gates

listen to the pronunciation of gates
Englisch - Türkisch
(Askeri) Küresel Hava Ulaştırma Yönetim Sistemi (Global Air Transportation Execution System)
gate
{i} geçit
gate
{i} kapı

Birisi kapıda duruyor. - Someone is standing at the gate.

Beni kapıya götürür müsün? - Will you take me to the gate?

gates of the arctic national park
Arktik milli parkın kapıları
gate
bu boruyu dolduran maden
gate
gatecrasher i
gate
giriş yeri
gate
çit

Tom kapının mandalını açmaya çalışmak için açıklıktan çite ulaştı. - Tom reached through the gap in the fence to try to unlatch the gate.

gate
gişe hasılatı
gate
(Mekanik) aralık
gate
giriş kapısı

Onların evinin giriş kapısı burasıdır. - This is the main gate to their house.

Bir araba giriş kapısını kapatıyordu. - A car was blocking the gateway.

gate
valf
gate
büyük kapı

Bu büyük kapı küçük bahçeye göre oransızdır. - This big gate is disproportionate to the small garden.

gate
(Ticaret) işten atma
gate
kapak
gate
vana
site gates
(Bilgisayar) site kapıları
swing gates
salınımlı kapaklar
gate
hasılat
gate
(bir maçı/gösteriyi/vb.) izleyenlerin sayısı
pearly gates
cennet kapısı
gate
kapıyı
railroad crossing with gates
demiryolu kapıları ile geçiş
railway crossing without gates
demiryolu kapıları olmadan geçiş
Pearly Gates
cennet
gate
dokümcülük kalıbı doldurmak için açılan delik
gate
elek
gate
{i} işten çıkarma
gate
{i} (maç, konser, sirk v.b.'nde bilet satışından sağlanan) hâsılat; gişe hâsılatı
gate
{i} kapı (kapı aralığını kapayan kanat)
gate
{i} patika
gate
{i} kanal kapağı
gate
sinyal cereyanı ile işleyen anahtar
gate
{i} bilet hasılatı
gate
{i} kapıyı gösterme
gate
{i} kovma
gate
temin edilen bilet hasılatı
gate
(Askeri) KAPI: Hava önleme görevlerinde, "Azami hız (veya güç) ile uç !" anlamına gelen bir kod. (Uçağın türüne bağlı olarak sınırlı bir süre için uygulanmak üzere, Sonradan ateşleyiciler, roketler vs. nin kullanımı yerel doktrine göre yapılacaktır)
gate
döküm ağzı
gate
döküm yolu
gate
giriş

Onların evinin giriş kapısı burasıdır. - This is the main gate to their house.

Giriş ücreti kapıda 30 dolar. - Admission is $30 at the gate.

hinged gates
mafsallı kapaklar
inner gates
memba kapakları
Englisch - Englisch
American Revolutionary general who became a hero after winning the Battle of Saratoga (1777) but suffered a humiliating defeat at Camden, South Carolina (1780). American computer software designer and business executive who cofounded Microsoft in 1975 and as chairman built it into one of the largest computer software manufacturers in the world. Dawes Charles Gates Gates of the Arctic National Park Gates Bill William Henry Gates III Gates Henry Louis Jr. Gates Horatio
{i} Bill Gates (born 1955), United States computer software designer, chairman and co-founder of Microsoft Inc., one of the world's richest men; family name
United States computer entrepreneur whose software company made him the youngest multi-billionaire in the history of the United States (born in 1955)
plural of gate
third-person singular of gate
Gates of the Arctic National Park
National preserve, northern Alaska, U.S. Its area of 11,756 sq mi (30,448 sq km) is entirely north of the Arctic Circle. Proclaimed a national monument in 1978, the area underwent boundary changes and was renamed in 1980. It includes a portion of the Central Brooks Range. The southern slopes are forested, contrasting with the barren northern reaches at the edge of Alaska's North Slope
gates of Zion
entrance to the land of Israel
gates of heaven
figurative entrance to heaven
gates of the arctic national park
a large national park in Alaska featuring the Great Mendenhall Glacier
Bill Gates' flower flies
plural form of Bill Gates' flower fly
Bill Gates' flower fly
A species of flower fly from Costa Rica, scientific name Eristalis gatesi
Pearly Gates
Alternative spelling of pearly gates
gate
A doorlike structure outside a house
gate
A logical pathway made up of switches which turn on or off. Examples are and, or, nand etc
gate
Doorway, opening, or passage in a fence or wall
gate
The amount of money made by selling tickets to a concert or a sports event
gate
To ground someone
gate
To open a closed ion channel.Alberts, Bruce; et al. "Figure 11-21: The gating of ion channels." In: Molecular Biology of the Cell, ed. Senior, Sarah Gibbs. New York: Garland Science, 2002 . Available from: http: //www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bookshelf/br.fcgi?book=mboc4∂=A1986&rendertype;=figure&id;=A2030
gate
A journey

nought regarding, they kept on their gate, / And all her vaine allurements did forsake .

gate
A line that separates particle type-clusters on two-dimensional dot plots
gate
passageway (as in an air terminal) where passengers can embark or disembark
gate
To keep something inside by means of a closed gate
gate
A way, path
gate
The gap between a batsman's bat and pad
gate
A street; now used especially as a combining form to make the name of a street
jade gates
plural form of jade gate
kissing gates
plural form of kissing gate
logic gates
plural form of logic gate
pearly gates
Heaven itself
pearly gates
The entrance way to Heaven
tide gates
plural form of tide gate
gate
{n} a large door, frame of wood, entrance, way
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
charitable organization that seeks to assist people through better health and learning
Bill Gates
{i} William Henry Gates III (born 1955), United States computer software designer, chairman and co-founder of Microsoft Inc., one of the world's richest men
Bill Gates
a US computer programmer and businessman, who started the Microsoft computer company and is famous for being the richest man in the world (1955- ). in full William Henry Gates III born Oct. 28, 1955, Seattle, Wash., U.S. U.S. computer programmer and businessman. As a teenager, he helped computerize his high school's payroll system and founded a company that sold traffic-counting systems to local governments. At 19 he dropped out of Harvard University and cofounded Microsoft Corp. with Paul G. Allen (b. 1954). Microsoft began its domination of the fledgling microcomputer industry when Gates licensed the operating system MS-DOS to IBM in 1980 for use in IBM's first personal computer. As Microsoft's largest shareholder, Gates became a billionaire in 1986, and within a decade he was the world's richest private individual. Beginning in 1995, he refocused Microsoft on the development of software solutions for the Internet, and he also moved the company into the computer hardware and gaming markets with the Xbox video machine. In 1999 he and his wife created the largest charitable foundation in the U.S
Charles Gates Dawes
born Aug. 27, 1865, Marietta, Ohio, U.S. died April 23, 1951, Evanston, Ill. U.S. politician. He practiced law in Nebraska before being appointed U.S. comptroller of the currency (1897-1902). In World War I he headed supply procurement for the American Expeditionary Force in France. In 1923 he chaired the Allied Reparations Commission and arranged the Dawes Plan. He served as vice president (1925-29) under Calvin Coolidge. He shared the 1925 Nobel Prize for Peace with Sir Austen Chamberlain
Cilician Gates
A mountain pass in the Taurus Mountains of southern Turkey. The pass has served for centuries as a natural highway linking Anatolia with the Mediterranean coast
Henry Louis Gates
born Sept. 16, 1950, Keyser, W.Va., U.S. U.S. critic and scholar. Gates attended Yale University and the University of Cambridge. He has chaired Harvard University's department of Afro-American Studies for many years. In such works as Figures in Black (1987) and The Signifying Monkey (1988) he has used the term signifyin' to represent a practice that can link African and African American literary histories; his other books include Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man (1998). He has edited many anthologies, including Reading Black, Reading Feminist (1990) and the Norton Anthology of African American Writers (1997), and has restored and edited many lost works by black writers. He writes frequently to a general public, notably in The New Yorker, and he wrote the television series Wonders of the African World (1999)
Henry Louis Jr. Gates
born Sept. 16, 1950, Keyser, W.Va., U.S. U.S. critic and scholar. Gates attended Yale University and the University of Cambridge. He has chaired Harvard University's department of Afro-American Studies for many years. In such works as Figures in Black (1987) and The Signifying Monkey (1988) he has used the term signifyin' to represent a practice that can link African and African American literary histories; his other books include Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man (1998). He has edited many anthologies, including Reading Black, Reading Feminist (1990) and the Norton Anthology of African American Writers (1997), and has restored and edited many lost works by black writers. He writes frequently to a general public, notably in The New Yorker, and he wrote the television series Wonders of the African World (1999)
Horatio Gates
born 1728, Maldon, Essex, Eng. died April 10, 1806, New York, N.Y., U.S. English-born American general. He served in the British army during the French and Indian War. In 1772 he immigrated to Virginia, where he sided with colonial interests. He was made adjutant general of the Continental Army (1775) and succeeded Gen. Philip Schuyler in New York (1777). Assisted by Benedict Arnold, he forced the surrender of British forces under John Burgoyne at the Battle of Saratoga (1777). Congress then chose Gates as president of the Board of War. Supporters, including Thomas Conway, sought to have Gates replace George Washington, but the plan failed, and Gates returned to his New York command. In 1780 he was transferred to the South, where he attempted to oust the British forces under Charles Cornwallis but was defeated at the Battle of Camden, S.C. An official inquiry was ordered, but charges never were pressed. He retired to Virginia, then freed his slaves in 1790 and moved to New York
Pearly Gates
gates of heaven, entrance to Paradise, entrance to heaven
William Henry Gates III
{i} Bill Gates (born 1955), United States computer software designer, chairman and co-founder of Microsoft Inc., one of the world's richest men
gate
A signal used to select radar echoes corresponding to a very short range increment Range is computed by moving the range gate or marker to the target echo; an arrangement which permits radar signals to be received in a small selected fraction of the time period between radar transmitter pulses
gate
the narrowed link between the runner and the cavity
gate
A door, valve, or other device, for stopping the passage of water through a dam, lock, pipe, etc
gate
(1) The control electrode in a field-effect transistor A voltage applied to the gate regulates the conducting properties of the channel region; or, (2) The most basic logic element A combination of transistors which form a circuit that performs a logic function, such as NAND or NOR
gate
A device that turns audio off or down when it falls below a specified threshold
gate
a door-like movable barrier in a fence or wall a computer circuit with several inputs but only one output that can be activated by particular combinations of inputs passageway (as in an air terminal) where passengers can embark or disembark total admission receipts at a sports event restrict (school boys') movement to the dormitory or campus as a means of punishment control with a valve or other device that functions like a gate supply with a gate; "The house was gated
gate
A large door or passageway in the wall of a city, of an inclosed field or place, or of a grand edifice, etc
gate
Passage for molten metal which connects runner with die cavity Also, the entire ejected content of a die, including castings, gates, runners, sprue (or biscuit) and flash
gate
an open gate, able to move forward easily, maybe even moving into a new area of your life If the gate is closed to you it could be that your trying to access areas/information that is not available to you
gate
The channel or opening through which metal is poured into the mold; the ingate
gate
The decision point, often a meeting, at which a management decision is made to allow the product development project to proceed to the next stage, to recycle back into the current stage to better complete some of the tasks, or to terminate The number of gates varies by company
gate
control with a valve or other device that functions like a gate
gate
also, the movable structure of timber, metal, etc
gate
{i} portion of a wall or fence that opens and closes; any barrier which opens and closes; entrance, entryway; number of spectators at a show or event; passageway through which passengers board (a train, plane, boat, etc.)
gate
1) A device having one output channel and one or more input channels, such that the output channel state is completely determined by the input channel states, except during switching transients 2) One of the many types of combinational logic elements having at least two inputs
gate
(rubber injection or transfer mold) - The orifice used to control the flow of rubber, and through which a shaped cavity in a mold is filled with rubber Glass transition point - Temp- erature at which a material loses its glass-like properties and becomes a semi-liquid Grain - The unidirectional orientation of rubber or filler particles occurring during pro- cessing (extrusion, milling, calen- dering) resulting in anisotropy of a rubber vulcanizate Green strength - (1) The resistance to deformation of a rubber stock in the uncured state (2) Uncured adhesion between plied or spliced surfaces
gate
A segment that allows transfer of control between rings in a controlled fashion Each gate segment has a vector of entries at its start Now called "call gate" in the Intel world Originated on Multics
gate
An electrical switch that is the most basic logic element in a chip Millions of these gates or "switches" can be found on a single chip
gate
The gap between a batsmans bat and pad
gate
Movable barrier
gate
A way; a path; a road; a street (as in Highgate)
gate
- An orifice through which the molten resin enters the cavity A gate is the small restricted opening connecting the runner to the cavity
gate
The gate at a sporting event such as a football match or baseball game is the total number of people who attend it. Their average gate is less than 23,000. to prevent a student from leaving a school as a punishment for behaving badly. Brandenburg Gate Golden Gate Bridge Heaven's Gate Ishtar Gate
gate
a door-like movable barrier in a fence or wall
gate
Also, figuratively, a means or way of entrance or of exit
gate
the portion of the runner where the molten metal enters the mold cavity
gate
restrict (school boys') movement to the dormitory or campus as a means of punishment
gate
The waste piece of metal cast in the opening; a sprue or sullage piece
gate
To supply with a gate
gate
A basic component used to build a circuit Usually performs some elementary logical operation: for example, an AND gate takes a collection of input bits, and outputs a '1' bit if all the input bits are '1', and a '0' bit otherwise See also fanin, fanout
gate
The top section of the swivel, which opens to allow the oar in or out, and locks shut with a finger nut
gate
a computer circuit with several inputs but only one output that can be activated by particular combinations of inputs
gate
In an airport, a gate is a place where passengers leave the airport and get on their aeroplane. Passengers with hand luggage can go straight to the departure gate to check in there
gate
Gate is used in the names of streets in Britain that are in a place where there once was a gate into a city. 9 Palace Gate
gate
by which the passage can be closed
gate
Manner; gait
gate
A gate is a structure like a door which is used at the entrance to a field, a garden, or the grounds of a building. He opened the gate and started walking up to the house
gate
The point at which a management decision is made to allow the product development project to proceed to the next stage, to recycle back into the current stage to better complete some of the tasks, or to terminate The number of gates varies by company
gate
In a lock tumbler, the opening for the stump of the bolt to pass through or into
gate
To punish by requiring to be within the gates at an earlier hour than usual
gate
total admission receipts at a sports event
gate
1 To control passage of a signal as in the circuits of a computer
gate
An opening for passage in any inclosing wall, fence, or barrier; or the suspended framework which closes or opens a passage
gate
In digital logic, a component that can switch the state of an output dependent on the states of one or more inputs
gate
A movable construction on the outward end of the rigger which takes up the sleeve of the blade The bar which closes the swivel Because the gate has a vertical inside surface that matches the flat surface on the sleeve, the orientation of the gate determines the angle of the spoon at any time during the drive
gate
The places which command the entrances or access; hence, place of vantage; power; might
gate
A door-like structure outside a house
gate
element caused by the resolution in time of the receiver; the original time period during which the receiver is ready to record echoes originating from a certain distance: in our case a space unit in polar coordinates of ca 83 3m radial length, related to the pulse length and the speed of light
gate
Adjustable barrier across a channel, which can be moved to regulate the flow and/or the level of water
gate
1 A signal which in the active state enables an operation to occur; and when in the inactive state inhibits an operation from occurring 2 The basic digital logic element - where the binary value of the output depends on the values of the inputs 3 The primary control terminal of a field effect transistor
gate
(n ) In electronic circuitry, a pathway that may be open or closed, depending on the source of the input, the strength of a signal, or the conductivity of chemicals used in semiconductors Logic gates are programmed to correspond to related"if-then" statements The state of an open or closed gate is analogous to the binary state of a 0 or a 1 The application of this analogy allows computing machinery with millions of gates to respond conditionally and to perform logical functions
gate
supply with a gate; "The house was gated"
gate
A dynamic processing device that turns a channel off or down when the signal drops below a certain level
gate
A boundary that defines a subset or sub-population of events Gates are set by drawing boundaries around the subsets on data plots (dot plots or histograms) Use gates either for data acquisition or analysis Inclusive gates select only the events that fall within (and on) the boundary Exclusive gates select only the events that fall outside of the boundary
gate
yett
pearly gates
the pearly gates the entrance to heaven - often used humorously
gates

    Silbentrennung

    Gates

    Türkische aussprache

    geyts

    Aussprache

    /ˈgāts/ /ˈɡeɪts/

    Etymologie

    [ 'gAt ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English geat; akin to Old Norse gat opening.

    Videos

    ... space and time, star gates, worm holes.  That's type two.  And then we have type three, and ...
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