The country's leadership had underestimated the depth of the crisis. = severity
depth
The number of simple elements which an abstract conception or notion includes; the comprehension or content
depth
degree of psychological or intellectual depth extent downward or backward or inward; "the depth of the water"; "depth of a shelf"; "depth of a closet"
depth
The height of a gemstone measured from the culet to the table
depth
If you are out of your depth, you are in water that is deeper than you are tall, with the result that you cannot stand up with your head above water
depth
to plumb new depths: see plumb to plumb the depths: see plumb
depth
A measure of folder enumeration depth, such as how many links to follow from the content source See also: scope
depth
The quality of being deep; deepness; perpendicular measurement downward from the surface, or horizontal measurement backward from the front; as, the depth of a river; the depth of a body of troops
depth
(usually plural) the deepest and most remote part; "from the depths of darkest Africa"; "signals received from the depths of space"
depth
The depths are places that are a long way below the surface of the sea or earth. The ship vanished into the depths
depth
When referring to a circuit, the maximum number of gates along any path from an input to the output (Note that circuits never contain loops )
depth
This is the depth of the earthquake below sea level in kilometres Earthquakes occur where the earth's crust fractures and moves Even along a zone of weakness, these fractures and movements occur only in one small area, to relieve localised stresses Often this point of fracture is deep within the earth Where earthquakes occur on plate margins (plates are large blocks of crust which are constantly in movement) the depth of the quake can be used be seismologists to obtain a picture of the way in which the plates are moving relative to one another
depth
The depth of a cut is measured from the bottom of the blade up to the bottom of a cut Depths are numbered starting with #0 (or sometimes #1) as the highest depth
depth
The depth of something such as a cupboard or drawer is the distance between its front surface and its back
depth
If you are in the depths of an unpleasant emotion, you feel that emotion very strongly. I was in the depths of despair when the baby was sick
depth
"Depth" in the WorldConnect Project indicates the number of generations (levels) someone can download from a family tree Some submitters will not allow any downloads; others will allow as many as ten generations (levels) to be downloaded The number of generations you can download will depend of the maximum number set by the submitter, and by the number of generations appearing in the family tree
depth
(n ) Generally, the z window coordinate
depth
The perpendicular distance from the chord to the farthest point of an arched surface
depth
The depth of someone's knowledge is the great amount that they know. We felt at home with her and were impressed with the depth of her knowledge
depth
That which is deep; a deep, or the deepest, part or place; the deep; the middle part; as, the depth of night, or of winter
depth
If you say that someone or something has depth, you mean that they have serious and interesting qualities which are not immediately obvious and which you have to think about carefully before you can fully understand them. His music lacks depth
depth
The depth of a window or pixmap is the number of bits per pixel it has The depth of a graphics context is the depth of the drawables it can be used in conjunction with graphics output
depth
The word alone generally denotes vertical depth below the surface In the case of incline shafts and boreholes it may mean the distance reached from the beginning of the shaft or hole, the borehole depth, or the inclined depth
depth
(n) One of the three principal dimensions of an object The depth dimension is described in the right side and top views of a multiview drawing The depth dimension is often associated with the Z axis in a 3-D modeling system Depth can also refer to the distance cut into an object using a machining process (e g , the distance measured between the crest and root of a thread normal to the axis or the depth of a drilled hole)
depth
Real or simulated 3-D distance Simulated depth may be created by perspective, overlapping, size, tone values, colours, and so on
depth
The measurement of the book at its thickest point, including the covers
depth
If something happens in the depths of a difficult or unpleasant period of time, it happens in the middle and most severe or intense part of it. The country is in the depths of a recession
depth
[Reach]: Not recommended Average depth in the reach, in feet When possible, use the preferred parameters upper_depth and lower_depth
depth
A dimension downward, backward, or inward Depth in the atlas subluxation complex adjustment tends to defeat subluxation reduction It is usually the result of body-drop which shortens the final optimum resultant of the force vectors
depth
If you deal with a subject in depth, you deal with it very thoroughly and consider all the aspects of it. We will discuss these three areas in depth
depth
The distance from the baseline to the highest point on the sheer Typically the bow Often inappropriately used to refer to the distance from the sheer to the baseline at amidships
depth
(usually plural) a low moral state; "he had sunk to the depths of addiction"
depth
An earthquake begins at a given point (hypocenter) which is defined by a position on the surface of the earth (epicenter) and a depth below this point (focal depth) This depth is given as kilometers (km) below mean sea-level
depth
[top] The distance from the top of the canoe at the gunwales to the bottom of the canoe when measured at the beam A good standard depth is about 13"
depth
If you talk about the depths of an area, you mean the parts of it which are very far from the edge. the depths of the countryside
depth
degree of psychological or intellectual depth
depth
If an emotion is very strongly or intensely felt, you can talk about its depth. I am well aware of the depth of feeling that exists in Londonderry = strength
depth
(of a box) The distance from the baseline of the box to the bottom edge of the box
depth
Describes the complexity and concentration of flavors in a wine, as in a wine with excellent or uncommon depth
depth
The depth of something such as a river or hole is the distance downwards from its top surface, or between its upper and lower surfaces. The smaller lake ranges from five to fourteen feet in depth The depth of the shaft is 520 yards They were detected at depths of more than a kilometre in the sea
depth
If you say that someone is out of their depth, you mean that they are in a situation that is much too difficult for them to be able to cope with it. Mr Gibson is clearly intellectually out of his depth
depth
(usually plural) a low moral state; "he had sunk to the depths of addiction
depth
Lowness; as, depth of sound
depth
A pair of toothed wheels which work together
depthless
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