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

aşıboyası renginde

listen to the pronunciation of aşıboyası renginde
Turkish - English
ochre
A somewhat yellowish orange colour

ochre colour:.

Referring to cultures that covered their dead with ochre
to cover with ochre
The stop codon sequence "UAA."
The name is also applied to clays of other colors
An earthy red, yellow or brown iron oxide, used as a pigment
a moderate yellow-orange to orange color
any of various earths containing silica and alumina and ferric oxide; used as a pigment
A type of earth used to create a specific yellow-brown pigment The term has also come to refer to the colour itself
A naturally occurring yellowish pigment composed of iron and clay
A impure earthy ore of iron or a ferruginous clay, usually red (hematite) or yellow (limonite), used as a pigment in making paints, etc
having a yellow-orange colour
Something that is ochre is a yellowish orange colour. For our dining room I have chosen ochre yellow walls
Red Earth used for colouring in a range of hues from yellow to deep red
{s} of an earthy-yellow color
An earth pigment containing silica, aluminum and ferric oxide
Referring to archaeological cultures that covered their dead with ochre
[Pronounced: oak-er] Naturally-occurring mineral – goethite or haematite or limonite – which was (possibly mixed with clay) and used in cave art and as a body decoration by Palaeolithic people, as at Paviland (South Wales) It has been suggested that the material was used for its medicinal and other properties, and its resemblance to blood may have been significant