pater

listen to the pronunciation of pater
Englisch - Türkisch
peder
baba

Tom'un dedesi ve babaannesi Avustralya'da yaşıyor. - Tom's paternal grandparents live in Australia.

O benim babamın babası. O benim baba tarafından büyükbabam. - He's my father's father. He's my paternal grandpa.

{i} ihtiyar
dili peder
Türkisch - Türkisch
Eski Romalılar'ın kullandığı maden vazo
Englisch - Englisch
father
an informal term for a father; probably derived from baby talk
{i} father, dad (British Slang)
pater noster
(Din) The prayer taught by Christ to his disciples, beginning with ‘Our Father’
pater noster
(Din) The Lord's Prayer, also known as the Our Father or Pater noster is probably the best-known prayer in Christianity. On Easter Sunday 2007 it was estimated that 2 billion Protestant, Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox Christians read, recited, or sang the short prayer in hundreds of languages in houses of worship of all shapes and sizes. Although many theological differences and various modes and manners of worship divide Christians, according to Fuller Seminary professor Clayton Schmit "there is a sense of solidarity in knowing that Christians around the globe are praying together…, and these words always unite us."
Walter Horatio Pater
born Aug. 4, 1839, Shadwell, London, Eng. died July 30, 1894, Oxford, Oxfordshire English critic, essayist, and humanist. Elected a fellow at the University of Oxford in 1864, Pater made his reputation as a scholar and aesthete with essays collected in Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873). Written in a delicate, fastidious style, the essays introduced his influential advocacy of "art for art's sake," which contrasted with the prevailing emphasis on art's moral or educational values and became a cardinal doctrine of Aestheticism. Marius the Epicurean (1885), a philosophical romance on the ideal life, is his most substantial work
Walter Pater
born Aug. 4, 1839, Shadwell, London, Eng. died July 30, 1894, Oxford, Oxfordshire English critic, essayist, and humanist. Elected a fellow at the University of Oxford in 1864, Pater made his reputation as a scholar and aesthete with essays collected in Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873). Written in a delicate, fastidious style, the essays introduced his influential advocacy of "art for art's sake," which contrasted with the prevailing emphasis on art's moral or educational values and became a cardinal doctrine of Aestheticism. Marius the Epicurean (1885), a philosophical romance on the ideal life, is his most substantial work
paters
plural of pater
pater

    Silbentrennung

    Pa·ter

    Türkische aussprache

    peytır

    Aussprache

    /ˈpātər/ /ˈpeɪtɜr/

    Etymologie

    (noun.) 14th century. From Latin pater (“father”).
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