full stop

listen to the pronunciation of full stop
Englisch - Türkisch
nokta noktalama işareti
nokta

Cümlenin sonunda nokta konulmalı. - One should add a full stop at the end of the sentence.

Bir cümlenin sonunda nokta olması gerekir. - There needs to be a full stop at the end of a sentence.

çekit
ıng. nokta
durak
(isim)kta, durak, durma, son
İng. nokta (noktalama işareti)
durma
son

Lütfen cümlenizin sonuna bir nokta ekleyin. - Please add a full stop at the end of your sentence.

Cümlenin sonunda nokta konulmalı. - One should add a full stop at the end of the sentence.

durak
come to a full stop
sekteye uğramak
come to a full stop
tamamen durmak
Englisch - Englisch
The punctuation mark “.” (indicating the end of a sentence or marking an abbreviation)
Used to emphasize the end of an important statement or point when speaking

We need more people to join IRC, full stop.

a punctuation mark ( ) placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop or after abbreviations; "in England they call a period a stop"
A full stop is the punctuation mark . which you use at the end of a sentence when it is not a question or exclamation. a point (.) that marks the end of a sentence or the short form of a word American Equivalent: period. used at the end of a sentence to emphasize that you do not want to say any more about a subject American Equivalent: period
{i} complete halt, standstill; period, punctuation mark ( . ) at the end of a sentence (British)
a punctuation mark indicating the end of a sentence
In cataloging, a full stop is a period ( ), colon ( : ), semicolon ( ; ), question mark ( ? ), or exclamation point ( ! )
Normal landing approach that terminates in the aircraft coming to a full stop on the runway, or taxiing off the runway to a ramp
full stops
plural form of full stop
full-stop
Attributive form of full stop, noun
a full stop
full point
come to a full stop
stop completely
full stop

    Türkische aussprache

    fûl stäp

    Synonyme

    period, dot, point

    Aussprache

    /ˈfo͝ol ˈstäp/ /ˈfʊl ˈstɑːp/

    Etymologie

    [ 'ful also 'f&l ] (adjective.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English; akin to Old High German fol full, Latin plenus full, plEre to fill, Greek plErEs full, plEthein to be full.
Favoriten