faldig

listen to the pronunciation of faldig
السويدية - التركية
katlamak
şarıl
katlantı
foldin
kıvrım
kavuşturmak
السويدية - الإنجليزية
fold
to make the proper arrangement (in a thin material) by bending

If you fold the sheets, they'll fit more easily in the drawer.

A pen or enclosure for sheep or other domestic animals
If a piece of furniture or equipment folds or if you can fold it, you can make it smaller by bending or closing parts of it. The back of the bench folds forward to make a table This portable seat folds flat for easy storage Check if you can fold the buggy without having to remove the raincover. a folding beach chair. Fold up means the same as fold. When not in use it folds up out of the way Fold the ironing board up so that it is flat. unfold
To cover or wrap up; to conceal
Wavelike layers in rock strata that are the result of compression
An arched-up layer of rock Rocks that are arched up are called anticlines and those that are arched down are called synclines
to fall over
If you decide to Fold, you are pulling out of the current round of cards and forfeiting your hand You do not have to add any more money to the pot but you are no longer participating in the game and any money you have put on the table is up for grabs by the winning player of the hand
cease to operate or cause to cease operating; "The owners decided to move and to close the factory"; "My business closes every night at 8 P M "
When someone joins an organization or group, you can say that they have come into the fold. When they leave the organization or group, you can say that they leave the fold. The EU wanted to bring the US back into the fold He might find it difficult to return to the family fold when he realizes his mistake. In geology, an undulation or wave in the stratified rocks of the Earth's crust. Stratified rocks were originally formed from sediments that were deposited in flat, horizontal sheets, although in some places the strata are no longer horizontal but have warped. The warping may be so gentle that the inclination of the strata is barely perceptible, or it may be so pronounced that the strata of the two flanks are essentially parallel or nearly flat. Folds vary widely in size; the tops of large folds are commonly eroded away on the Earth's surface
bend or lay so that one part covers the other; "fold up the newspaper"; "turn up your collar"
The folds in a piece of cloth are the curved shapes which are formed when it is not hanging or lying flat. The priest fumbled in the folds of his gown
the result of, or the process of, introducing a bend into the previously flat plane of the paper
a bend in rock strata
If you fold your arms or hands, you bring them together and cross or link them, for example over your chest. Meer folded his arms over his chest and turned his head away Mrs Ringrose sat down and folded her hands in her lap
A fold in a piece of paper or cloth is a bend that you make in it when you put one part of it over another part and press the edge. Make another fold and turn the ends together. = crease
A method of gently mixing ingredients Use a rubber spatula to cut down through the mixture, move across the bottom of the bowl, and come back up, "folding" some of the mixture from the bottom close to the surface Using a gentle over and under motion to combine ingredients to prevent loss of air that may result from stirring or beating To blend a delicate, frothy mixture into a heavier one preferably with a rubber spatula so that none of the lightness or volume is lost The motion used is one of turning under and bringing up
the Church or a church
of anything; as, fourfold, four times, increased in a quadruple ratio, multiplied by four
The removal of differences between characters that are deemed unimportant for the purposes of inexact or case-insensitive matching As well as ignoring differences of case, folding ignores any accent on a character