brian

listen to the pronunciation of brian
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of brian in Turkish Turkish dictionary

Boru
(Osmanlı Dönemi) ŞEBUR
boru
Nefesle çalınan perdesiz madenî çalgı, borazan
boru
Bir yerden başka bir yere sıvı gaz vb. aktarmaya yarayan, içi boş, uçları açık, uzun ve dar silindir: "Soba borusu kazanın içinden geçerdi."- N. Cumalı
boru
Nefesle çalınan perdesiz madenî çalgı, borazan: "Ankara'da ilk sabah boru sesinden uyandım."- R. E. Ünaydın
boru
Bir yerden başka bir yere sıvı gaz vb. aktarmaya yarayan, içi boş, uçları açık, uzun ve dar silindir
Lehçe - Turkish

Definition of brian in Lehçe Turkish dictionary

boru
bordan
English - English
A male given name

Why oh why had his parents even considered Brian? Brian is someone who works in a hardware shop or fixes the U bend. What chance did Sir Lovesdaslutalot have in life with a name like Brian? You can't even shorten Brian to Bri without it sounding like a kind of cheese!.

To keep fire at the mouth of (as of an oven), to give light or to preserve heat
given name, male
{i} male first name; family name
Brian Boru Friel Brian Holland Brian and Eddie Josephson Brian David Medawar Sir Peter Brian Moore Brian Mulroney Martin Brian Brian Ó Nuallain
Brian Boru
born 941, near Killaloe, Ire. died April 23, 1014, Clontarf, near Dublin High king of Ireland (1002-14). He became king of Munster in 976, won control of the southern half of Ireland from the high king Maelsechlainn in 997, and replaced him in 1002. Leinster and the Norsemen of Dublin united against him in 1013 with help from abroad; at the Battle of Clontarf, won by his son Murchad, Brian was killed in his tent by fleeing Norsemen (see Vikings). A line of princes, the O'Briens, descended from him
Brian D Josephson
born Jan. 4, 1940, Cardiff, Wales British physicist. He received a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge and began building on earlier work done by Leo Esaki of IBM and Ivar Giaever (b. 1929) of General Electric. For his discovery of what is now called the Josephson effect in superconductivity, he shared a Nobel Prize with Esaki and Giaever in 1973. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1970 and was named a professor at Cambridge in 1974
Brian David Josephson
born Jan. 4, 1940, Cardiff, Wales British physicist. He received a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge and began building on earlier work done by Leo Esaki of IBM and Ivar Giaever (b. 1929) of General Electric. For his discovery of what is now called the Josephson effect in superconductivity, he shared a Nobel Prize with Esaki and Giaever in 1973. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1970 and was named a professor at Cambridge in 1974
Brian Friel
an Irish writer of short stories and plays that are mostly about Irish people and the political situation in Ireland (1929- ). born Jan. 9, 1929, near Omagh, County Tyrone, N.Ire. Irish dramatist and short-story writer. Friel taught school in Londonderry before settling in County Donegal, Ireland. After The New Yorker began publishing his stories, he turned to writing full time. His first dramatic success was Philadelphia, Here I Come! (1963). Later he wrote about the dilemmas of Irish life and the troubles in Northern Ireland in such plays as The Freedom of the City (1973) and Making History (1988). Many of his plays notably Translations (1980) and Dancing at Lughnasa (1990, Tony Award; film, 1998) deal with family relationships and their connection to language, customs, and the land. His short-story collections include The Diviner (1983)
Brian Moore
born Aug. 25, 1921, Belfast, N.Ire. died Jan. 10, 1999, Malibu, Calif., U.S. Irish-born Canadian novelist. Moore immigrated to Canada in 1948 and was a writer for the Montreal Gazette from 1952. He is best known for his first novel, The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne (1955; film, 1987), about an aging spinster whose pretensions to gentility are gradually dissolved in alcoholism. His later novels include The Luck of Ginger Coffey (1960), The Emperor of Ice Cream (1965), The Doctor's Wife (1976), and The Magician's Wife (1998). His novels were very different from each other in voice, setting, and incident but alike in their lucid, elegant, and vivid prose
Brian Mulroney
{i} Martin Brian Mulroney (born 1939), 18th prime minister of Canada (from 1984 to 1993)
Brian Mulroney
born March 20, 1939, Baie-Comeau, Que., Can. Prime minister of Canada (1984-93). The son of an electrician in a paper-and-pulp town, he grew up bilingual in English and French. He began practicing law in Montreal in 1965. In 1974 he served on a commission to investigate crime in Quebec's construction industry. From 1977 to 1983 he was president of the Iron Ore Company. Elected leader of the Progressive Conservative Party in 1983, he became prime minister when the party defeated the Liberals in the general election in 1984. Creating a coalition of Quebec nationalists and western conservatives, he advocated unification while recognizing Quebec as a "distinct society." He sought U.S. cooperation on acid rain and trade policies and helped negotiate NAFTA. He retired from politics in 1993
Brian Pinkerton
{i} American who developed the WebCrawler®
Brian and Eddie Holland
orig. Edward Holland born Feb. 15, 1941, Detroit, Mich., U.S. born Oct. 30, 1939, Detroit, Mich., U.S. U.S. songwriters and producers. In 1962 the brothers formed a team with Lamont Dozier (b. 1941), which subsequently created a series of hits for almost every artist on the Motown label and helped define its characteristic sound through blending elements of gospel music and rhythm and blues with elaborate arrangements. Their songs include "Baby Love," "Stop! In the Name of Love" (two of the seven hits they wrote for the Supremes), "Heat Wave," "Baby, I Need Your Loving," and dozens of other hits for artists such as Marvin Gaye and the Temptations
Martin Brian Mulroney
born March 20, 1939, Baie-Comeau, Que., Can. Prime minister of Canada (1984-93). The son of an electrician in a paper-and-pulp town, he grew up bilingual in English and French. He began practicing law in Montreal in 1965. In 1974 he served on a commission to investigate crime in Quebec's construction industry. From 1977 to 1983 he was president of the Iron Ore Company. Elected leader of the Progressive Conservative Party in 1983, he became prime minister when the party defeated the Liberals in the general election in 1984. Creating a coalition of Quebec nationalists and western conservatives, he advocated unification while recognizing Quebec as a "distinct society." He sought U.S. cooperation on acid rain and trade policies and helped negotiate NAFTA. He retired from politics in 1993
Patrick O'Brian
orig. Richard Patrick Russ born Dec. 12, 1914, near London, Eng. died Jan. 2, 2000, Dublin, Ire. British writer. He was the eighth of nine children; an early marriage ended in divorce, and after World War II he married again, changed his name, and moved to a small, secluded coastal town in France near the Spanish border. He received little critical notice until age 54, when he began publishing his 18th-century seafaring series featuring Capt. Jack Aubrey and ship's surgeon Stephen Maturin; it eventually numbered 20 books (1969-99) and was compared with the works of Herman Melville, Anthony Trollope, and Marcel Proust
Peter Brian Medawar
{i} (1915-1987) Brazilian-born English zoologist and anatomist, Nobel prize winner for medicine in 1960
Sir Peter Brian Medawar
born Feb. 28, 1915, Rio de Janeiro, Braz. died Oct. 2, 1987, London, Eng. Brazilian-born British zoologist. Educated at Oxford, he began transplant research in 1949. His finding (1953) that adult animals injected with foreign cells early in life accept skin grafts from the original donor or its twin lent support to Macfarlane Burnet's hypothesis that cells learn, during and just after birth, to distinguish "own" from "foreign." He found that nonidentical cattle twins accept skin grafts from each other, proving that antigens "leak" between the embryos' yolk sacs, and showed with mice that each cell contains genetic antigens important to immunity. His work deflected immunology from dealing with the fully developed immunity mechanism to attempting to alter the mechanism itself (e.g., suppression of transplant rejection). He and Burnet shared a 1960 Nobel Prize
Turkish - English

Definition of brian in Turkish English dictionary

boru
pipe

The water pipes froze and then burst. - Su boruları dondu ve sonra patladı.

Our water pipes burst. - Bizim su boruları patlamış.

boru
{i} conduit
boru
tube
boru
{i} horn

Tom played a Spanish folk tune on his English horn at a Chinese restaurant in France. - Tom, Fransa'da bir Çin lokantasında İngiliz borusu ile İspanyol halk melodisi çaldı.

boru
drain

The plumber pumped out the water in order to drain the pipe. - Tesisatçı boruyu boşaltmak için suyu dışarı pompaladı.

The drain is running freely. - Pis su borusu iyi çalışıyor.

boru
trompe
boru
(Gıda) vessel
boru
boom
boru
chimney
boru
(Otomotiv) cylinder pipe
boru
{i} blare
boru
{i} duct
boru
tubing
boru
trumpet
boru
clarion
boru
flue
boru
hose
boru
pipe in

He spoke with a pipe in his mouth. - Ağzında bir boru ile konuştu.

Boru
(Tıp) syring
boru
trump
boru
pipe, tube, duct; horn, bugle
boru
pipe, tube
boru
clarion; conduit
boru
mus. horn; bugle
boru
slang nonsense, empty talk
boru
slang bad, in a bad state
boru
duct; bugle
boru
brass wind instrument (especially used for sounding military signals)
boru
telescopic
boru
line
boru
bore
boru
salpinx
boru
manifold
boru
alpenhorn
brian

    Hyphenation

    bri·an

    Turkish pronunciation

    brayın

    Pronunciation

    /ˈbrīən/ /ˈbraɪən/

    Etymology

    () An Irish name of Celtic origin and obscure meaning, possibly from a word meaning "hill, high".

    Videos

    ... Brian just joined us. So why don't you come grab your seat here? Which is good, because, ...
    ... So I'd like to turn it over to Brian McClendon to talk about ...
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