jellyfish

listen to the pronunciation of jellyfish
الإنجليزية - التركية
denizanası

Çoğu denizanası sokmaları ölümcül değil ama çoğu yine de oldukça ağrılıdır. - Most jellyfish stings aren't deadly, but many are pretty painful nonetheless.

Tom kendini denizanası araştırmasına adıyor. - Tom is devoting himself to jellyfish research.

deniz anası

Tom bir deniz anası tarafından sokuldu. - Tom got stung by a jellyfish.

denizısırganı
(deyim) süt çocuğu
{i} k.dili. kararsız kimse
{i} pısırık
su medüzu
medüz
{i} muhallebi çocuğu
denizana

Denizanasının bilinci var mıdır? - Do jellyfish have consciousness?

Çoğu denizanası sokmaları ölümcül değil ama çoğu yine de oldukça ağrılıdır. - Most jellyfish stings aren't deadly, but many are pretty painful nonetheless.

dili kararsız kimse
jellyfish sting
denizanası acı
box jellyfish
kutu denizanası
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Almost transparent aquatic being; any one of the acalephs, especially one of the larger species, having a jellylike appearance
any of numerous usually marine and free-swimming coelenterates that constitute the sexually reproductive forms of hydrozoans and scyphozoans
one of the larger species, having a jellylike appearance
– Any of a variety of free-swimming, marine invertebrates characterized by an umbrella-shaped body largely made up of a jelly-like substance and long, hanging tentacles with stinging cells on them
a tasty and clever fish, that swims in the upper parts of the sea and is always looking for any possible BG-players who dare to challenge that area, to play with In old western days there were similar things called pistoleros
A computer program that plays backgammon and performs rollouts, developed by JellyFish AS
{i} stinging soft gelatinous marine animal with an umbrella shaped body and long trailing tentacles; coward, person without backbone, spineless person (Slang)
A jellyfish is a sea creature that has a clear soft body and can sting you. jellyfish a sea animal that has a round transparent body and can sting you. Any of about 200 described species of free-swimming marine cnidarians (in the classes Scyphozoa and Cubozoa), many of which have a bell-shaped body. The term is also frequently applied to other similar cnidarians (e.g., Portuguese man-of-war) and some unrelated forms (e.g., ctenophores and salps). In scyphozoan jellyfish, the free-swimming medusa form is the dominant stage, with the sessile polyp form found only during larval development. Jellyfish live in all oceans and include the familiar disk-shaped animals that are often found drifting along the shoreline. Most species are 1-16 in. (2-40 cm) in diameter; some are 6 ft (1.8 m) in diameter, with tentacles more than 100 feet (30 m) long. Though some jellyfish simply filter-feed, most feed on small animals (e.g., crustaceans) that they catch in their tentacles, whose stinging cells immobilize the prey; contact can be irritating and sometimes dangerous to humans. The cubozoan jellyfish comprise 50 species of box jellies (the rather spherical body is squared off at the edges), which are usually 1-2 in. (2-4 cm) in diameter
Any one of the acalephs, esp
large siphonophore having a bladderlike float and stinging tentacles
jellyfish baby
A still-born infant resulting from radiation poisoning
jellyfish tree
A rare tree, Medusagyne oppositifolia, indigenous to the island of Mahé in the Seychelles
box jellyfish
Pacific jellyfish of class Cubozoa, also known as sea wasps, Chironex fleckeri
jellyfish.
medusoid
box jellyfish
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) Box jellyfish are water-dwelling invertebrates belonging to the class Cubozoa, named for their cube-shaped medusae. They share many characteristics with their relatives the true jellies in the class Scyphozoa. The name sea wasp is also applied to some species of cubozoans, including Chironex fleckeri and Carybdea alata
A jellyfish
seablubber
A jellyfish
slobber
jellyfishes
plural of jellyfish
jellyfish

    الواصلة

    jel·ly·fish

    التركية النطق

    celifîş

    النطق

    /ˈʤelēˌfəsʜ/ /ˈʤɛliːˌfɪʃ/
المفضلات