tatar

listen to the pronunciation of tatar
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} Tatar
(isim) Tatar
tatarca
mongol tatar
moğol tatar
Türkisch - Türkisch
(Osmanlı Dönemi) (Tetar) (Arapçada: Teter) Bu isim, asıl itibariyle Moğol milletlerinden bir kavmin adıdır. Bu kavmin efrâdı, Cengiz Han askerlerinin pişdarları hükmünde olduğundan eski zamanlarda Moğollar mânasında kullanılmıştır.Arap ve Fars tarihlerinde de yukardaki mânada kullanılmıştır. Sonra bu isim bütün Turanî milletlerine verilerek "Akvam-ı Tatariye" diye adlandırılmıştır. Ve bütün bu milletlerin meskenine Tataristan ismi verilmişse de, bu tabirin yersiz olduğu sonra anlaşılmış ve bu mânada kullanılışı terkedilmiş
Tataristan'da, Batı Sibirya'da ve Rusya Federasyonu'nun değişik bölgelerinde yaşayan Türk soyundan bir halk ve bu halktan olan kimse
Posta sürücüsü
Börek çorbası
posta
Tatar böreği
Haşlanmış kalınca yufka parçalarına yoğurt ve kıyma katılarak, üzerine kızgın yağ gezdirilerek yapılan yemek
Tatar çorbası
Unun hafifçe kavrulmasından sonra soğan, domates, patates ve benzeri malzeme ile hazırlanan bir tür çorba
tatar arabası
Posta arabası
tatar ağası
Posta görevi yapan tatarların amiri
tatar ağası
Beceriksiz, başarısız, dikkate alınmayan
Englisch - Englisch
An agglutinative language belonging to the Uralian group of the Northwestern branch of Turkic languages. It is an official language of Tatarstan. There are some eight million speakers spread across Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia
A person belonging to one of several Turkic, Tatar-speaking ethnic groups in Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia
A savage or violent person

And Juan, too, blasphemed an octave higher; / His blood was up: though young, he was a Tartar, / And not at all disposed to prove a martyr.

A people in Eastern Europe and Central Asia
{i} language of the Tartar tribes
{i} member of a people of Russia and the inclosing countries; descendant of Tatars; Tartar
or Tartar Any member of the Turkic-speaking peoples who today live mainly in west-central Russia east to the Ural Mountains, in Kazakhstan, and in western Siberia. They first appeared as nomadic tribes in northeastern Mongolia in the 5th century. Some joined the armies of Genghis Khan. Especially identified with the Golden Horde, they were converted to Islam in the 14th century. The Golden Horde soon became independent Tatar khanates (see khan). Their economy was based on mixed farming and herding, which remain central to their economy. They developed craftsmanship in wood, ceramics, leather, cloth, and metal and have been well known as traders. Today there are about six million Tatars in all regions; they constitute about half the population of the Russian republic of Tatarstan. See also Tatar language. Tatar language Volga Tatar language Tatar Strait
An agglutinative language belonging to the Uralian group of the Northwestern branch of Turkic languages. It is an official language of Tatarstan. There are some eight million speakers spread across Eastern Europe and Central Asia
a member of the Mongolian people of central Asia who invaded Russia in the 13th century
the Turkic language spoken by the Tatar people living from the Volga to the Ural Mountains a member of the Turkic-speaking people living from the Volga to the Ural Mountains (the name has been attributed to many other groups) a member of the Mongolian people of central Asia who invaded Russia in the 13th century
a member of the Turkic-speaking people living from the Volga to the Ural Mountains (the name has been attributed to many other groups)
{s} of or pertaining to the Tatars, of or pertaining to the language of the Tatars
the Turkic language spoken by the Tatar people living from the Volga to the Ural Mountains
Tatar Strait
A channel of southeast Russia between Sakhalin Island and the mainland. It connects the Sea of Japan on the south with the Sea of Okhotsk on the north. Wide passage in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, connecting the Sea of Japan and the Sea of Okhotsk. Located between Sakhalin Island and the Russian mainland, it is generally shallow, with depths less than 700 ft (210 m). Ice impedes its ports for half the year
Tatar language
formerly Volga Tatar language Turkic language with some eight million speakers. Its speakers include less than half the population of Tatarstan in Russia, with the remainder scattered in enclaves across eastern European Russian, Siberia, and the Central Asian republics. Tatar, like the closely related Bashkir language, is characterized by a remarkable series of vowel shifts that distinguish it (at least in its most characteristic varieties) from all other Turkic languages. It has numerous dialect distinctions; the conventional division is between a central group that includes the Tatar of most of Tatarstan and the literary language based on Kazan speech, a western group, and an eastern group. Crimean Tatar, belonging to the southwestern group of Turkic languages, and Chulym Tatar, belonging to the northeastern group, are not closely related to Tatar
Crimean Tatar
A Turkic language of Crimea (Ukraine) Turkey, Romania, Russia, Bulgaria and Uzbekistan
Mongol Tatar
{i} member of any of the Asiatic tribes who invaded western Asia and eastern Europe and settled in areas of European Russia
Türkisch - Englisch
hist. mounted courier, mounted messenger; postrider
post boy
Tataric
Tatar
tatarian
Tartar

Scratch a Russian and find a Tartar. - Bir Rus'u çizersen altında bir Tatar çıkar.

Scratch a Russian and find a Tartar. - Bir Rus'u çiz ve bir Tatar bul.

tatar oku
More people have
Tatarlar
tartars
artından atlı/tatar kovarcasına
(running) as if chased by the devil
tatar

    Silbentrennung

    Ta·tar

    Türkische aussprache

    tätır

    Aussprache

    /ˈtatər/ /ˈtætɜr/

    Etymologie

    [ 'tä-t&r ] (noun.) 1811. From French Tartare.
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