fermuar. f

listen to the pronunciation of fermuar. f
التركية - الإنجليزية
{i} zipper
A zip fastener
To sequentially rip out, usually during a lead fall, a whole series of placements Not a good omen, as the odds are high that the end result will be at least a whipper and possibly a crater A-B C-D E-G H-O P-R S-T U-Z
{i} zip fastener, device used for fastening (pants, jackets, etc.); person who zips; thing that zips or fastens; (term used in Canada and USA) display of news bulletins or adverts that scrolls across a lit up screen placed on a building
To put a zipper on an article
A pressure-sensitive plastic closure
close with a zipper; "Zip up your jacket--it's cold"
To close a zipper
A zipper is a device used to open and close parts of clothes and bags. It consists of two rows of metal or plastic teeth which separate or fasten together as you pull a small tag along them. Device for binding the edges of an opening, as on a garment or a bag. A zipper consists of two strips of material with metal or plastic teeth along the edges, and a sliding piece that interlocks the teeth when moved in one direction and separates them again when moved in the opposite direction. The idea of a slide fastener was first exhibited by Whitcomb L. Judson died 1909 at the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893. The modern form of the zipper began to appear on clothing in the late 1920s
a fastener for locking together two toothed edges by means of a sliding tab
[also Zip', noun] A derogatory term for the inhabitants of the Wilds, borrowed from Free Trader [or Slaver, according to some sources] usage Reputedly the term, as applied to primitive and superstitious people, refers to what they know "zip", what they own of value "zip", and their prospects for the future "zip" Social and Political Data Home Reference Page ®1996 Traveller is a registered trademark of FarFuture Enterprises All rights reserved Copyright© 1998 by Derek Stanley
(vb ) to pull out protection sequentially while falling
{f} zip, fasten with a zipper
fermuar. f
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