to hollow

listen to the pronunciation of to hollow
Englisch - Türkisch
oyuk

Tilki oyuk bir ağaçta saklandı. - The fox hid in the hollow tree.

çukur
içi boş
delik
Boş, önemsiz, değersiz
bütünüyle
{s} boş

O başka bir boş sözdü. - It was another hollow promise.

Bu kavun boş görünüyor. Belki de çok ucuz olmasının nedeni budur. - This melon sounds hollow. Maybe that's why it was so cheap.

kovuklu
boşluk
boşluktan gelen
delikli
oyulmak
sahtelik
boşluktan gelen (ses)
dere
{f} oy
(ses) yankı yapan
{s} kof
oyuk yer
{f} oymak
tamamen
boş bir şekilde
samimiyetsizlik
{f} out oymak
(Askeri) Ağaç kovuğu
{s} yalan
oyuk,v.oy: adj.delikli
boşluktan gelen yalan
{s} çökük
{s}
{s} sahte
{s} çukur, derin, çökük
hollow pretense gösteriş
boş başarı
{f} kazmak
yankı yapan
{s} çökmüş
hollow victory bir şeye yaramayan zafer
{f} çukur açmak
tam bir
içi oyuk
Englisch - Englisch
{v} groove
A feeling of emptiness
Having an empty space or cavity inside
Without substance; having no real or significant worth; meaningless

a hollow victory.

Insincere, devoid of validity; specious

a hollow promise.

A sunken area, the equivalent to a copse in British English
Distant, eerie; echoing, reverberating, as if in a hollow space; dull, muffled; often low-pitched

a hollow moan.

If you describe a statement, situation, or person as hollow, you mean they have no real value, worth, or effectiveness. Any threat to bring in the police is a hollow one. + hollowness hol·low·ness One month before the deadline we see the hollowness of these promises
{n} a hollow place, hole, opening, cavert
{v} to make hollow, scoop, empty, shout
holwe
A hollow sound is dull and echoing. the hollow sound of a gunshot
The part or space of a case binding between the textblock spine and the inside of the cover spine
a low area within a bog or fen that is wetter than surrounding hummocks and usually less acidic
{i} hole, cavity; sunken area; small valley
Lacking in flavor Describes a wine that has a first taste and a short finish, and lacks depth at mid-palate
Reverberated from a cavity, or resembling such a sound; deep; muffled; as, a hollow roar
Something that is hollow has a space inside it, as opposed to being solid all the way through. a hollow tree. a hollow cylinder
Descriptive term denoting cylindrical type of wave
deliberately deceptive; "hollow (or false) promises"; "false pretenses"
a small valley between mountains; "he built himself a cabin in a hollow high up in the Appalachians"
to make a hole in something; to excavate
Not sincere or faithful; false; deceitful; not sound; as, a hollow heart; a hollow friend
remove the inner part or the core of; "the mining company wants to excavate the hillsite"
To make hollow, as by digging, cutting, or engraving; to excavate
a depression hollowed out of solid matter
To shout; to hollo
Of something solid, having an empty space inside
remove the interior of; "hollow out a tree trunk"
Describes a wine that has a first taste and a short finish, and lacks depth in the middle No body!
A cavity, natural or artificial; an unfilled space within anything; a hole, a cavern; an excavation; as the hollow of the hand or of a tree
A concentric cotton wick used in Argon and other type lamps
A wet depression or pool found between hummocks or mounds 2 A sunken basin or depression, often sloped and having an outflow Includes gullies with slow streams where there is little sedimentation or erosion
as if echoing in a hollow space; "the hollow sound of footsteps in the empty ballroom"
Lacking in flavour Describes a wine that has a first taste and a short finish, and lacks depth at mid-palate
The concave space between the two edges of a skate blade that runs the length of the blade
devoid of significance or point; "empty promises"; "a hollow victory"; "vacuous comments"
not solid; having a space or gap or cavity; "a hollow wall"; "a hollow tree"; "hollow cheeks"; "his face became gaunter and more hollow with each year
See All, adv
A surface that is hollow curves inwards. He looked young, dark and sharp-featured, with hollow cheeks
Without substance, dishonest
Missing middle between "attack" and "finish" Caused by too many grapes on insufficiently pruned vines If very noticeable, called "empty"
{s} empty, having nothing inside; bowl shaped, concave; worthless, meaningless
Of a sound, low-pitched, and maybe scary
A small valley between mountains; "he built himself a cabin in a hollow high up in the Rockies"
Hollo
A sunken area in something solid
Wholly; completely; utterly; chiefly after the verb to beat, and often with all; as, this story beats the other all hollow
If someone gives a hollow laugh, they laugh in a way that shows that they do not really find something amusing. Murray Pick's hollow laugh had no mirth in it
A hollow is an area that is lower than the surrounding surface. Below him the town lay warm in the hollow of the hill
a body position in acrobatics in which the body is straight, the back is not arched, and the stomach and chest are pulled in tightly
To urge or call by shouting
Having an empty space or cavity, natural or artificial, within a solid substance; not solid; excavated in the interior; as, a hollow tree; a hollow sphere
A low spot surrounded by elevations; a depressed part of a surface; a concavity; a channel
Hot- or cold-manufactured tube, which is used as starting tube for a subsequent forming step or a tube, which is not finally dressed and straightened
a small valley between mountains; "he built himself a cabin in a hollow high up in the Appalachians" a cavity or space in something; "hunger had caused the hollows in their cheeks" remove the interior of; "hollow out a tree trunk" as if echoing in a hollow space; "the hollow sound of footsteps in the empty ballroom" not solid; having a space or gap or cavity; "a hollow wall"; "a hollow tree"; "hollow cheeks"; "his face became gaunter and more hollow with each year
A paper tube stuck to the spine of a book, to which the covering material is attached The resulting hollow back allows a freer opening for sections of stiff paper, or for books in which entries are to be made, and allows books bound in stiff material such as vellum and buckram to open more freely
If something is hollowed, its surface is made to curve inwards or downwards. The mule's back was hollowed by the weight of its burden. her high, elegantly hollowed cheekbones. a place in something that is at a slightly lower level than its surface = dip
A hollow is a hole inside a tree. I made my home there, in the hollow of a dying elm
{f} excavate, dig out, make hollow
Depressed; concave; gaunt; sunken
a cavity or space in something; "hunger had caused the hollows in their cheeks"
Describing a wine as hollow implies that something more was expected of it For example, a wine with a promising nose and forepalate, which then seems thin, perhaps lacking in flavour or body, on the midpalate may be described as 'hollow on the midpalate'
to hollow
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