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Turkish - English
hell
A place or situation of great suffering in life

There is many a boy here today who looks on war as all glory, but, boys, it is all hell.

Used to emphasize

Hell, yeah!.

A place into which a tailor throws his shreds, or a printer his broken type
emphasis If you say that someone is going hell for leather, you are emphasizing that they are doing something or are moving very quickly and perhaps carelessly. The first horse often goes hell for leather, hits a few fences but gets away with it
This word occurs eighteen times in the New Testament In nine instances the Greek word is Hades; in eight instances it is Gehenna; and in one it is Tartarus Hades: Matt xi 23, xvi 18; Luke xvi 23; Acts ii 31; 1 Cor xv 55; Rev i 18, vi 8, xx 13, 14 (See Hades ) Gehenna: Matt v 22, 29, x 28, xiii 15, xviii 9, xxiii 15, 33; James iii 6 (See Gehenna ) Tartarus: 2 Peter ii 4 (See Tartaros ) Descended into hell (Creed) means the place of the dead (Anglo-Saxon, helan, to cover or conceal, like the Greek "Hades," the abode of the dead, from the verb a-cido, not to see In both cases it means "the unseen world" or "the world concealed from sight " The god of this nether world was called "Hades" by the Greeks, and "Hel" or "Hela" by the Scandinavians In some counties of England to cover in with a roof is "to hell the building," and thatchers or tilers are termed "helliers " Lead apes in hell (See Ape )
emphasis You can use as hell after adjectives or some adverbs to emphasize the adjective or adverb. The men might be armed, but they sure as hell weren't trained
(Rivers of) Classic authors tell us that the Inferno is encompassed by five rivers: Acheron, Cocytus, Styx, Phlegethon, and Lethe Acheron from the Greek achos-reo, grief-flowing; Cocytus, from the Greek kokuo, to weep, supposed to be a flood of tears; Styx, from the Greek stugeo, to loathe; Phlegethon, from the Greek phleo to burn; and Lethê, from the Greek letle, oblivion Five hateful rivers round Inferno run, Grief comes the first, and then the Flood of tears, Next loathsome Styx, then liquid Flame appears, Lethe comes last, or blank oblivion E C B
emphasis If you say that all hell breaks loose, you are emphasizing that a lot of arguing or fighting suddenly starts. He had an affair, I found out and then all hell broke loose
Collective entities do not exist unless there are individuals that support them by allowing themselves to be manipulated by them If all of the individuals forming a collective entity were to die and ressurect within the Church, then that entity would cease to exist The collective entity has no soul It is like a parasite depending entirely on its constituents But if the individuals were to die without accepting Christ, they would still be constituents of their collective entities and they would still be under the entity's control The entity would continue to exist through the souls of the dead The fate of the individual would depend entirely on the whims of the collective entities
emphasis Some people say like hell to emphasize that they strongly disagree with you or are strongly opposed to what you say. `I'll go myself.' --- `Like hell you will!'
emphasis If you say that someone raises hell, you are emphasizing that they protest strongly and angrily about a situation in order to persuade other people to correct it or improve it. The only way to preserve democracy is to raise hell about its shortcomings
feelings If you tell someone to go to hell, you are angrily telling them to go away and leave you alone. `Well, you can go to hell!' He swept out of the room
feelings You can say `what the hell' when you decide to do something in spite of the doubts that you have about it. What the hell, I thought, at least it will give the lazy old man some exercise
The place where devils live and where sinners are punished after death
If you go through hell, or if someone puts you through hell, you have a very difficult or unpleasant time. All of you seem to have gone through hell making this record
emphasis If you say you hope to hell or wish to hell that something is true, you are emphasizing that you strongly hope or wish it is true. I hope to hell you're right
emphasis If you describe a place or situation as a living hell, you are emphasizing that it is extremely unpleasant. School is a living hell for some children
emphasis You can use from hell after a noun when you are emphasizing that something or someone is extremely unpleasant or evil. He's a child from hell
A gambling house
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