تعريف siyah elbise في التركية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- black
Tom only wears black clothes.
- Tom sadece siyah elbiseler giyer.
The red belt goes well with her black dress.
- Kırmızı kemer onun siyah elbisesine uyar.
- To apply blacking to something
Loving you, I could conceive no life sweeter than hers -- to be always near you; to black your boots, carry up your coals, scrub your doorstep; always to be working for you, hard and humbly and without thanks.
- Relating to persons of (usually noticeable) negroid African descent or their culture. Also people of an Asian, Aborigine or Maori descent
- To make black, to blacken
I saw red, and instead of a cab I fetched that policeman. Of course father did black his eye.
- absorbing all light and reflecting none; dark and colourless
- Bad; evil; ill-omened
what a black day would that be, when the Ordinances of Jesus Christ should as it were be excommunicated, and cast out of the Church of Christ.
- Overcrowded
- {a} dark, cloudy, mournful, dismal, wicked
- make or become black; "The smoke blackened the ceiling"; "The ceiling blackened"
- Synge; "took a dim view of things" (of intelligence operations) deliberately misleading; "black propaganda" harshly ironic or sinister; "black humor"; "a grim joke"; "grim laughter"; "fun ranging from slapstick clowning
- for mourning was a Roman custom (Juvenal, x 245) borrowed from the Egyptians Black, in blazonry, means constancy, wisdom, and prudence Black, in several of the Oriental nations, is a badge of servitude, slavery, and low birth Our word blackguard seems to point to this meaning The Latin niger meant bad, unpropitious (See Blackguard )
- a person, not of Hispanic origin, having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa
- black clothing (worn as a sign of mourning); "the widow wore black" (board games) the darker pieces the quality or state of the achromatic color of least lightness (bearing the least resemblance to white) a person with dark skin who comes from Africa (or whose ancestors came from Africa) popular child actress of the 1930's (born 1927) British chemist who identified carbon dioxide and who formulated the concepts of specific heat and latent heat (1728-1799) marked by anger or resentment or hostility; "black looks"; "black words" of or belonging to a racial group having dark skin especially of sub-Saharan African origin; "a great people--a black people--
- If you say that someone is black and blue, you mean that they are badly bruised. Whenever she refused, he'd beat her black and blue Bud's nose was still black and blue
- extremely dark; "a black moonless night"; "through the pitch-black woods"; "it was pitch-dark in the celler" being of the achromatic color of maximum darkness; having little or no hue owing to absorption of almost all incident light; "black leather jackets"; "as black as coal"; "rich black soil" (of the face) made black especially as with suffused blood; "a face black with fury" soiled with dirt or soot; "with feet black from playing outdoors"; "his shirt was black within an hour" dressed in black; "a black knight"; "black friars" (of coffee) without cream or sugar (of events) having extremely unfortunate or dire consequences; bringing ruin; "the stock market crashed on Black Friday"; "a calamitous defeat"; "the battle was a disastrous end to a disastrous campaign"; "such doctrines, if true, would be absolutely fatal to my theory"- Charles Darwin; "it is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it"- Douglas MacArthur; "a fateful error" stemming from evil characteristics or forces; wicked or dishonorable; "black deeds"; "a black lie"; "his black heart has concocted yet another black deed"; "Darth Vader of the dark side"; "a dark purpose"; "dark undercurrents of ethnic hostility"; "the scheme of some sinister intelligence bent on punishing him"-Thomas Hardy (used of conduct or character) deserving or bringing disgrace or shame; "Man
- One of the participants of a backgammon game, presumably the one using darker-colored checkers Also, the checkers used by this player
- Fig
- Black humour involves jokes about sad or difficult situations. `So you can all go over there and get shot,' he said, with the sort of black humour common among British troops here It's a black comedy of racial prejudice, mistaken identity and thwarted expectations
- distributed or sold illicitly; "the black economy pays no taxes"
- Something that is black is of the darkest colour that there is, the colour of the sky at night when there is no light at all. She was wearing a black coat with a white collar He had thick black hair I wear a lot of black He was dressed all in black
- extremely dark; "a black moonless night"; "through the pitch-black woods"; "it was pitch-dark in the celler"