anatolian

listen to the pronunciation of anatolian
English - Turkish
{s} Anadolu, Anadolu'ya özgü
anadolulu
anadolu

Noel Baba bir Anadolu ereniydi. - Santa Claus was an Anatolian saint.

Bir Anadolu köyünde yazın söğüt gölgesinin altında uyumak ne kadar huzur vericidir. - How restful it is to sleep under the shadow of a willow in an Anatolian village in summertime.

anatolian language
anadolu dili
Anatolian Side
Asya Yakası (İstanbul)
Anatolian leopard
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) Anadolu parsı
anatolian high school
anadolu lisesi
anatolian leopard
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) Anadolu panteri
anatolian shepherd
Anadolu çoban köpeği: Anadolu'da Sivas bölgesinde yetiştirilen, burnu ve ağzı siyah, kulakları düşük, kuyruğı sırtına doğru düzgün kıvrım yaparak duran ve çok tutulan bir tür köpek, kangal
central anatolian
orta anadolu
eastern anatolian project
doğu anadolu projesi
English - English
Any of the languages of Anatolia
Of or pertaining to Anatolia or its people, culture, etc
A native or inhabitant of Anatolia
{s} of or pertaining to Anatolia; of or relating to the people or culture of Anatolia
Of or pertaining to Anatolia or its people, culture etc
{i} native or resident of Anatolia
{i} extinct family of Anatolian languages that were spoken in ancient Anatolia that included Hittite and other nonexistent languages
an extinct branch of the Indo-European family of languages known from inscriptions and important in the reconstruction of Proto-Indo European
anatolian leopard
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) The Anatolian leopard (Panthera pardus tulliana) is a subspecies of leopard native to Asia Minor, Turkey. It is unknown whether any of these leopards still exist in the wild
Anatolian languages
Branch of the Indo-European language family spoken in Anatolia in the 2nd-1st millennia BC. The attested Anatolian languages are Hittite, Palaic, Luwian (Luvian), Hieroglyphic Luwian, Lycian, and Lydian. Hittite, by far the most copiously attested of the group, is known chiefly from a vast archive of cuneiform tablets found in 1905 at Hattusas (now Bogazköy, in north-central Turkey), the capital of the Hittite empire; Hittite texts date from the 16th to 13th century BC. By the late Roman or early Byzantine period at the latest, Anatolian languages had all become extinct. Several non-Indo-European languages of ancient Anatolia, all known from cuneiform texts, are also sometimes considered Anatolian languages: Hattic, spoken in central Anatolia before the coming of the Hittites and known solely from words and texts preserved by Hittite scribes; Hurrian, spoken in the 2nd millennium BC in northern Mesopotamia and southeastern Anatolia; and Urartian (Urartean), known from northwestern Anatolian texts of the 9th-7th centuries BC
anatolian

    Hyphenation

    An·a·to·li·an

    Turkish pronunciation

    änıtōliın

    Pronunciation

    /ˌanəˈtōlēən/ /ˌænəˈtoʊliːən/
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