allen

listen to the pronunciation of allen
Englisch - Türkisch
alyan

Tom, doğru ebatta alyan anahtarı olmadığı için karyolanın montajını yapamadı. - Tom couldn't assemble the bed because he didn't have the right sized Allen key.

alye
allen screw
alyan başlı vida
allen wrench
alyan anahtar
allen key
Alyan anahtarı
allen screw
(Mühendislik) alyen vida; altı köşeli gömme başlı vida
allen wrench
(Mühendislik) alyen anahtar, gömme anahtar, altı-köşe "L" şeklinde anahtar
allen wrench
Alyan anahtarı
Allen's Test
(Tıp) (Allen deneyi) a) İdrarda şeker araştırılmasında Fehling deneyinin bir modifikasyonu. Kaynar idrara Fehling solüsyonu katılır ve soğumaya bırakılır: Positif reaksiyonda bulanıklık belirir. b) Fenol belirtimi: 2 damla şüpheli solüsyona 5 damla HCI ve 1 damla HNO3 katılır: Fenol varsa kiraz kırmızısı bir renk belirir. c) Striknin belirtimi: Eterle tüketilen hülasa bir porselen kapsül içerisinde damla damla konularak yoğunlaştırılır, artık (residuum) soğutlur, sülfirik asit ve manganez dioksit ile işlem yapılır. Striknin menekşe bir renk verir. d) Tinea Versicolor teşhis için: Bileşik iyot solüsyonu deri üzerindeki şüpheli "Eruption" üzerine dokundurulur: Pozitif reaksiyon mahon rengi belirmesi ile tayin olunur
allen wrench
allen anahtarı,alyan anahtar
allen wrench
(İnşaat) (hex) altı köşe gömme anahtar
allen's paradoxic law
(Tıp) (Allen Paradoks kuralı) Normal şahıslarda, alınan şeker miktarı arttıkça organizmada yakılma hızı da arttığı haldediyabetiklerde bu olayın zıt bir yön göstermesi
van allen radiation belts
(Askeri) VAN ALLEN RADYASYON KUŞAKLARI: Dünya manyetik sahasına hapsedilmiş yüksek enerji yüklü partiküllerin bulunduğu sahalara verilen genel isim. Bu kuşakların büyüklüğünü ve şeklini tarifi bir radyasyon yoğunluk ölçüsü ve hakim partikül unsurlarının seçilmesine bağlıdır. Bulundukları bilinen kuşaklar şunlardır: 1. ortalama 200 mil irtifa jeomanyetik ekvatorda toplanmış proton sahası; 2. ortalama 1200 mil irtifada jeomanyetik ekvatorda toplanmış bir elektron sahası. 3. ortalama 20.000 mil irtifada jeomanyetik ekvatorda toplanmış ve birbiri üzerine binmiş elektron ve proton sahaları. Ayrıca suni kaynaklardan hapsedilmiş radyasyon sahaları da mevcuttur. gezegenler arası keşifte bir engel meydana getiren bu kuşakların mevcudiyeti ilk defa, Iowa devlet üniversitesinden Dr. James A. Allen tarafından haber verilmiştir
Türkisch - Türkisch

Definition von allen im Türkisch Türkisch wörterbuch

woody allen
Komedi ile felsefenin paradoksal karışımı olan Radyo Günleri, Kahire'nin Mor Gülü, Bir Daha çal Sam gibi filmleriyle tanınmış ABD'li sinema yönetmeni ve oyuncusu
Englisch - Englisch
An English and Scottish surname derived from the given name Alan
A male given name, a variant of Alan; in modern use often transferred from the surname
United States filmmaker and comic actor (1935-)
This refers to the book by James Allen, Natural Language Processing, second edition, Benjamin Cummings, 1995
An English and Scottish surname derived from the given name
An English and Scottish male given name, a variant of Alan
a soldier of the American Revolution whose troops helped capture Fort Ticonderoga from the British (1738-1789)
United States comedienne remembered as the confused but imperturbable partner of her husband, George Burns (1906-1964)
American humorist famous for his dry, satirical work in vaudeville, radio, and early television. American comedian best remembered as the confused but unflappable foil to her husband and stage partner, George Burns. American religious leader and the first bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (1816-1831). English Roman Catholic cardinal who directed the work on the Douay Bible. American comic actor, writer, and filmmaker whose films include Annie Hall (1977), which won two Academy Awards, Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), and Everyone Says I Love You (1996). Allen Ethan Allen Mel Melvin Allen Israel Allen Richard Allen Steve Stephen Valentine Patrick William Allen Allen Woody Allen Stewart Konigsberg William Allen Basie Brooks Rodney Allen Du Mont Allen Balcom Dulles Allen Welsh Robert Allen Zimmerman Ginsberg Allen Irwin Newell Allen Tate John Orley Allen Van Allen radiation belts White William Allen
The application of the Allen convention requires the responder to apply the Stayman convention first, which means that the responder must bid 2 Clubs, asking the opener if he has a 4-card Major suit
{i} male first name; family name
hill
a soldier of the American Revolution whose troops helped capture Fort Ticonderoga from the British (1738-1789) United States filmmaker and comic actor (1935-) United States comedienne remembered as the confused but imperturbable partner of her husband, George Burns (1906-1964)
Allen bolt
A bolt whose head has a hexagonal socket
Allen bolts
plural form of Allen bolt
Allen key
A hex head wrench
Allen keys
plural form of Allen key
Allen screw
A screw whose head has a hexagonal socket
Allen screws
plural form of Allen screw
Allen wrench
A hex head wrench
Allen wrenches
plural form of Allen wrench
allen key
Trademark - A spanner designed to fit into and turn an Allen screw
allen wrench
Trademark - A spanner designed to fit into and turn an Allen screw
Allen B Du Mont
born Jan. 29, 1901, Brooklyn, N.Y., N.Y., U.S. died Nov. 15, 1965, New York City U.S. engineer. He became interested in television in 1928, as chief engineer at the De Forest Radio Co., and concluded that television required a purely electronic system to work. In 1931 he set up what would become Allen B. Du Mont Laboratories, where he improved the cathode-ray tube and developed the modern oscilloscope. In 1937 he began manufacturing the first commercial television receivers. After World War II he marketed the first widely available TV receivers and set up one of the first TV broadcasting networks. He served with the National Television System Committee formulating broadcasting standards and worked with the Federal Communications Commission in allocating frequencies for TV channels
Allen Balcom Du Mont
born Jan. 29, 1901, Brooklyn, N.Y., N.Y., U.S. died Nov. 15, 1965, New York City U.S. engineer. He became interested in television in 1928, as chief engineer at the De Forest Radio Co., and concluded that television required a purely electronic system to work. In 1931 he set up what would become Allen B. Du Mont Laboratories, where he improved the cathode-ray tube and developed the modern oscilloscope. In 1937 he began manufacturing the first commercial television receivers. After World War II he marketed the first widely available TV receivers and set up one of the first TV broadcasting networks. He served with the National Television System Committee formulating broadcasting standards and worked with the Federal Communications Commission in allocating frequencies for TV channels
Allen Ginsberg
{i} (1926-1997) American poet and leader of the 1960s Beat Generation, author of the poetry collections "Howl" and "Kaddish
Allen Ginsberg
a US poet and leader of the Beat Generation (1926-97). born June 3, 1926, Newark, N.J., U.S. died April 5, 1997, New York, N.Y. U.S. poet. Ginsberg was the son of a poet. He attended Columbia University, where he met Jack Kerouac. His epic poem Howl (1956), a denunciation of the failings of American society, became the most famous poem of the Beat movement; in it and later works, largely inspired by Walt Whitman, he celebrated the pleasures of psychotropic drugs, footloose wandering, and homosexuality. Kaddish (1961) is a long confessional poem about his mother's insanity and suicide. His collections include Reality Sandwiches (1963), The Fall of America (1972), and Mind Breaths (1978). Ginsberg's life was one of ceaseless travel, poetry readings, and left-wing political activity, and he was a guru of the American youth counterculture in the 1960s and '70s
Allen Irwin Ginsberg
born June 3, 1926, Newark, N.J., U.S. died April 5, 1997, New York, N.Y. U.S. poet. Ginsberg was the son of a poet. He attended Columbia University, where he met Jack Kerouac. His epic poem Howl (1956), a denunciation of the failings of American society, became the most famous poem of the Beat movement; in it and later works, largely inspired by Walt Whitman, he celebrated the pleasures of psychotropic drugs, footloose wandering, and homosexuality. Kaddish (1961) is a long confessional poem about his mother's insanity and suicide. His collections include Reality Sandwiches (1963), The Fall of America (1972), and Mind Breaths (1978). Ginsberg's life was one of ceaseless travel, poetry readings, and left-wing political activity, and he was a guru of the American youth counterculture in the 1960s and '70s
Allen Kelsey Grammer
{i} birth name of Kelsey Grammer (born 1955) United States television actor and director who starred in "Cheers" and "Frasier
Allen Newell
born March 19, 1927, San Francisco, Calif., U.S. died July 19, 1992, Pittsburgh, Pa. U.S. cognitive scientist. He taught at Carnegie Mellon University from 1961 until his death. In the late 1950s and early 1960s he collaborated with Herbert Simon in constructing an influential model of human problem solving (Human Problem Solving, 1972). His later work was concerned with artificial intelligence, and he is known for his development of computer models of human cognition and the development of a unified theory of cognition (Unified Theories of Cognition, 1990). In 1992 he received the National Medal of Science
Allen Park
A city of southeast Michigan, a suburb of Detroit. Population: 31,092
Allen Stewart Konigsberg
{i} Woody Allen (born 1935), Jewish United States filmmaker and actor
Allen Tate
born Nov. 19, 1899, Winchester, Ky., U.S. died Feb. 9, 1979, Nashville, Tenn. U.S. poet and novelist. While attending Vanderbilt University Tate helped found The Fugitive (1922-25), a poetry magazine concentrating largely on the South, and contributed to I'll Take My Stand (1930), a Fugitive manifesto defending the region's conservative agrarian society. From 1934 he taught at several institutions, including Princeton University and the University of Minnesota, becoming a leading exponent of the New Criticism. He emphasized the writer's need for tradition, which he found in Southern culture and later in Roman Catholicism, to which he converted in 1950. His best-known poem is "Ode to the Confederate Dead" (1926)
Allen W Dulles
born April 7, 1893, Watertown, N.Y., U.S. died Jan. 29, 1969, Washington, D.C. U.S. diplomat and administrator. He held diplomatic posts before practicing law with his brother, John Foster Dulles. In World War II he served in the Office of Strategic Services. After the war he chaired a committee to survey the U.S. intelligence system. When the Central Intelligence Agency was established in 1951, he became its deputy director. As director (1953-61), he oversaw the agency's early successes, but the U-2 Affair (1960) and the Bay of Pigs invasion (1961) led to his resignation
Allen Welsh Dulles
born April 7, 1893, Watertown, N.Y., U.S. died Jan. 29, 1969, Washington, D.C. U.S. diplomat and administrator. He held diplomatic posts before practicing law with his brother, John Foster Dulles. In World War II he served in the Office of Strategic Services. After the war he chaired a committee to survey the U.S. intelligence system. When the Central Intelligence Agency was established in 1951, he became its deputy director. As director (1953-61), he oversaw the agency's early successes, but the U-2 Affair (1960) and the Bay of Pigs invasion (1961) led to his resignation
Allen key
a tool used to turn an Allen screw American Equivalent: Allen wrench (From the Allen Manufacturing Company of Hartford, Connecticut, USA)
Allen screw
a type of screw with a hole that has six sides
Allen wrench
A rod with six sides and often L-shaped Used to remove certain screws and fastenings, especially set screws Sometimes called "hex wrenches" or "Allen key "
Allen wrench
(Otomotiv) An L-shaped tool that works like a screwdriver, designed to remove screws with hexagonal holes in their heads. They are sometimes called hex wrenches
Allen wrench
Hexagon (6-point) tip used to fit socket head screws or setscrews
Allen wrench
An L-shaped tool that works like a screwdriver, designed to remove screws with hexagonal holes in their heads They are sometimes called hex wrenches
Allen wrench
A wrench used specifically for allen-head screws
Allen wrench
Size-specific "L"-shaped loosening and tightening tool Also referred to as hex key
Allen wrench
A tool consisting of an L-shaped bar with a hexagonal head, used to turn screws with hexagonal sockets. a tool used to turn an Allen screw British Equivalent: Allen key (Allen Manufacturing Company of Hartford, Connecticut)
allen screw
a screw with a hexagonal hole in the head
allen spanner
type of wrench
allen wrench
a wrench for Allen screws
Paul Allen's flower flies
plural form of Paul Allen's flower fly
Paul Allen's flower fly
A species of flower fly from Costa Rica, scientific name Eristalis alleni
Van Allen belt
Any of similar areas around another planet
Van Allen belt
Either of two torus-shaped areas of high-energy charged particles which partly surround Earth, trapped by its magnetic field. The areas are characterised by intense radiation. When the belts "overload", particles strike the upper atmosphere and fluoresce, causing the polar aurora
Van Allen belts
plural form of Van Allen belt
Van Allen radiation belt
Any of similar areas around another planet
Van Allen radiation belt
Either of two torus-shaped areas of high-energy charged particles which partly surround Earth, trapped by its magnetic field. The areas are characterised by intense radiation. When the belts "overload", particles strike the upper atmosphere and fluoresce, causing the polar aurora
Van Allen radiation belts
plural form of Van Allen radiation belt
Ethan Allen
born Jan. 21, 1738, Litchfield, Conn. died Feb. 12, 1789, Burlington, Vt., U.S. American soldier and frontiersman. After fighting in the French and Indian War (1754-63), he settled in what is now Vermont. At the outbreak of the American Revolution, his force of Green Mountain Boys (organized in 1770) helped defeat the British in the Battle of Ticonderoga (1775). As a volunteer with troops commanded by Gen. Philip Schuyler, he attempted to take Montreal but was captured by the British and held prisoner until 1778. He returned to Vermont, where he worked for statehood. Failing to achieve this, he attempted to negotiate the annexation of Vermont to Canada
John Orley Allen Tate
born Nov. 19, 1899, Winchester, Ky., U.S. died Feb. 9, 1979, Nashville, Tenn. U.S. poet and novelist. While attending Vanderbilt University Tate helped found The Fugitive (1922-25), a poetry magazine concentrating largely on the South, and contributed to I'll Take My Stand (1930), a Fugitive manifesto defending the region's conservative agrarian society. From 1934 he taught at several institutions, including Princeton University and the University of Minnesota, becoming a leading exponent of the New Criticism. He emphasized the writer's need for tradition, which he found in Southern culture and later in Roman Catholicism, to which he converted in 1950. His best-known poem is "Ode to the Confederate Dead" (1926)
Mel Allen
orig. Melvin Allen Israel born Feb. 14, 1913, Birmingham, Ala., U.S. died June 16, 1996, Greenwich, Conn. U.S. sports broadcaster. As lead announcer for the New York Yankees baseball team (1940-64), he was known for his congeniality and his catchphrase "How about that!" He hosted the television program This Week in Baseball (1977-95). In 1978 Allen and Red Barber became the first broadcasters elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame
Paul Allen
{i} (born 1953) United States entrepreneur, cofounder of Microsoft, one of the richest men in the world
Richard Allen
born Feb. 14, 1760, Philadelphia, Pa. died March 26, 1831, Philadelphia U.S. religious leader. He was born to slave parents, and his family was sold to a Delaware farmer. A Methodist convert at 17, he was licensed to preach five years later. By 1786 he had purchased his freedom and settled in Philadelphia, where he joined St. George's Methodist Episcopal Church. Racial discrimination prompted him to withdraw in 1787, and he turned an old blacksmith shop into the first black church in the U.S. Allen and his followers built the Bethel African Methodist Church, and in 1799 he was ordained as its minister. In 1816 he organized a conference of black leaders to form the African Methodist Episcopal Church, of which he was named the first bishop
Rodney Allen Brooks
born Dec. 30, 1954, Adelaide, S.Aus., Austl. Australian computer scientist. By the time he finished his doctorate (1981) at Stanford University, Calif., Brooks was disillusioned by the traditional "model-based" approach to artificial intelligence (AI). After moving to the Mobile Robotics Laboratory at MIT in 1984, he built simple robots that could perform "insectlike" actions on the premise that practical learning comes from interacting with the real world. In 1997 Brooks became director of the MIT AI Research Laboratory
Steve Allen
v. orig. Stephen Valentine Patrick William Allen born Dec. 26, 1921, New York, N.Y., U.S. died Oct. 30, 2000, Los Angeles, Calif. U.S. entertainer and songwriter. He appeared as a comedian on radio in the 1940s before moving to late-night television, where he created and hosted The Tonight Show (1953-57) and The Steve Allen Show (1957-60). He hosted several other television shows, including Meeting of Minds (1977-81). He composed over 3,000 songs, including "Picnic" and "Impossible," and appeared in films such as The Benny Goodman Story (1956) and The Sunshine Boys (1975)
Tim Allen
(born 1953) American actor and writer, star of the television sitcom "Home Improvement" and the film "The Santa Clause
Van Allen radiation belts
Two doughnut-shaped zones of highly energetic charged particles (see electric charge) trapped at high altitudes in Earth's magnetic field. Named for James A. Van Allen (b. 1914), who discovered them in 1958, they are most intense over the Equator and effectively absent above the poles. The two zones merge gradually, with the flux of charged particles showing two regions of maximum density. The inner one, mostly protons thought to be produced by primary cosmic rays striking the atmosphere, is centred about 3,700 mi (6,000 km) above Earth's surface. The outer region includes some helium ions from the solar wind and is centred about 12,500 mi (20,000 km) above Earth's surface. Intense solar activity (see solar cycle) causes disruptions of the belts, linked in turn with such phenomena as auroras and magnetic storms
William Allen White
born Feb. 10, 1868, Emporia, Kan., U.S. died Jan. 29, 1944, Emporia U.S. journalist. White purchased the Emporia Daily and Weekly Gazette in 1895. His editorial writing was a mixture of tolerance, optimism, liberal Republicanism, and provincialism. His widely circulated 1896 editorial "What's the Matter with Kansas?" was credited with helping elect William McKinley president. He also wrote fiction, biographies, and an autobiography. His son and successor, William Lindsay White (1900-73), wrote one of the best-selling books on World War II, They Were Expendable (1942)
Woody Allen
{i} (born 1935 as Allen Stewart Konigsberg) Jewish United States filmmaker and actor
Woody Allen
a US film director who also acts in his own humorous films, which are often about people who live in New York City and have problems in their relationships (1935- ). orig. Allen Stewart Konigsberg born Dec. 1, 1935, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S. U.S. film director, screenwriter, and actor. After writing routines for comedians and performing as a nightclub comic, he wrote the Broadway play Don't Drink the Water (1966). His early films, such as Bananas (1971) and Sleeper (1973), combined highbrow comedy and slapstick. Later romantic comedies such as Annie Hall (1977), which won him two Academy Awards, and Manhattan (1979) offered a bittersweet view of New York life. He continued making films into the 21st century, most notably Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), and Bullets over Broadway (1994)
van allen
United States physicist who discovered two belts of charged particles from the solar wind trapped by the Earth's magnetic field (born in 1914)
van allen belt
a belt of charged particles (resulting from cosmic rays) above the Earth trapped by the Earth's magnetic field
Türkisch - Englisch
allene
allen

    Silbentrennung

    Al·len

    Türkische aussprache

    älın

    Aussprache

    /ˈalən/ /ˈælən/

    Videos

    ... with the with the profits of this nation will be able to allen ...
    ... AUDIENCE: Hi, my name is Caleb Allen. ...
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