thatcher

listen to the pronunciation of thatcher
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Margaret Thatcher, British Prime Minister
An occupational surname for someone who covered roofs in straw
A device which removes dead grass clippings from a lawn. (Technically a de-thatcher, often a lawnmower attachment.)
A person who installs thatch as a roofing material
{n} one who covers places with straw
{i} family name; Margaret Thatcher (born 1925), former prime minister of Great Britain((1979-1990, first woman ever to hold that position)
an English occupational surname for someone who covered roofs in straw
Margaret Thatcher British Prime Minister
A machine (similar to a rotary-type lawn mower with wire claws, rather than blades, on the rotating bar) used to claw and lift thatch from lawn
British stateswoman; first woman to serve as Prime Minister (born in 1925)
One who thatches
someone skilled in making a roof from plant stalks or foliage British stateswoman; first woman to serve as Prime Minister (born in 1925)
A thatcher is a person whose job is making roofs from straw or reeds. someone whose job is making roofs from dried straw, reeds, leaves etc
{i} person who thatches roofs
someone skilled in making a roof from plant stalks or foliage
Thatcher's children
People who grew up or were born in the United Kingdom during the premiership of Margaret Thatcher (1979–1990) and who are said to have adopted the ideology of Thatcherism, in particular the concepts of personal financial gain, self-sufficiency and disregard of the welfare of those who are less well-off

Non-unionism was now the norm across swathes of the private sector so that only an estimated 16% of employees were organised by trade unions by 2006. Increasingly younger workers aged between sixteen and twenty-four – known as Thatcher's children – saw little point in being trade union members.

de-thatcher
A device which removes dead grass clippings from a lawn, often a lawnmower attachment. Frequently inaccurately called a thatcher
knob-thatcher
Someone who makes wigs
thatch
A buildup of cut grass, stolons or other material on the soil in a lawn
thatch
Straw, rushes, or the like, used for making or covering the roofs of buildings, or of stacks of hay or grain
thatch
To cover the roof with straw, reed, leaves, etc
thatch
{v} to cover a house with straw
thatch
{n} straw used for the covering of a house
Margaret Baroness Thatcher Thatcher
orig. Margaret Hilda Roberts born Oct. 13, 1925, Grantham, Lincolnshire, Eng. British politician and prime minister (1979-90). She earned a degree from the University of Oxford, where she was one of the first woman presidents of the Oxford University Conservative Association, then worked as a research chemist. After her marriage to Denis Thatcher (1951), she read for the bar and specialized in tax law. She was elected to Parliament in 1959 and served as secretary of state for education and science (1970-74). As a member of the Conservative Party's newly energetic right wing, she succeeded Edward Heath as party leader in 1975. In 1979 she became Britain's first woman prime minister. She advocated individual initiative, confronted the labour unions, privatized national industries and utilities and attempted to privatize aspects of health care and education, pursued a strong monetarist policy, and endorsed a firm commitment to NATO. Her landslide victory in 1983 owed partly to her decisive leadership in the Falkland Islands War. A split in party ranks over European monetary and political integration led to her resignation in 1990, by which time she had become Britain's longest continuously serving prime minister since 1827
Margaret Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven Thatcher
orig. Margaret Hilda Roberts born Oct. 13, 1925, Grantham, Lincolnshire, Eng. British politician and prime minister (1979-90). She earned a degree from the University of Oxford, where she was one of the first woman presidents of the Oxford University Conservative Association, then worked as a research chemist. After her marriage to Denis Thatcher (1951), she read for the bar and specialized in tax law. She was elected to Parliament in 1959 and served as secretary of state for education and science (1970-74). As a member of the Conservative Party's newly energetic right wing, she succeeded Edward Heath as party leader in 1975. In 1979 she became Britain's first woman prime minister. She advocated individual initiative, confronted the labour unions, privatized national industries and utilities and attempted to privatize aspects of health care and education, pursued a strong monetarist policy, and endorsed a firm commitment to NATO. Her landslide victory in 1983 owed partly to her decisive leadership in the Falkland Islands War. A split in party ranks over European monetary and political integration led to her resignation in 1990, by which time she had become Britain's longest continuously serving prime minister since 1827
Margaret Thatcher
a British politician in the Conservative Party, now officially called Baroness Thatcher, and sometimes called Maggie in the newspapers. She became leader of her party in 1975, and in 1979 became the UK's first woman Prime Minister, a position she held until 1990. She won three General Elections one after the other, and she had a great influence on British politics and on British life. Her ideas, which have become known as Thatcherism, have also influenced politicians in other countries. She reduced taxes, took away power from trade unions, and started a programme of privatization (=selling state-owned services such as electricity, gas, and the telephone service, so that they became private companies) . She was a strong and determined leader who would not change her mind easily and would not accept disagreement among her ministers. For this reason, she was sometimes called "the Iron Lady" (1925- )
Margaret Thatcher
(born 1925) prime minister of Great Britain (1979-1990)
thatch
A name in the West Indies for several kinds of palm, the leaves of which are used for thatching
thatch
{i} covering or mat made from straw; material that resembles straw or hay (often referring to hair)
thatch
To cover with, or with a roof of, straw, reeds, or some similar substance; as, to thatch a roof, a stable, or a stack of grain
thatch
A thatch or a thatch roof is a roof made from straw or reeds. They would live in a small house with a green door and a new thatch
thatch
You can refer to someone's hair as their thatch of hair, especially when it is very thick and untidy. Teddy ran thick fingers through his unruly thatch of hair. See Edward Teach
thatch
{f} cover, put a thatch over
thatch
Thatch is straw or reeds used to make a roof
thatch
a house roof made with a plant material (as straw) hair resembling thatched roofing material plant stalks used as roofing material cover with thatch; "thatch the roofs
thatchers
plural of thatcher
التركية - الإنجليزية
thatcherite
thatcher

    الواصلة

    That·cher

    التركية النطق

    thäçır

    النطق

    /ˈᴛʜaʧər/ /ˈθæʧɜr/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'thach ] (transitive verb.) 14th century. Middle English thecchen, from Old English theccan to cover; akin to Old High German decchen to cover, Latin tegere, Greek stegein to cover, stegos roof, Sanskrit sthagati he covers.
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