Select Keyboard:
Türkçe ▾
  1. Türkçe
  2. English
  3. العربية
  4. Dansk
  5. Deutsch
  6. Ελληνικά
  7. Español
  8. فارسی
  9. Français
  10. Italiano
  11. Kurdî
  12. Nederlands
  13. Polski
  14. Português Brasileiro
  15. Português
  16. Русский
  17. Suomi
  18. Svenska
  19. 中文注音符号
  20. 中文仓颉输入法
X
"1234567890*-Bksp
Tabqwertyuıopğü,
CapsasdfghjklşiEnter
Shift<zxcvbnmöç.Shift
AltGr

(fiil) çit ile çevirmek

listen to the pronunciation of (fiil) çit ile çevirmek
Turkish - English
palisade
To equip with a palisade
A wall of wooden stakes, used as a defensive barrier
A line of cliffs
{n} pales set up for inclosure or defense
{v} to inclose or fence with palisades
Any fence made of pales or sharp stakes
Palissade Sturdy wooden fence usually built to enclose a site until a permanent stone wall could be constructed Often built on a raised earth bank to give further protection Sometimes these were built as an extra defence or as a temporary protection while a more permanent structure was being built
surround with a wall in order to fortify
fortification consisting of a strong fence made of stakes driven into the ground
To surround, inclose, or fortify, with palisades
A sturdy wooden fence usually built to enclose a site until a permanent stone wall can be constructed
A fortification or enclosure formed by placing logs in a ditch to form a wall
used as the name of the cliffs on the west bank of the lower Hudson
A defence of closely-spaced posts Often set in a ditch
layer of cells in the leaf which contain a lot of chloroplasts
A row of logs or poles inserted upright into the ground and used as a wall or fence
[n] A defensive enclosure consisting of a fence of stakes or poles set firmly in the ground
one showing basaltic columns; usually in pl
Many of the earthlodge villages of the Plains Village peoples, and later the Arikara and Mandan, were fortified by a deep ditch and a log stockade wall, also known as a palisade