Onun giysileri odanın her yanına dağılmış ve şapkasını yatağın dibinde buldu. - Her clothes were strewn about the room, and she found her hat at the foot of the bed.
If a place is strewn with things, they are lying scattered there. The front room was strewn with books and clothes The riverbed was strewn with big boulders. Strewn is also a combining form. a litter-strewn street. a rock-strewn hillside
(used with `with' or in combination) covered by or as if by something scattered over or on; "the forest floor strewn with boulders"; "the petal-strewn aisle"
being distributed here and there without order; "scattered leaves littered the sidewalk"; "don't forget to pick up the clothes lying strewn all over the floor"
To strew things somewhere, or to strew a place with things, means to scatter them there. The racoons knock over the rubbish bins in search of food, and strew the contents all over the ground An elderly woman was strewing the floor with French chalk so that the dancing shoes would not slip By the end, bodies were strewn all round the headquarters building
To cover more or less thickly by scattering something over or upon; to cover, or lie upon, by having been scattered; as, they strewed the ground with leaves; leaves strewed the ground
To scatter; to spread by scattering; to cast or to throw loosely apart; used of solids, separated or separable into parts or particles; as, to strew seed in beds; to strew sand on or over a floor; to strew flowers over a grave
[ 'strü ] (transitive verb.) before 12th century. Middle English strewen, strowen, from Old English strewian, strEowian; akin to Old High German strewen to strew, Latin struere to heap up, sternere to spread out, Greek stornynai.