lighthouse.

listen to the pronunciation of lighthouse.
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} deniz feneri

Hâlâ deniz fenerine gitmek istiyor musun? - Do you still want to go to the lighthouse?

Tom, deniz feneri bekçisi ve yalnız bir hayat sürüyor. - Tom is a lighthouse keeper and leads a lonely life.

{i} fener

Tom, deniz feneri bekçisi ve yalnız bir hayat sürüyor. - Tom is a lighthouse keeper and leads a lonely life.

Hâlâ deniz fenerine gitmek istiyor musun? - Do you still want to go to the lighthouse?

faro
kâğıdı dağıtana karşı oynanan iskambil oyunu türü
lighthouse
fener kulesi
lighthouse
denizfeneri
faro
{i} bir iskambil oyunu
faro
bütün oyuncuların kâğıdı dağıtana karşı oynadıkları bir çeşit iskambil oyunu
faro
{i} kâğıdı dağıtana karşı oynanan kâğıt oyunu
lighthouse
deniz fener

Hâlâ deniz fenerine gitmek istiyor musun? - Do you still want to go to the lighthouse?

Tom, deniz feneri bekçisi ve yalnız bir hayat sürüyor. - Tom is a lighthouse keeper and leads a lonely life.

Englisch - Englisch
phare
A building, usually a tower, containing a light to warn or guide ships
{n} a building with lights to direct seamen
faro
a building on or near the shore, with a light high enough above the water to warn sailors from danger
building with strong light which warns people in boats about nearby rocks
A tower used as an aid to navigation marking a hazard or point of entrance Usually consisting of a very bright light atop a tower and often a foghorn or siren and radio beacon
Added in 1820s to aid navigation for vessels using the deep water channels It is still in use today and plays a central role in the navigational system for ships entering Portsmouth Harbour
A lighthouse is a tower containing a powerful flashing lamp that is built on the coast or on a small island. Lighthouses are used to guide ships or to warn them of danger. Structure, usually with a tower, built onshore or on the seabed to signal danger or provide aid to seafarers. The first known lighthouse was the Pharos of Alexandria. The modern lighthouse dates only from the early 18th century. Initially made of wood, these towers were often washed away in severe storms. The first lighthouse made of interlocking masonry blocks was built on the treacherous Eddystone Rocks reef, off Plymouth, England (1759). Interlocking masonry blocks remained the principal material of lighthouse construction until they were replaced by concrete and steel in the 20th century. Modern construction methods have facilitated the building of offshore lighthouses. The most common illuminant is the electric-filament lamp. Refinements in lenses (e.g., the Fresnel lens) and reflectors made it possible to substantially increase the light's intensity. Radio and satellite-based navigation systems have greatly reduced the need for large lighthouses in sighting land
A tower or other building with a powerful light at top, erected at the entrance of a port, or at some important point on a coast, to serve as a guide to mariners at night; a pharos
{i} tall tower topped by a very bright light which is used to guide or warn ships
a tower with a light that gives warning of shoals to passing ships
lighthouse.
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