petering

listen to the pronunciation of petering
Englisch - Türkisch
tükenme
suya düşme
petering out
dışarı tükenme
peter
çük
peter
(Argo) penis
peter
bitmek
peter
son bulmak
peter
(out ile) yavaş yavaş tükenmek
Peter
{i} aziz Petrus (İsa'nın havarisi)
Peter
{i} Peter
Peter
{i} Petrus

Aziz Petrus meydanı, ya da Piazza San Pietro, Vatikan'daki Aziz Petrus Bazilikasının önünde yer almaktadır. - Saint Peter's square, or the Piazza San Pietro, is located in front of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican.

Aziz Petrus meydanı kalabalıktır. - Saint Peter's Square is crowded.

Peter
kasa

Philip, Andrew ve Peter gibi, Bethesda kasabasındandı. - Philip, like Andrew and Peter, was from the town of Bethesda.

Peter
para kasası
peter
peter yavaş yavaş bit
peter
tükenmek
peter
hızı azalmak
Türkisch - Türkisch

Definition von petering im Türkisch Türkisch wörterbuch

PETER
(Osmanlı Dönemi) f. Düz maden levha
peter
Düz maden levha
Englisch - Englisch

Definition von petering im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch

petering out
Present participle of peter out
Peter
The leading Apostle in the New Testament

And I say unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church;.

Peter
The epistles of Peter in the New Testament of the Bible, 1 Peter and 2 Peter attributed to St. Peter
Peter
A male given name

What splendid names for boys there are! / There's Carol like a rolling car, / And Martin like a flying bird, / And Adam like the Lord's First Word, / And Raymond like the Harvest Moon, / And Peter like a piper's tune,.

peter
To dwindle; to trail off; to diminish to nothing
peter
The penis
peter
to fail or lose power, efficiency, or value
Peter
given name, male
Peter
Peter's regency was directed by Aleksandr Menshikov. He fell under the influence of the aristocratic Dolgoruky family, which ousted Menshikov as regent, moved the capital to Moscow (1728), and arranged Peter's betrothal to one of its princesses. On the day set for the wedding, Peter died of smallpox at age
Peter
born Sept. 6, 1923, Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes died Nov. 3, 1970, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S. Last king of Yugoslavia. The son of Alexander I, he became titular king on his father's assassination (1934), but he ruled under the regency of his uncle Prince Paul (1893-1976). After a coup deposed Paul (1941), Peter ruled for several weeks until the German invasion forced him to flee to London. He led a government-in-exile until the Yugoslav monarchy was abolished in 1945. He moved to the U.S., where he worked in public relations. Spanish Pedro known as Peter the Cruel born Sept. 5, 1319, or Sept. 15, 1317, Balaguer, Catalonia died Jan. 5, 1387, Barcelona King of Aragon (1336-87). He took the Balearic Islands and Roussillon from Majorca (1343-44), defeated the Aragonese nobles (1348), and became duke of Athens and Neopatras (1380). He waged war against Castile (1356-66) but failed to gain any territory; after 1369 France favoured Castile over Aragon. Peter tried to maintain neutrality in the Hundred Years' War, and he quarreled with his heir, the future John I, who became the tool of French intrigues. born 903 died Jan. 30, 969 Tsar of Bulgaria (927-969). The second son of Simeon I, he inherited the throne on his father's death in 927. Early in his reign, Peter faced revolts by his brothers, which were suppressed, and he also endured raids by the Magyars, who crossed Bulgaria on their way to the Byzantine Empire. His reign, however, was generally peaceful, and he made important gains against the Byzantines, receiving the title emperor from them. He also forced the Byzantines to recognize the independence of the Bulgarian church, and he married the granddaughter of the Byzantine emperor Romanus I Lecapenus. In 965 war broke out with the Byzantines; Peter subsequently suffered a stroke and retired to a monastery, where he died two years later. Canonized by the Bulgarian Orthodox church, Peter was deeply religious and an active church builder. During his reign, the Bogomil heresy first appeared. Russian Pyotr Alekseyevich known as Peter the Great born June 9, 1672, Moscow, Russia died Feb. 8, 1725, St. Petersburg Tsar of Russia (1682-1725). Son of Tsar Alexis, he reigned jointly with his half brother Ivan V (1682-96) and alone from 1696. Interested in progressive influences from western Europe, he visited several countries there (1697-98). After returning to Russia, he introduced Western technology, modernized the government and military system, and transferred the capital to the new city of St. Petersburg (1703). He further increased the power of the monarchy at the expense of the nobles and the Orthodox church. Some of his reforms were implemented brutally, with considerable loss of life. Suspecting that his son Alexis was conspiring against him, he had Alexis tortured to death in 1718. He pursued foreign policies to give Russia access to the Baltic and Black seas, engaging in war with the Ottoman Empire (1695-96) and with Sweden in the Second Northern War (1700-21). His campaign against Persia (1722-23) secured for Russia the southern and western shores of the Caspian Sea. In 1721 he was proclaimed emperor; his wife succeeded him as the empress Catherine I. For raising Russia to a recognized place among the great European powers, Peter is widely considered one of the outstanding rulers and reformers in Russian history, but he has also been decried by nationalists for discarding much of what was unique in Russian culture, and his legacy has been seen as a model for Joseph Stalin's brutal transformation of Russian life. born July 11, 1844, Belgrade, Serbia died Aug. 16, 1921, Topider, near Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes King of Serbia (1903-18) and of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (later Yugoslavia) from 1918. The son of Prince Alexander Karadjordjevi, who was forced to abdicate in 1858, he lived with his family in exile. He fought with the French army in the Franco-Prussian War and with the Serbian revolt against the Turks (1875). After the assassination of Alexander Obrenovi (1903), Peter was elected king of Serbia. He advocated a constitutional government and won recognition for his liberal policies. In World War I, he allied Serbia with France and Russia but was defeated by the Central Powers. In 1918 he returned to Belgrade and was proclaimed king of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Abelard Peter Altgeld John Peter Behrens Peter Lawrence Peter Berra Brook Sir Peter Stephen Paul Carey Peter Philip Cooper Peter Davies Sir Peter Maxwell Debye Peter Doherty Peter Charles Dunne Finley Peter Emerson Peter Henry Fabergé Peter Carl Giannini Amadeo Peter Goldmark Peter Carl Hall Sir Peter Reginald Frederick Handke Peter Kropotkin Peter Alekseyevich Lorre Peter Martins Peter Matthiessen Peter Medawar Sir Peter Brian Minuit Peter Mitchell Peter Dennis Müller Johannes Peter O'Toole Peter Seamus Peter Damian Saint Peter III Peter the Great Peter II Peter IV Peter the Cruel Peter I Peter Lombard Peter the Apostle Saint Peter the Great Bay Peter the Hermit Peter the Venerable Peter's Pence Roget Peter Mark Rose Peter Edward Rubens Peter Paul Saint Peter's Basilica Schubert Franz Peter Scott Sir Peter Markham Seeger Peter Sellars Peter Sellers Peter Shaffer Peter Levin Stuyvesant Peter Taylor Peter Hillsman Ustinov Sir Peter Alexander John Peter Wagner Waldo Peter Weiss Peter Ulrich Peter John Weissmuller Zenger John Peter Northcliffe of Saint Peter Alfred Charles William Harmsworth Viscount Karl Peter Ulrich duke von Holstein Gottorp
Peter
{i} Saint Peter (died c. AD 67), one of the 12 Apostles; male first name
Peter
disapproval If you say that someone is robbing Peter to pay Paul, you mean that they are transferring money from one group of people or place to another, rather than providing extra money. Sometimes he was moving money from one account to another, robbing Peter to pay Paul. + peter out peter out If something peters out, it gradually comes to an end. The six-month strike seemed to be petering out. The chief of the 12 Apostles. He is traditionally regarded as the first bishop of Rome. rob Peter to pay Paul rob. peter out to gradually become smaller, less, weaker etc and then come to an end. Spanish Pedro known as Peter the Great born 1239 died Nov. 11, 1285, Villafrance del Panades, Catalonia King of Aragon (1276-85) and of Sicily (as Pedro I, 1282-85). He married the Hohenstaufen heiress of Sicily (1262) and ended the Sicilian revolt (1282), becoming king despite Guelph and papal opposition (see Sicilian Vespers). Unhappy with his Sicilian venture, nobles and municipalities in Aragon forced Peter to confirm their legal rights and to diminish crown rights. In 1285 he defeated Philip III of France, who had invaded Aragon in an effort to dethrone him. Russian Pyotr Fyodorovich orig. Karl Peter Ulrich, duke von Holstein-Gottorp born Feb. 21, 1728, Kiel, Holstein-Gottorp died July 18, 1762, Ropsha, near St. Petersburg, Russia Tsar of Russia (1762). Grandson of Peter I, the young duke was brought to Russia by his aunt Elizabeth when she became empress (1741). Proclaimed the heir to the Russian throne, he was unpopular at court for his pro-Prussian attitude. After he succeeded Elizabeth (1762), he reversed her foreign policy, making peace with Prussia and withdrawing from the Seven Years' War. He offended the Orthodox church by trying to force it to adopt Lutheran practices. After six months he was forced to abdicate by a group of nobles, in collusion with his own wife, Catherine (later Catherine II), and Count Grigory Orlov, and was murdered while in the conspirators' custody. Russian Pyotr Alekseyevich born Oct. 23, 1715, St. Petersburg, Russia died Jan. 29, 1730, Moscow Tsar of Russia (1727-30). The grandson of Peter I, he was named heir to the throne by Catherine I and on her death was crowned at age
Peter
fever
peter
disciple of Jesus and leader of the apostles; regarded by Catholics as the vicar of Christ on earth and first Pope
peter
obscene terms for penis
peter
{f} diminish and come to a stop; give out, expire; fade, die out
peter
(Saint) The apostle who denied Jesus and who Jesus called 'the rock on which the church was built'; Peter was the first bishop of Rome, or Pope
peter
(See Blue Peter ) Great Peter A bell in York Minister, weighing 10 3/4 tons, and hung in 1845 Lord Peter The Pope in Swift's Tale ej'a Tub Rob Peter to pay Paul (See Robbing ) St Peter Patron saint of fishers and fishmongers, being himself a fisherman St Peter, in Christian art, is represented as an old man, bald, but with a flowing beard; he is usually dressed in a white mantle and blue tunic, and holds in his hand a book or scroll His peculiar symbols are the keys, and a sword, the instrument of his martyrdom He has got St Peter's fingers - i e the fingers of a thief The allusion is to the fish caught by St Peter with a piece of money in its mouth They say that a thief has a fish-hook on every finger
peter
The name of one of the apostles, To become exhausted; to run out; to fail; used generally with out; as, that mine has petered out
peter
Proclaimed King of Yugoslavia in 1941 at age 17; deposed November 1945
peter
(See Blue Peter ) Great Peter A bell in York Minster, weighing 10 3/4 tons, and hung in 1845 Lord Peter The Pope in Swift's Tale of a Tub Rob Peter to pay Paul (See Robbing ) St Peter Patron saint of fishers and fishmongers, being himself a fisherman St Peter, in Christian art, is represented as an old man, bald, but with a flowing beard; he is usually dressed in a white mantle and blue tunic, and holds in his hand a book or scroll His peculiar symbols are the keys, and a sword, the instrument of his martyrdom He has got St Peter's fingers - i e the fingers of a thief The allusion is to the fish caught by St Peter with a piece of money in its mouth They say that a thief has a fish-hook on every finger
peter
(B) echo; high-low signal
peter
A common baptismal name for a man
peter
11r L 16 adj Small, little; insignificant, minor As a name: St Peter, one of the apostle in the Bible
Türkisch - Englisch

Definition von petering im Türkisch Englisch wörterbuch

Peter
Peter
petering
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