to loom

listen to the pronunciation of to loom
Englisch - Türkisch
dokuma tezgâhı

Ben yeni dokuma tezgahımı denedikten sonra, yatağımı yaptım ve kahve değirmenini tamir ettim. - After I tried out my new loom, I made my bed and repaired the coffee grinder.

aslından daha kocaman ve korkunç gözükmek
belirmek
görünmek
tezgah

Ben yeni dokuma tezgahımı denedikten sonra, yatağımı yaptım ve kahve değirmenini tamir ettim. - After I tried out my new loom, I made my bed and repaired the coffee grinder.

(up ile) aslından daha büyük ve korkunç gözükmek
(isim) Uzakta hayal gibi belirme
(Elektrik, Elektronik) Sargı
(isim) Dokuma tezgâhı; dokuma; (denizcilik) küreğin topacı
uzakta hayal gibi gözükmek
tezgah,v.uzakta belir: n.dokuma tezgahı
{f} karaltı gibi görünmek
küreğin topacı
aslından daha büyük ve korkunç gözü
uzakta hayal gibi belirme
(isim) dokuma tezgâhı
dokuma tezgah

Ben yeni dokuma tezgahımı denedikten sonra, yatağımı yaptım ve kahve değirmenini tamir ettim. - After I tried out my new loom, I made my bed and repaired the coffee grinder.

dokuma

Ben yeni dokuma tezgahımı denedikten sonra, yatağımı yaptım ve kahve değirmenini tamir ettim. - After I tried out my new loom, I made my bed and repaired the coffee grinder.

büyük önem kazanmak
{f} belli belirsiz görünmek
görün
(Tekstil) dokuma tezgahı, tezgah
Englisch - Englisch
That part of an oar which is near the grip or handle and inboard from the rowlock
A frame or machine of wood or other material, in which a weaver forms cloth out of thread; a machine for interweaving yarn or threads into a fabric, as in knitting or lace making
A loon (bird of order Gaviformes)
{n} a fat earth
{n} a weaver's frame for work, tool, bird
{v} to cover with
{v} to appear elevated more than usual
To appear above the surface either of sea or land, or to appear enlarged, or distorted and indistinct, as a distant object, a ship at sea, or a mountain, esp
appear very large or occupy a commanding position; "The huge sculpture predominates over the fountain"; "Large shadows loomed on the canyon wall"
to take shape, appear, or come into view in a hazy manner, as if through a mist, in such a manner that it appears threatening
means a utensil (Anglo-Saxon, loma) Thus “heir-loom” means a personal chattel or household implement which goes by special custom to the heir The word was in familiar use in Prior's time (1664-1721), for he says “a thousand maidens ply the purple loom ”
The Schiffli loom on which the goods is framed to be embroidered
{f} appear as a large and indistinct form; appear as larger than life; impend, be about to occur; weave fabric on a loom
a textile machine for weaving yarn into a textile appear very large or occupy a commanding position; "The huge sculpture predominates over the fountain"; "Large shadows loomed on the canyon wall"
A loom is a machine, hand or power driven, necessary to weave cloth
(a) The reflection on the clouds of light from below; (b) An oar handle
from atmospheric influences; as, the ship looms large; the land looms high
The section of the oar between the blade and the handle
A device used for weaving
come into view indistinctly, often threateningly; "Another air plane loomed into the sky
come into view indistinctly, often threateningly; "Another air plane loomed into the sky"
If a worrying or threatening situation or event is looming, it seems likely to happen soon. Another government spending crisis is looming in the United States The threat of renewed civil war looms ahead. the looming threat of recession
The basic frame used for weaving Two horizontal beams are used to tie the vertical warps and hold them tightly in place Looms can be either horizontal or vertical Horizontal looms are small, used for nomadic weavings and can be folded in order to be transported on an animal such as a donkey, horse or camel Vertical looms are used for weavings of large rugs and are stationary Three or more people can sit side by side and work simultaneously
See Loon, the bird
{i} apparatus on which fabrics are woven, weaving machine
A frame or automated machine that weaves two or more sets of threads or yarns to form a cloth
To impend; to threaten or hang over
A device or machine for weaving cloth
To rise and to be eminent; to be elevated or ennobled, in a moral sense
Wiring loom with or with-out sensors
A framework or machine for interweaving yarns or threads into a fabric
A mechanical device that interlaces fibers at right angles with varying degrees of weave construction (weight, thickness and design) More modern looms are air jet but rapier and more traditional shuttle equipment is still in use
The part of the oar or scull between the spoon and the handle
If something looms over you, it appears as a large or unclear shape, often in a frightening way. the bleak mountains that loomed out of the blackness and towered around us
The equipment on which fabric is woven
an unnatural and indistinct appearance of elevation or enlargement of anything, as of land or of a ship, seen by one at sea
hang over, as of something threatening, dark, or menacing; "The terrible vision brooded over her all day long"
The code name given to the second-generation Brocade Fabric ASIC
Fabric machine to produce cloth by means of the weaving of two series of perpendicular threads known as trams and warps
A loom is a machine that is used for weaving thread into cloth. a frame or machine on which thread is woven into cloth. Machine for weaving cloth. The earliest looms, from the 5th millennium BC, consisted of bars or beams forming a frame to hold a number of parallel threads in two alternating sets. By raising one set of these threads (which together formed the warp), it was possible to run a cross thread (a weft, or filling) between them. A shuttle carried the filling strand through the warp. The fundamental operation of the loom remained unchanged, but over centuries many improvements were introduced in both Asia and Europe. The drawloom, probably invented in Asia for silk weaving, provided a means for raising warp threads in groups as required by a pattern. In the 18th century Jacques de Vaucanson and J.-M. Jacquard mechanized this function by the ingenious use of punched cards; the cards programmed the mechanical drawboy, saving labour and eliminating errors (see Jacquard loom). In England the inventions of John Kay (flying shuttle), Edmund Cartwright (power drive), and others contributed to the Industrial Revolution, in which the loom and other textile machinery played a central role
A wooden structure that holds the warp and weft threads for weaving the rug It can be vertical and horizontal The height and width of the loom determines the rug size
The state of looming; esp
A machine used for weaving fabrics
This is the main central section of the oar
a textile machine for weaving yarn into a textile
A loon, the bird
a machine or device from which cloth is produced by interweaving thread or yarn at right angles
to loom
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