(isim) şapka

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) şapka
Türkisch - Englisch
hat
The lottery or draw itself

We're both in the hat, let's hope we come up against each other.

Any receptacle from which numbers/names are pulled out in a lottery
{n} a part of dress, a cover for the head
furnish with a hat
The portion of a detachable brake disc that comes in contact with the wheel hub
to knock something into a cocked hat: see cocked hat. Head covering of any of various styles, used for warmth, fashion, or religious or ceremonial purposes, when it often symbolizes the office or rank of the wearer. In the West, through the Middle Ages, men wore hats in the form of caps or hoods, and women wore veils, hoods, or head draperies. The silk top hat originated in Florence 1760. The derby (bowler) was introduced in 1850. The cloth cap with visor was for decades the international standard for workingmen and boys. Women's hats went through periods of astonishing ostentation, the last being the years preceding World War I. Since 1960 the wearing of hats by both men and women has greatly declined in the West. With 15th-century origins, the broad-brimmed sombrero is still popular in Mexico and parts of Latin America. The people of East Asia have devised head coverings as simple as the Chinese coolie hat, a one-piece flattened cone, and as elaborate and decorative as the Japanese cap-shaped kammuri of black lacquered silk decorated with an upright streamer and imperial chrysanthemum crest. In India the Gandhi cap, fez, and turban are in general use. In regions where the Ottoman Empire ruled (including the Balkans and North Africa), the traditional headgear of the fez and tarboosh remained popular for men until the 20th century. Farther east, from Iran to South Asia (as well as in parts of coastal Arabia), various types of turbans have been worn by men. In the Arabian interior, the Levant, and parts of Syria and Iraq, the kaffiyeh (sometimes called a ghurah), a wide cloth held in place by a camel-hair cord (iql), remains customary, even for men sporting Western attire. In Israel the yarmulke is common, particularly among observant Jews
In British English, if you pass the hat around, you collect money from a group of people, for example in order to give someone a present. In American English, you just say pass the hat. Professors are passing the hat to help staff in their department
The headwear of the bando All instruments except for Sousaphones and Drumline wear the hat in the above picture Sousaphones wear berets
In competitions, if you say that the winners will be drawn or picked out of the hat, you mean that they will be chosen randomly, so everyone has an equal chance of winning. The first 10 correct entries drawn out of the hat will win a pair of tickets, worth £20 each
{i} headcovering shaped from fabric or other material; person's role or position
one with a crown and brim, made of various materials, and worn by men or women for protecting the head from the sun or weather, or for ornament
Cf
A cap or hat worn by officers or enlisted men when full-dress uniform, or dress uniform, is not worn
of Hote to be called
Job, the duties of a post
Slang: High hat cymbals Submitted by Karl Kuenning RFL from Roadie Net
Standing in the doorway
an informal term for a person's role; "he took off his politician's hat and talked frankly"
A particular role, especially one which includes a head-covering
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