a glove

listen to the pronunciation of a glove
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of a glove in Turkish Turkish dictionary

glove
Eldiven
English - English
gantlet
glove
To catch the ball in a baseball mitt

He gloved the line drive for the third out.

glove
The ability to catch a hit ball

Frederico had a great glove, but he couldn't hit a curveball, so he never broke into the pros.

glove
To put on a glove

Maxwell gloved his hand so that he wouldn't leave fingerprints, then pulled the trigger.

glove
{n} a cover for the hand and arm
glove
{v} to cover wih gloves
glove
is an input device that captures the shape and movements of your hand and fingers
glove
Gloves are pieces of clothing which cover your hands and wrists and have individual sections for each finger. You wear gloves to keep your hands warm or dry or to protect them. a pair of white cotton gloves
glove
A glove wired with "Biosensors" to detect hand and finger motions
glove
To cover with, or as with, a glove
glove
{f} put gloves on; provide with gloves
glove
protective covering made of leather or canvas which is worn on the foil hand
glove
An item of clothing other than a mitten, covering all or part of the hand and fingers, but allowing independent movement of the fingers
glove
The latter characteristic distinguishes the glove from the mitten
glove
{i} protective covering for the hand (against cold, dirt, etc.); padded covering for the hand (worn in boxing and other sports)
glove
emphasis If you say that something fits like a glove, you are emphasizing that it fits exactly
glove
gloves that are big and padded; worn for boxing
glove
Protective equipment covering the fencer's weapon hand
glove
gloves worn by fielders in baseball
glove
handwear: covers the hand and wrist
glove
A cover for the hand, or for the hand and wrist, with a separate sheath for each finger
glove
located at the pivots on variable-geometry aircraft It is impossible to have one-piece pivotal aircraft because at zero sweep, the inner ends would overlap (the solution to this problem is a fixed inner wing called a glove)
glove
A boxing glove
glove
hand in glove: see hand see also kid gloves. Covering for the hand with separate sections for the fingers and the thumb, usually extending over the wrist or part of the arm. Linen gloves were found in the tomb of Tutankhamen in Egypt. Medieval European nobles wore both fabric and leather gloves, often jeweled and embroidered. By the 14th century gloves were worn generally by upper-class men; but in the 16th century Catherine de Médicis, queen consort of Henry II of France, made gloves for women fashionable. Glovemaking became an industry in 1834 when the glove-cutting die was invented in France. Fabric gloves of antiquity were made of woven material, but modern fabric gloves are knitted of cotton, wool, or synthetic fibres
glove
a covering for the hand having separate sections for each of the fingers and the thumb and often extending part way up the arm; gauntlet
a glove
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