kai

listen to the pronunciation of kai
ألمانية - التركية
s {kay} r rıhtım
s. r. kay rıhtım
[der] rıhtım
rıhtım
ab Kai
rıhtımda teslim {m}
الإنجليزية - التركية

تعريف kai في الإنجليزية التركية القاموس.

chicken
tavuk

Biz biraz tavuk çorbası yedik. - We had some chicken soup.

Beypiliç'in tavuk etini seviyorum. - I like Beypilic chicken.

chicken
piliç

Tom bir ekstra-baharat kovası, kızarmış piliç ve bir konteyner lahana salatası ısmarladı. - Tom bought a bucket of extra-spicy fried chicken and a container of coleslaw.

Bu piliç çok pişirilmiş. - The chicken is overcooked.

kai-lan
Kai-lan (literally "mustard orchid"), also known as Chinese broccoli or Chinese kale, iş a slightly bitter leaf vegetable featuring thick, flat, glossy blue-green leaves with thick stems and a small number of tiny, almost vestigial flower heads similar to those of broccoli. As a group of Brassica oleracea, kai-lan iş of the same species of plant as broccoli and kale. İts flavor iş very similar to that of broccoli, though not identical, being a bit sweeter
kai-lan
(Botanik, Bitkibilim) Çin brokolisi
chicken
piliç eti
chicken
(deyim) korkak olmak (coward)

chicken out olarak sözlükte yer alıyor.

chicken
{i} civciv
chicken
korkak

Sen böyle bir korkaksın. - You're such a chicken.

chicken
{i} kız

Fırında kızartılmış tavuğu severim. - I like roast chicken.

Babam tavuk kızartmak için ateş kullanır. - Dad uses fire to roast a chicken.

chicken
ödlek
chicken
{i} piliç, tavuk eti
chicken
{i} toy
chicken
(fiil) korkak davranmak, korkudan çekinmek
chicken
out korkudan çekinmek
chicken
{f} korkudan çekinmek
chicken
genç kız
chicken
{i} cesaret yoklama oyunu
chicken
{f} out argo korkudan çekinmek
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
A male given name of modern usage
of modern usage
{i} (Informal) food (term used in New Zealand)
chicken
kai apple
South African fruit smelling and tasting like apricots; used for pickles and preserves
koen-kai
a sumo fan club, either for a heya or for a particular rikishi; a useful source of money
Chiang Kai-Shek
{i} (1887-1975) Chinese political and military leader who was the president of China between 1950-1975
Chiang Kai-shek
or Chiang Chieh-shih or Jiang Jieshi born Oct. 31, 1887, Zhejiang, China died April 5, 1975, Taipei, Taiwan Head of the Nationalist government in China (1928-49) and later in Taiwan (1949-75). After receiving military training in Tokyo, in 1918 he joined Sun Yat-sen, leader of the Nationalist Party, which was trying to consolidate control over a nation in chaos. In the 1920s Chiang became commander in chief of the revolutionary army, which he sent to crush warlords active in the north (see Northern Expedition). In the 1930s he and Wang Jingwei vied for control of a new central government with its capital at Nanjing. Faced with Japanese aggression in Manchuria and communist opposition led by Mao Zedong in the hinterland, Chiang decided to crush the communists first. This proved to be a mistake, and Chiang was forced into a temporary alliance with the communists when war broke out with Japan in 1937. After the war China's civil war resumed, culminating in the Nationalists' flight to Taiwan in 1949, where Chiang ruled, supported by U.S. economic and military aid, until his death, when his son, Chiang Ching-kuo, took up the reins of government. His years ruling Taiwan, though dictatorial, oversaw the island's economic development and increasing prosperity even in the face of its precarious geopolitical position. His failure to keep control of mainland China has been attributed to poor morale among his troops, lack of responsiveness to popular sentiment, and lack of a coherent plan for making the deep social and economic changes China required
chiang kai-shek
Chinese military and political figure; in the Chinese civil war that followed World War II he was defeated by the Chinese communists and in 1949 was forced to withdraw to Taiwan where he served as president of Nationalist China until his death (1897-1975)
kai

    النطق

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () Taken into regular use in the 1990s, with earlier popularity peaks in Scandinavia and Germany. The medieval Danish Kaj is possibly of Roman origin, Latinized as Caius, like the rare medieval English male given name Kay. The German Kai may also derive from a West Frisian pet form of Gerard, Cornelius, Nicholas, or Kampe "warrior". In the U.S. Kai has also been explained as Hawaiian kai (“sea”).
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