bacon

listen to the pronunciation of bacon
Englisch - Türkisch
(Gıda) jambon

Jambon ya da sosis ister misin? - Would you like bacon or sausage?

domuz pastırması

Ben her zaman balığa çıkıyor olamam, eve domuz pastırması getirmek zorundayım. - I can't be going fishing all the time, I have to bring home the bacon.

Sadece biraz domuz pastırması istiyorum, bu kadar. - I just want some bacon, that's all.

bir şeyde muvaffak olmak
bring home the bacon istediğini elde etmek
beykin
{i} tütsülenmiş domuz eti
domuz pastırma

Kahvaltı için domuz pastırmalı sahanda yumurta istiyor musun? - Do you want fried eggs with bacon for breakfast?

Biraz daha domuz pastırması ister misiniz? - Do you want some more bacon?

{i} beykın, tuzlanmış/tütsülenmiş domuz böğrü/sırtı
hayvanın yan ve sırt tarafından elde edilen tuzlanmış veya tütsülenmiş domuz eti
{i} beykın

Bir BLT sandviçi, ekmek, beykın, marul, domates ve mayonezden oluşur. - A BLT sandwich is made up of bread, bacon, lettuce, tomatoes and mayonnaise.

BLT beykın, marul ve domates anlamına gelir. - BLT stands for bacon, lettuce and tomato.

bacon
domuz yağı
pastırmalı
bacon and eggs
beykinli yumurta
bacon dumplings
pastırma köfte
bacon rind
pastırma kabuklu
smoked bacon
(Gıda) jambon füme
oriental bacon
pastırma
a rasher of bacon
domuz pastırması dilimi
a rasher of bacon
domuz salamı dilimi
bring home the bacon
evin geçimini sağlamak
bring home the bacon
ekmek parası kazanmak
bring home the bacon
başarmak
bring home the bacon
{k} (deyim) hayatını kazanmak,para kazanmak,bir iş veya görevde başarılı olmak
bring home the bacon
{k} ailesinin geçimini sağlamak, ailesini geçindirmek
give me several slices of bacon, please
birkaç dilim domuz pastırması verin lütfen
save bacon
(deyim) save one's/aomeone's bacon [kd] yakayi kurtarmak,pacayi kurtarmak
save one's bacon
cezadan kurtulmak
save one's bacon
postu kurtarmak
save one's bacon
ölümden kurtulmak
save one's bacon
paçayı sıyırmak
who brings home the bacon
evin geçimini sağlayan kimse
Türkisch - Türkisch
Domuz pastırması
Englisch - Englisch
Thin slices of the above in long strips
Cured meat from the sides, belly, or back of a pig, particularly, or sometimes other animals
{n} hog's flesh cured with salt and dried
Very rough, hazardous road surface conditions
Thin drapery speleothem formed on concave walls; minerals, generally iron, cause parallel banding
{i} thin slices of pork meat; (Slang) money
"The duty and office of Rhetoric is to apply Reason to Imagination for the better moving of the will" (629)
The back and sides of a pig salted and smoked; formerly, the flesh of a pig salted or fresh
A cut of meat from the sides, belly or back a pig, particularly, or sometimes other animals
This is bacon in a chunk You must slice it by hand (and may want to remove the rind first) Slab bacon is often the only way to find top-quality bacon
back and sides of a hog salted and dried or smoked; usually sliced thin and fried
bacon in a chunk You must slice it by hand (and may want to remove the rind first) Slab bacon is often the only way to find top-quality bacon
The sides, breast, and back portions of a pig, salted and smoked A good bacon piece should have a thin white fat A piece with yellowish fat should be avoided
English scientist and Franciscan monk who stressed the importance of experimentation; first showed that air is required for combustion and first used lenses to correct vision (1220-1292)
Bacon is salted or smoked meat which comes from the back or sides of a pig. Irish-born British painter best known for his portraits in which subjects are distorted and invested with feelings of terror. English-born American colonist who led Bacon's Rebellion (1676), in which a group of frontiersmen captured and burned Jamestown in an attempt to gain reforms and greater participation in the government of Virginia. English friar, scientist, and philosopher whose Opus Majus (1267) argued that Christian studies should encompass the sciences. Bacon Francis Viscount St. Albans Bacon Francis Bacon Nathaniel Bacon Roger Fall Albert Bacon
back and sides of a hog salted and dried or smoked; usually sliced thin and fried English statesman and philosopher; precursor of British empiricism; advocated inductive reasoning (1561-1626) English scientist and Franciscan monk who stressed the importance of experimentation; first showed that air is required for combustion and first used lenses to correct vision (1220-1292)
A thin slice of pork in a long strip that is fried to a crisp
English statesman and philosopher; precursor of British empiricism; advocated inductive reasoning (1561-1626)
pancetta
bacon and cabbage
A popular dish consisting of a large piece of boiling bacon simmered with cabbage and other vegetables such as onions, turnips and carrots. Served with the bacon sliced and much of the boiled liquid retained with the vegetables
bacon fed
Fat, greasy
bacon rind
The tough out skin of pork or bacon
bacon-faced
having a fat, sleek face
bacon and eggs
eggs (fried or scrambled) served with bacon
bacon and eggs
legs (Slang in London Cockney)
bacon rind
(Slang used in London Cockney) blind
bacon rind
the rind of bacon
bacon strip
a slice of bacon
bacon-lettuce-tomato sandwich
sandwich filled with slices of bacon and tomato with lettuce
a good voice to beg bacon
said in ridicule of a bad voice
bring home the bacon
To have a remunerative job; to have a career which satisfies one's financial needs

No one brought home the bacon better than Stevens.

get the bacon bad
To be morbidly obese
save someone's bacon
To save someone's life

the tide being fortunately in our favour, we reached the Saint Vincent in good time, going up the accommodation ladder on the port side, which, as you know, is devoted to the use of the lower deck portion of the crew, just as Eight Bells struck. Ha, my lads, cried the Jaunty, who stood by the entry-port, you've just saved your bacon!.

save someone's bacon
to prevent an undesirable occurrence
side of bacon
A salted and cured longitudinal half of a pig with the legs and shoulders removed
streaky bacon
Bacon made from pork belly rather than from side or back cuts
Albert Bacon Fall
born Nov. 26, 1861, Frankfort, Ky., U.S. died Nov. 30, 1944, El Paso, Texas U.S. secretary of the interior (1921-23). He began practicing law in New Mexico Territory in 1889. He served in the U.S. Senate from 1913 to 1921, when he was appointed Secretary of the Interior by Pres. Warren G. Harding. He resigned his cabinet post two years later and returned to New Mexico. In 1924 a Senate investigation revealed that Fall had accepted a large bribe to lease to private oil interests, without competitive bidding, naval oil reserve lands in the Teapot Dome reserve in Wyoming and other reserves in California. He was convicted of bribery in 1929 and served nine months of a one-year prison sentence. See also Teapot Dome scandal
Canadian bacon
{i} boneless cured strip of pork loin that tastes like ham and is packed in a cylindrical piece to be sliced
Canadian bacon
Cured rolled bacon from the loin of a pig. meat from the back or sides of a pig, served in thin narrow pieces
Francis Bacon
an Irish artist who is famous for painting people and animals in twisted shapes with dark, strong colours (1909-92). born Oct. 28, 1909, Dublin, Ire. died April 28, 1992, Madrid, Spain Irish-British painter. He lived in Berlin and Paris before settling in London (1929) to begin a career as an interior decorator. With no formal art training, he started painting, drawing, and participating in gallery exhibitions, with little success. In 1944 he achieved instant notoriety with a series of controversial paintings, Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion. His mature style emerged completely with the series of works known as "The Screaming Popes" (1949-mid-1950s), in which he converted Diego Velázquez's famous Portrait of Pope Innocent X into a nightmarish icon of hysterical terror. Most of Bacon's paintings depict isolated figures, often framed by geometric constructions, and rendered in smeared, violent colours. His imagery typically suggests anger, horror, and degradation
Francis Bacon
{i} (1561-1626) English politician and philosopher who advocated inductive reasoning ; (1909-1992) Irish-born British painter
Francis Viscount St. Albans Bacon
born Jan. 22, 1561, London, Eng. died April 9, 1626, London British statesman and philosopher, father of modern scientific method. He studied at Cambridge and at Gray's Inn. A supporter of the Earl of Essex, Bacon turned against him when Essex was tried for treason. Under James I he rose steadily, becoming successively solicitor general (1607), attorney general (1613), and lord chancellor (1618). Convicted of accepting bribes from those being tried in his court, he was briefly imprisoned and permanently lost his public offices; he died deeply in debt. He attempted to put natural science on a firm empirical foundation in the Novum Organum (1620), which sets forth his scientific method. His elaborate classification of the sciences inspired the 18th-century French Encyclopedists (see Encyclopédie), and his empiricism inspired 19th-century British philosophers of science. His other works include The Advancement of Learning (1605), History of Henry VII (1622), and several important legal and constitutional works
Kevin Bacon
(born 1958) American film and television actor who acted in "Apollo 13" and "JFK
Nathaniel Bacon
born Jan. 2, 1647, Suffolk, Eng. died October 1676, Virginia Colony British-born American colonial planter, leader of Bacon's Rebellion. He emigrated from England in 1673 and acquired land in Virginia, where he was appointed to the council of William Berkeley, the British governor. After a dispute over Indian policy, he defied Berkeley's orders and organized an expedition against the Indians in 1676. He then turned his forces against Berkeley, captured Jamestown, and briefly controlled most of Virginia. His death at age 29 of influenza, at the height of his power, ended the rebellion
Roger Bacon
born 1220, Ilchester, Somerset, or Bisley, Gloucester?, Eng. died 1292, Oxford English scientist and philosopher. He was educated at Oxford and the University of Paris and joined the Franciscan order in 1247. He displayed a prodigious energy and zeal in the pursuit of experimental science; his studies eventually won him a place in popular literature as a worker of wonders. He was the first European to describe in detail the process of making gunpowder, and he proposed flying machines and motorized ships and carriages. He therefore represents a historically precocious expression of the empirical spirit of experimental science, even though his actual practice of it seems to have been exaggerated. His philosophical thought was essentially Aristotelian, though he was critical of the methods of theologians such as Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas, arguing that a more accurate experimental knowledge of nature would be of great value in confirming the Christian faith. He also wrote on mathematics and logic. He was condemned to prison 1277 by his fellow Franciscans because of "suspected novelties" in his teaching
Sir Francis Bacon
an English politician, philosopher, and writer (1561-1626)
bring home the bacon
(Slang) provide for one's family, financially support one's family
canadian bacon
from a boned strip of cured loin
save one's bacon
save oneself, rescue oneself from a bad situation
sell one's bacon
sell oneself, sell oneself into slavery
streaky bacon
Streaky bacon is bacon which has stripes of fat between stripes of meat. smoked or salted meat from a pig that has lines of fat going through it
bacon

    Silbentrennung

    Ba·con

    Türkische aussprache

    beykın

    Aussprache

    /ˈbākən/ /ˈbeɪkən/

    Etymologie

    [ 'bA-k&n ] (noun.) 14th century. From Middle English bacon (“meat from the back and sides of a pig”), from Anglo-Norman bacon, bacun (“ham, flitch, strip of lard”), from Old Low Frankish *bakko (“ham, flitch”), from Proto-Germanic *bakkōn (“back”), from Proto-Indo-European *bhAg- (“back, buttocks”). Cognate with Old High German bahho, bacho (“back, ham, side of bacon”) (compare Alemannic German Bache, Bachen), Old Saxon baco (“back”), Dutch bake (“side of bacon, ham”), Old English bæc (“back”). More at back.

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    ... showing him Frances bacon photos, which is, like, all ...
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