envelopes

listen to the pronunciation of envelopes
Englisch - Türkisch
zarflar

Bütün bu zarfların üstüne pul yapıştırmam gerekiyor. - I need to put stamps on all these envelopes.

Bazı zarflar istiyorum. - I would like some envelopes.

envelope
zarf

Benim bir zarfa, bir parça kağıda ve kurşun kaleme ya da bir dolma kaleme ihtiyacım var. - I need an envelope, a piece of paper, and a pencil or a pen.

Ben zarfı açtım ve bir mektup çıkardım. - I opened the envelope and pulled out a letter.

envelopes and labels
(Bilgisayar) zarflar ve etiketler
envelop
{f} kuşatmak
envelope
kılıf
envelope
mektup zarfı
envelope
(Tıp) Sarmak, örtmek, etrafını çevirmek
envelop
sarmalamak
envelop
zarf

Zarfın üstüne yanlış adres yazdım. - I wrote the wrong address on the envelope.

Ben zarfı açtım ve bir mektup çıkardım. - I opened the envelope and pulled out a letter.

envelop
kapatmak
envelope
sarıt
envelope
dış kabuk
envelope
sarmak
envelope
kaplamak
envelop
kaplamak
envelop
sar
envelop
sarmak
envelop
örtmek
envelope
{f} zarfla

Bazı zarflar istiyorum. - I would like some envelopes.

Bütün bu zarfların üstüne pul yapıştırmam gerekiyor. - I need to put stamps on all these envelopes.

Envelope
teketek
envelope
kabu
envelop
kuşatma
envelop
envelopmentsarma
envelop
örtme
envelop
(Askeri) KUŞATMAK: Düşmanın bir yanına veya her iki yanına birden taarruz etmek. Bu kuşatma, genel olarak, düşman cephesine taarruz etmek suretiyle de yapılır
envelope
{i} torba [(Anatomi) ]
envelope
zar

Ben zarfı açtım ve bir mektup çıkardım. - I opened the envelope and pulled out a letter.

Zarfın üstüne yanlış adres yazdım. - I wrote the wrong address on the envelope.

envelope
torba
envelope
(Tıp) Herhangi bir şeyi dıştan saran oluşum, zar örtü
envelope
{i} örtü
envelope
örtü/zarf
envelope
(Askeri) ZARF: Bir balonun dış tarafı. Bu terimi kuşatmak anlamına gelen "envelop" ile karıştırmamalıdır
envelope
{f} kapla
envelope
bürüm
Englisch - Englisch
Envelopes refers to a type of document created in Mail Merge that contains only one record per page
plural of envelope
Email messages are stored in electronic "envelopes" while they are being moved from place to place by various email programs Envelopes are used only by programs; users see only the header and body of a message
envelop
To surround or enclose

b) sporophyte with foot reduced, the entire sporophyte enveloped by the calyptra, which is ± stipitate at the base.

envelope
A bag containing the lifting gas of a balloon or airship; fabric that encloses the gas-bags of an airship
envelope
Something that envelops; a wrapping
envelope
A paper or cardboard wrapper used to enclose small, flat items, especially letters, for mailing
envelope
The shape of a sound, which may be controlled by a synthesizer or sampler
envelop
{v} to wrap, fold, cover, surround, hide
envelope
{n} a wrapper, fold, outward case, work
airmail envelopes
special envelopes which are designed for sending air mail
envelop
{f} enwrap, enfold, encase, enclose
envelop
A curve or surface which is tangent to each member of a system of curves or surfaces, the form and position of the members of the system being allowed to vary according to some continuous law
envelop
enclose or enfold completely with or as if with a covering; "Fog enveloped the house
envelop
It is sometimes raised in the ditch and sometimes beyond it
envelop
enclose or enfold completely with or as if with a covering; "Fog enveloped the house"
envelop
To put a covering about; to wrap up or in; to inclose within a case, wrapper, integument or the like; to surround entirely; as, to envelop goods or a letter; the fog envelops a ship
envelop
the cover or wrapper of a document, as of a letter
envelop
Thus, any curve is the envelope of its tangents
envelop
A work of earth, in the form of a single parapet or of a small rampart
envelop
If one thing envelops another, it covers or surrounds it completely. That lovely, rich fragrant smell of the forest enveloped us an enveloping sense of well-being. to cover or wrap something or someone up completely envelop in (envoloper, from voloper )
envelop
The nebulous covering of the head or nucleus of a comet; called also coma
envelop
That which envelops, wraps up, encases, or surrounds; a wrapper; an inclosing cover; esp
envelope
The nebulous covering of the head or nucleus of a comet; called also coma
envelope
The part of an e-mail message that contains the information needed to forward a message to the recipients The envelope is important to messaging servers and is not usually seen by users
envelope
A curve that bounds another curve or set of curves, as the modulation envelope of an amplitude-modulated carrier wave in electronics
envelope
a natural covering (as by a fluid); "the spacecraft detected an envelope of gas around the comet"
envelope
any wrapper or covering a flat rectangular paper container for papers the bag containing the gas in a balloon the maximum operating capability of a system; "test pilots try to push the envelope"
envelope
A shape that changes as a function of time The shape of a synthesizer's envelope is controlled by a set of rate (or time) and level parameters The envelope is a control signal that can be applied to various aspects of a synth sound, such as pitch, filter cutoff frequency, and overall amplitude Usually, each note has its own envelope(s)
envelope
An envelope is the rectangular paper cover in which you send a letter to someone through the post
envelope
The characteristic change in amplitude throughout time which all sounds possess The envelope of a sound has a number of features: whether it sustains like a bowed violin string; whether it decays like a plucked violin string or a single strike of a drum; and how quickly the sound reaches its fullest intensity - how the sound "attacks" While the envelope of any specific sound has specific characteristics determined by the way the sound was generated, it should be realised that real sounds occur in real situations and the envelope of a sound will change according to the environment it occupies A clave in a cave may appear (what is the sonic equivalent of the eye-based "appear"?) to have a longer envelope than when it is played in the open air
envelope
A curve or surface which is tangent to each member of a system of curves or surfaces, the form and position of the members of the system being allowed to vary according to some continuous law
envelope
The information used for routing an email that is transmitted with the email but not part of its contents
envelope
the icon that you click on to send your comment via email It will appear if you click on the envelope on the toolbar
envelope
If someone pushes the envelope, they do something to a greater degree or in a more extreme way than it has ever been done before. There's a valuable place for fashion and design that pushes the envelope a bit
envelope
The outermost layers of a cell or the membrane of a virus
envelope
A continuous seal for preventing bitumen from leaking down into or off a building Is constructed by extending the base sheet or other non-porous ply of felt beyond the edge of the field plies It is then turned back onto the top of the system and adhered See also Bitumen-Stop
envelope
a curve that is tangent to each of a family of curves
envelope
An enclosing structure or cover, such as a membrane
envelope
outer surface of a virus, also called the coat Not all viruses have an envelope (See also virus; env )
envelope
A mathematical curve, surface, or higher-dimensional object that is the tangent to a given family of lines, curves, surfaces, or higher-dimensional objects
envelope
A bag containing the lifting gas of a balloon or airship
envelope
{i} paper wrapper in which letters are sealed and sent
envelope
It is sometimes raised in the ditch and sometimes beyond it
envelope
A device that changes a basic setting by the desired amount at specified time intervals Envelopes are commonly used to alter basic waveform pitch settings, as well as basic TVF and TVA settings
envelope
a flat rectangular paper container for papers
envelope
the gas bag of a pressure or semi-rigid airship Unlike a rigid airship gas cell, an envelope forms an external barrier to the elements, and when pressurized, serves an integral role in maintaining the airship's shape It also has fittings for attaching the fins, control car and other structural components The envelope is usually made of a high-strength fabric combined with a sufficiently impermeable barrier coating or film to minimize loss of the buoyant gas it contains Formerly made of rubberized cotton, envelopes nowadays are constructed mainly of synthetic materials with their seams cemented, glued or sealed
envelope
A poetic device in which a line, phrase, or stanza is repeated so as to enclose other material, as in Dryden's What passion cannot Music raise and quell! When Jubal struck the corded shell, His listening brethren stood around, And, wondering, on their faces fell To worship that celestial sound Less than a god they thought there could not dwell Within the hollow of that shell That spoke so sweetly and so well What passion cannot Music raise and quell! Sidelight: The rhyme scheme abba in a quatrain is termed an envelope rhyme since the rhymes of the first and last lines enclose the other lines (Compare Chain Verse, Rondeau)
envelope
The fabric that keeps gas inside a balloon or airship As a balloon rises, the air pressure surrounding the envelope lessens, and so the gas trapped inside tends to expand Unless this pressure is released through a valve, the envelope will tear Press 'Back' to return
envelope
the cover or wrapper of a document, as of a letter
envelope
1) Jargon for Lamp 2) The glass tube part of the lamp, containing the filament
envelope
That which envelops, wraps up, encases, or surrounds; a wrapper; an inclosing cover; esp
envelope
A curve that follows some characteristic of a sound For example, an amplitude envelope is a curve that follows the contour of a sound's amplitude
envelope
the maximum operating capability of a system; "test pilots try to push the envelope"
envelope
element of a SOAP message, it wraps all the other elements of the SOAP message The Envelope element is mandatory and must appear first in a SOAP message document The Envelope specifies the version of the message, and it identifies the encoding rules that are used, if any
envelope
A curve which touches every member of a family of curves or lines For example the axes are the envelope of the system of circles (x-a)2 + (y-a)2 = a2
envelope
Usually refers to a graph of the airspeed and altitude of safe operation of a system The area within the chart is the safe zone, and the area 'outside the envelope' is the dangerous area When testing a system to verify the safe expansion of the envelop to a new area it is refered to as 'pushing the envelope'
envelope
A work of earth, in the form of a single parapet or of a small rampart
envelope
(n ) A file the sendmail program creates when it parses email addresses The file contains information about how to deliver the message
envelope
the outer covering of a virus The HIV envelope contains spikes and is composed of 2 protein subunits -- gp120 and gp41 -- encoded by the env gene The glycoprotein gp120 attaches itself to the CD4 surface protein, allowing HIV to infect certain cells
envelope
Information about a mail message that is not in the header This information is used by MTAs* to determine where mail must go, and if not deliverable, where it is to be returned This information is typically transferred with commands of the SMTP* protocol
envelope
A part of message which has information of sender and recipient Fundamentally, it is information used by MTA for delivery and it is different from main body of the mail (contents) which MUA sends It is invisible or can be seen partly in the following headers as its traces: Sender in `Return-Path: ' field Recipient of envelope at that time which follows after optional "for" of `Received: ' field It is possible that names of sender and recipient of envelope are renamed to others by the procedure of alias or mailing-list (It is information exchanged by MAIL/RCPT command in SMTP and exchanged by protocol in X 400 )
envelope
The changes of a tone, e g , attack, sustain, decay, release
envelope
A paper or cardboard wrapper used to enclose and small, flat items, especially letters, for mailing
envelope
The dynamic shape of a sound over time, commonly characterized by its attack, decay, sustain, and release
envelope
the bag containing the gas in a balloon
envelope
any wrapper or covering
envelope
Thus, any curve is the envelope of its tangents
envelope
How a sound is controlled Some envelopes are graphical and have various nodes, or joints, that have lines drawn between them to show how that aspect of the sound will behave Some other envelopes are ADSR types This stands for Attack (how quickly the sound approaches), Decay (how quickly the sound fades out), Sustain (how long the note is held before it falls) and Release (how quickly the sound is released when it stops)
envelope
1 Of a variable, a curve which bounds the values which the variable can assume, but does not consider possible simultaneous occurrences or correlations between different values
envelope
The set of limitations within which a technological system can perform safely and effectively
envelopes
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