chambers

listen to the pronunciation of chambers
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} kiralık odalar
i., çoğ. hâkimin oturum dışı konularda çalıştığı yer
(isim) kiralık odalar
chamber
{i} oda

Hava bir odada sıkıştırıldığında hayli ısı yalıtımı sağlar. - Air provides considerable thermal insulation when trapped in a chamber.

Birçok küçük işletme sahipleri bir ticaret odasına aittir. - Many small business owners belong to a chamber of commerce.

chamber
hazne
chambers of commerce
ticaret odaları
chamber
{i} bölme
chamber
yasama meclisi
chamber
hakimin özel odası
chamber
kabul salonu
chamber
(Hukuk) senato
chamber
oda vermek
chamber
(Tıp) kapalı yer
chamber
(Kanun) yargıç odası
chamber
(Tıp) odacık
chamber
(Denizbilim) kap
chamber
kompartıman
chamber
(Jeoloji) loca
chamber
kamara
chamber
lonca
chamber
(Tıp) dolap
chamber
ingiliz yasama meclisi
chamber
salon
chamber
hazne (silah)
chamber
(Tıp) tank
chamber
(Politika, Siyaset) resmi konut
chamber
meclis
chamber
kısım
chamber
(Politika, Siyaset) saray
chamber
hazne (tüfek)
chamber
(Avcılık) mermi yatağı
chamber
kapalı bölüm
chamber
uğraştırıcı olma
chamber
düşündürücü
chamber
jüri üyesine itiraz
chamber
ilginç
chamber
{f} oda ver
chamber
özel bir amaç için ayrılmış oda
Chamber
karain
chamber
Meslek odası

The chamber of environmental engineering raises an objection to new law.

chamber
büro
chamber
boşluk
chamber
{i} kamara, İngiliz yasama meclisi
chamber
teşrii meclis
chamber
{i} oda, yatak odası, özel oda
chamber
hâkimin oturum dışı konularda çalıştıgı oda
chamber
(Askeri) HÜCRE: bkz: "ballonet balloon"
chamber
saray veya resmi ikametgah odası
chamber
(Askeri) Fişek yatağı, barut yatağı, mermi yatağı
chamber
fişek yatağı odaya koymak
chamber
{i} daire
chamber
oda,v.oda ver: n.oda
chamber
{i} mahkeme, komisyon
chamber
{i} yatak odası
chamber
{i} fişek yatağı
in chambers
hakimin özel odasında
Englisch - Englisch
A judge's private office
plural form of chamber
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of chamber
The rooms used by a barrister or to an association of barristers
Chambers Robert and William Chambers David Whittaker Jay Vivian Chambers
A judge's office Also usually where the judge's clerks work
plural of , chamber
A judge's private office in the courthouse
The two meeting places of the House and Senate where the formal businessof the day is conducted Chamber galleries are open to the public
The private office or room of a judge
Private office or room of a judge
Shorthand for The Chambers Dictionary
third-person singular of chamber
{i} room wherein a judge can privately talk with lawyers or hear cases not taken to court; (British) suite of rooms used by attorneys
The traditional name for the barrister’s office
The private office of a Judge or Commissioner, where s/he hears motions and signs orders when not holding court
There are hundreds of underground manmade stone chambers in Massachusetts of unknown origin and conjectured purpose There is much debate and controversy over this Everything from Irish Culdee Monks to Colonial's root cellars to Native American construction has been proposed From inside, some of these chambers view significant celestial events, and most are tall enough to stand up in
Vesicles or vughs connected by a channel or channels
Private office suite of the judge and his/her staff Proceedings held in chambers are rarely open to the press, and only by permission of the judge
A judge's office
A judge's private office A hearing in chambers takes place in the judge's office outside of the presence of the jury and the public
English architect (1723-1796)
blue chambers
plural form of blue chamber
bubble chambers
plural form of bubble chamber
chamber
In martial arts, to prepare an offensive, defensive, or counteroffensive action by drawing a limb or weapon to a position where it may be charged with kinetic energy

Bob chambered his fist for a blow, but Sheila, having studied her Agrippa, used Bruce Lee's one-inch punch to break his nose.

combustion chambers
plural form of combustion chamber
echo chambers
plural form of echo chamber
gas chambers
plural form of gas chamber
lower chambers
plural form of lower chamber
magma chambers
plural form of magma chamber
upper chambers
plural form of upper chamber
chamber
{i} room (particularly a bedroom); office; meeting room; legislature; compartment
chamber
{n} a part of a house, gune or mine, a cavity
chamber
{v} to riot, revel, intrigue, keep close
David Whittaker Chambers
v. orig. Jay Vivian Chambers born April 1, 1901, Philadelphia died July 9, 1961, near Westminster, Md., U.S. U.S. journalist and principal figure in the Alger Hiss case. He joined the Communist Party in 1923 and worked at various times as an editor at New Masses, The Daily Worker, and Time magazine. In testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee in August 1948, he named former State Department official Alger Hiss as a fellow member of a 1930s Communist spy ring. Hiss denied the charges and sued Chambers for slander. In the trials that followed, Chambers produced material he claimed Hiss had given him to pass along to Soviet agents. His autobiography, Witness, was published in 1952
John Chambers
{i} President and General Manager of the Cisco Systems computer company in California (USA)
Robert and William Chambers
born July 10, 1802, Peebles, Tweeddale, Scot. died March 17, 1871, St. Andrews, Fifeshire born 1800, Peebles died 1883 Scottish publishers. Robert, who began business as a bookstall keeper in Edinburgh, wrote historical, literary, and geological works. In 1832 the brothers started Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, which led to the establishment of the publishing firm W. & R. Chambers, Ltd. Their Chambers's Encyclopaedia (1859-68) was based on a translation of the German Konversations-Lexikon. Considered scholarly and reliable on historical subjects, the encyclopaedia has gone through several editions, but the lack of a continuous revision system has led to the dating of much of its material
Whittaker Chambers
v. orig. Jay Vivian Chambers born April 1, 1901, Philadelphia died July 9, 1961, near Westminster, Md., U.S. U.S. journalist and principal figure in the Alger Hiss case. He joined the Communist Party in 1923 and worked at various times as an editor at New Masses, The Daily Worker, and Time magazine. In testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee in August 1948, he named former State Department official Alger Hiss as a fellow member of a 1930s Communist spy ring. Hiss denied the charges and sued Chambers for slander. In the trials that followed, Chambers produced material he claimed Hiss had given him to pass along to Soviet agents. His autobiography, Witness, was published in 1952
at chambers
in the judge's office
chamber
place in a chamber
chamber
To be lascivious
chamber
Another word for House of Representatives of Senate Also refers to the actual room where legislative action takes place
chamber
To place in a chamber, as a round of ammunition
chamber
To create or modify a gun to be a specific caliber
chamber
a natural or artificial enclosed space
chamber
A chamber is a room designed and equipped for a particular purpose. For many, the dentist's surgery remains a torture chamber. see also gas chamber. bubble chamber chamber music chamber of commerce cloud chamber Star Chamber hyperbaric chamber recompression chamber decompression chamber
chamber
That part of the bore of a piece of ordnance which holds the charge, esp
chamber
{f} place in a chamber; assign a room to
chamber
A narrower portion of the bore, at its base Most typically found in howitzers, it allows a projectile to be fired using less powder than a gun of the same caliber
chamber
The meeting place for the membership of either the House or Senate A chamber is often referred to as "the floor "
chamber
as regards the U S government, either the House of Representatives or the Senate
chamber
Part of the gun in which the propellant charge is placed In a bag gun, that space between the obturator or breechblock and the forcing cone In fixed or semi-fixed ammunition, the space occupied by the cartridge case
chamber
To enclose in a room
chamber
A short piece of ordnance or cannon, which stood on its breech, without any carriage, formerly used chiefly for rejoicings and theatrical cannonades
chamber
A room, especially one used primarily for sleeping; bedroom, sleeping room
chamber
The rear part of the barrel that is formed to accept the cartridge to be fired A revolver employs a multi-chambered rotating cylinder separated from the stationary barrel
chamber
The rear end of a gun barrel, into which the powder charge was rammed when loading Chambers of howitzers and mortars were usually smaller in diameter then the bore
chamber
  The official room or location for meetings of a legislative body
chamber
A cavity in a mine, usually of a cubical form, to contain the powder
chamber
A chamber pot
chamber
To reside in or occupy a chamber or chambers
chamber
A retired room, esp
chamber
1) An Echo Chamber (a room designed with very hard, non-parallel surfaces equipped with a speaker and microphone so that when dry signals from the console are fed to the speaker, the microphone will have a reverberation of these signals that can be mixed in with the dry signals at the console) 2) A program in a delay/reverb effects device that simulates the sound of an Echo Chamber
chamber
The place in which the senate or house of representatives meet Also a generic way to refer to a house of the legislature
chamber
in breech-loading guns
chamber
a room where a judge transacts business
chamber
The place where the Senate and House of Representatives meet
chamber
the meeting room of a house of Parliament
chamber
To shut up, as in a chamber
chamber
One of the legislative bodies in a government where multiple such bodies exist, or a single such body in comparison to others
chamber
In a firearm, this is the portion of the weapon that holds the ammunition round immediately prior to (and during initiation of) its discharge
chamber
A room or rooms where a lawyer transacts business; a room or rooms where a judge transacts such official business as may be done out of court
chamber
The Assembly or Senate chamber where Floor Sessions are held
chamber
an enclosed volume (as the aqueous chamber of the eyeball or the chambers of the heart)
chamber
A hall, as where a king gives audience, or a deliberative body or assembly meets; as, presence chamber; senate chamber
chamber
A meeting place for either the House or Senate (as opposed to a committee room)
chamber
The meeting place for the membership of either the House or the Senate
chamber
an upper room used for sleeping; a bedroom; as, the house had four chambers
chamber
Apartments in a lodging house
chamber
A chamber is a large room, especially one that is used for formal meetings. We are going to make sure we are in the council chamber every time he speaks
chamber
a natural or artificial enclosed space a room where a judge transacts business an enclosed volume (as the aqueous chamber of the eyeball or the chambers of the heart) a deliberative or legislative or administrative or judicial assembly; "the upper chamber is the senate"
chamber
when of different diameter from the rest of the bore; formerly, in guns, made smaller than the bore, but now larger, esp
chamber
a room used primarily for sleeping
chamber
(see holding chamber) This is a component of the AeroMask* Equine System that holds the aerosol cloud in suspension while the horse inhales It serves to separate the large, non-respirable particles from the small particles which are inhaled
chamber
Either the House of Representatives or the Senate
chamber
(also called holding chamber) This is a component of the AeroKat* Feline Aerosol Chamber that holds the aerosol cloud in suspension while the feline inhales It serves to separate the large, non-respirable particles from the small particles which are inhaled
chamber
The place where a house of parliament sits In Queensland there is only one active chamber, the Legislative Assembly The Legislative Council was abolished in 1922
chamber
An enclosed space. For example, a test chamber is typically a closable case where devices under test are placed
chamber
The bodies, the Senate and the House of Representatives that comprise Congress and [2] the ornate meeting rooms in the Capitol building where the Senate and the House conducts its business
chamber
Also known as the "floor," it is the room in which the Senate or the House of Representatives meets
chamber
You can refer to a country's parliament or to one section of it as a chamber. More than 80 parties are contesting seats in the two-chamber parliament Signor Amato's government has only a 16-seat majority in the Chamber of Deputies. = house
chamber
To furnish with a chamber; as, to chamber a gun
chamber
A compartment or cell; an inclosed space or cavity; as, the chamber of a canal lock; the chamber of a furnace; the chamber of the eye
chamber
A legislative or judicial body; an assembly; a society or association; as, the Chamber of Deputies; the Chamber of Commerce
chamber
A legislative, judicial or deliberative assembly
chamber
The meeting place for the membership of either house of the legislature where official business by the entire membership is conducted
chamber
—A place where the legislative body meets to conduct business In the U S we have two chambers, one each for the House and Senate respectively
chamber
a deliberative or legislative or administrative or judicial assembly; "the upper chamber is the senate"
chamber
the meeting room of a house of Parliament a law-making body
gas chambers
chambers into which was streamed a deadly gas in the extermination camps that the Nazis set up during WWII
in chambers
within the judge's private office (Law)
judges' chambers
judge's office, private room where a judge performs research and holds private meetings
chambers

    Silbentrennung

    cham·bers

    Türkische aussprache

    çeymbırz

    Aussprache

    /ˈʧāmbərz/ /ˈʧeɪmbɜrz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'chAm-b&r ] (noun.) 13th century. Middle English chambre, from Old French, from Late Latin camera, from Latin, arched roof, from Greek kamara vault.
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