toboggan

listen to the pronunciation of toboggan
الإنجليزية - التركية
kar kızağı
{f} kızak kay
kızakla kay
ayaksız ve ucu kalkık alçak kızak
{f} kızakla kaymak
{f} kızakla kaymak/gitmek
{i} ayaksız kızak
toboggan slide böyle kızakların kayması için yapılmış ve çoğunlukla setlerle çevrilmiş dönüşlü yokuş
böyle kızakla kaymak veya gitmek
(fiil) kızakla kaymak
{i} kızak
{i} bir tür alçak kızak
tobogan
toboggan slide
kızak pisti
toboggan chute
kızak pisti
التركية - التركية
Bir kavşağı aşmaya olanak veren, viyodük biçiminde kısa karayolu
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
to slide down a hill on a toboggan or other object

The hillside, lined with a coating of wet leaves ready to toboggan her down the slope, made her grateful for a few saplings that provided handholds.

A long sled without runners, with the front end curled upwards, which may be pulled across snow by a cord or used to coast down hills

Trenance Park has gardens, a toboggan run, miniature golf and the indoor delights of Water World with its tropical fun pool and flumes.

Something which, once it starts(figuratively) going downhill, is unstoppable until it reaches the bottom

We all have found out that once a show goes into rehearsal, it's a toboggan slide and there's not enough time. So we had six months of preproduction meetings.

to (figuratively) go downhill unstoppably until one reaches the bottom

I can't win, can I? You think I'm posh and my folks think I'm tobogganing down-market faster than the royal family.

A similar sled of wood, pulled by dogs, possibly with steel runners, made to transport cargo

These animals are harnessed by a padded collar to a light flat sleigh, of skins stretched across a frame of thin wood, called a toboggan.

a winter hat or ski mask

We used an old toboggan stuffed with cotton for the ball, and it served the purpose very well.

to go downhill unstoppably until one reaches the bottom
Something which, once it starts going downhill, is unstoppable until it reaches the bottom
move along on a luge or toboggan
a flat-bottomed sled with no runners, as used by Canadian Indians
a light sled, mainly used for sliding down hills for pleasure
{i} sled
a long narrow sled without runners; boards curve upward in front move along on a luge or toboggan
A kind of sledge made of pliable board, turned up at one or both ends, used for coasting down hills or prepared inclined planes; also, a sleigh or sledge, to be drawn by dogs, or by hand, over soft and deep snow
A toboggan is a light wooden board with a curved front, used for travelling down hills on snow or ice. = sled, sledge. a light wooden board with a curved front, used for sliding down hills covered in snow sledge (tobogan, from tobagun ). to slide down a hill on a toboggan
{f} sled on snow in a toboggan (type of large sled)
a long narrow sled without runners; boards curve upward in front
To slide down hill over the snow or ice on a toboggan
toboggan slide
A quick, unstoppable decline
toboggan slide
A track prepared with ice or snow, for sledding down a slope or slide
toboggan slides
plural form of toboggan slide
toboggan chute
{i} toboggan slide
tobogganing
Present participle of toboggan

I can't win, can I? You think I'm posh and my folks think I'm tobogganing down-market faster than the royal family.

tobogganed
past of toboggan
tobogganer
Someone who rides a toboggan
tobogganer
One who practices tobogganing
tobogganing
riding on a long light sled with low handrails
tobogganing
Sport of sliding down a snow-covered hill on a toboggan, a long, flat-bottomed sled made of thin boards curved up at the front end. The word is of Algonquian origin and probably refers to a towing sled. Tobogganing as a sport appears to have originated on the slopes of Mount Royal in Montreal in the late 19th century. In the early 20th century many tobogganing chutes (3-ft-wide wood-or ice-sided channels) were built
tobogganing
the use of toboggans, historically for transport, but now usually for pleasure or for organised sport
toboggans
third-person singular of toboggan
toboggans
plural of , toboggan
toboggan

    الواصلة

    to·bog·gan

    التركية النطق

    tıbägın

    المترادفات

    sled, sledge, cariole, carriole

    النطق

    /təˈbägən/ /təˈbɑːɡən/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ t&-'bä-g&n ] (noun.) circa 1820. 1829, verb 1846. From French tabaganne, probably from Mi'kmaq tepaqan or Abenaki udãbãgan, influenced by similar words in other Eastern Canadian Indian languages. The US sense of hat is recorded in 1929, and toboggan cap in 1928.
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