catherine

listen to the pronunciation of catherine
English - Turkish

Definition of catherine in English Turkish dictionary

tongue
dil

Onların ana dili Fransızca. - French is their mother tongue.

Benim ana dilim İspanyolca'dır. - My mother tongue is Spanish.

Catherine-wheel
çarkıfelek
catherine wheel
şişleri kenardan dışarı çıkan tekerlek
catherine wheel
sisleri kenardan dışarı çıkan tekerlek
Catherine wheel
gül biçiminde renkli pencere
Catherine wheel
yanlamasına takla
Catherine wheel
ışıklar saçarak dönen fişek
Catherine wheel
çarkıfelek
tongue
dil vuruşu yapmak (çalgı)
tongue
(Muzik) dilli

Tek dilli Tom Ana dilinizde düşünmeyin dedi. - Don't think in your native tongue, said the monolingual Tom.

tongue
konuşmak

Goriller konuşmak için dudaklarını ve dillerini kullanamazlar ama insanlarla başka yollarla iletişim kurabilirler. - Gorillas cannot use their lips and tongues to speak, but they can communicate with people in other ways.

tongue
zıvana dili
tongue
lisan
tongue
{f} konuş

Onun gözündeki bakışına göre onun şaka yollu konuştuğunu söyleyebilirdim. - By the look in his eye I could tell that he was speaking tongue in cheek.

Göklerden ve yerden korkmayın fakat Wenzhou'lu bir kişinin kendi dilini konuştuğunu duymaktan korkun. - Do not fear the heavens and the earth, but be afraid of hearing a person from Wenzhou speak in their local tongue.

tongue
geçme
tongue
i. 1. anat. dil. 2. dil, lisan
tongue
(Tıp) Dil, lingua
tongue
geçme yapmak (tahta)
tongue
and-groove joint zıvana lambalı geçme
tongue
dili konuşmak
tongue
dil vuruşu yapmak
tongue
tahtalara geçme kenar yapmak
tongue
{i} uzantı
tongue
{i} erkek parça
turn catherine wheels
yanlamasına takla atmak
English - English
A female given name

Yes, Catherine sounds like a lovely name. I like it. My new name will be Catherine. She rolled the name Catherine silently again. The name had character a noble ring to it she really liked it.

Russian Yekaterina Alekseyevna orig. Marta Skowronska born April 15, 1684 died May 17, 1727, St. Petersburg, Russia Second wife of Peter I and empress of Russia (1725-27). A peasant woman of Baltic origin, she became Peter's mistress in 1702. In 1703, after the birth of their first child, she was received into the Russian Orthodox church and rechristened. She married Peter in 1712 and in 1724 was crowned empress-consort. After Peter's death (1725), she served two years as empress of Russia. Russian Yekaterina Alekseyevna orig. Sophie Friederike Auguste, princess von Anhalt-Zerbst known as Catherine the Great born May 2, 1729, Stettin, Prussia died Nov. 17, 1796, Tsarskoye Selo, near St. Petersburg, Russia German-born empress of Russia (1762-96). The daughter of an obscure German prince, she was chosen at age 14 to be the wife of the future Peter III. The marriage was a complete failure. Because her neurotic husband was incapable of ruling, the ambitious Catherine saw the possibility of eliminating him and governing Russia herself. After Peter became emperor in 1762, she conspired with her lover, Grigory G., Count Orlov, to force Peter to abdicate (he was murdered soon after) and have herself proclaimed empress. In her 34-year reign she led Russia into full participation in European political and cultural life. With her ministers she reorganized the administration and law of the Russian Empire and extended Russian territory, adding the Crimea and much of Poland. Though she had once intended to emancipate the serfs, she instead strengthened the system she had once condemned as inhuman. She had great energy and wide interests, and her personal life was notable for her many lovers, including Grigory Potemkin. Breshkovsky Catherine Catherine I Catherine de Médicis Catherine of Alexandria Saint Catherine of Aragon Catherine of Braganza Catherine of Siena Saint Catherine Howard Catherine Parr Connolly Maureen Catherine Deneuve Catherine Catherine Dorléac Catherine Greenaway Catherine II Catherine the Great
given name, female
{i} female first name
tongue
scribes
Catherine wheel
A firework that rotates when lit
Catherine wheel
A breaking wheel

She only lied to the boy to keep him from hurt, and for her sin her intestines were pulled from her on a Catherine wheel.

Catherine wheel
The image of a breaking wheel, or wheel with spikes on it

Sorcerers are too common; cunning men, wizards, and white witches have commonly St. Catherine's wheel printed in the roof of their mouth, or in some other part about them .

Catherine wheels
plural form of Catherine wheel
Catherine Breshkovsky
born 1844 died Sept. 12, 1934, near Prague, Czech. Russian revolutionary. After becoming involved with the Narodnik (or Populist) revolutionary group in the 1870s, she was arrested and exiled to Siberia for the years 1874-96. In 1901 she helped organize the Socialist Revolutionary Party, and her involvement again led to her arrest and exile to Siberia (1910-17). Though she became known as the "little grandmother of the Revolution," she opposed the Bolsheviks after their 1917 victory and emigrated to Prague
Catherine Deneuve
orig. Catherine Dorléac born Oct. 22, 1942, Paris, France French film actress. She appeared in films from age 13 and won fame with her role in The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964). Her cool blond beauty and skillful portrayals in Roman Polanski's Repulsion (1965) and Luis Buñuel's Belle de jour (1967) and Tristana (1970) made her an international star. Her numerous other films include The Last Metro (1980) and Indochine (1992)
Catherine Howard
born 1520 died Feb. 13, 1542, London, Eng. Fifth wife of Henry VIII of England. The granddaughter of the 2nd duke of Norfolk, she became a maid of honour to Anne of Cleves, Henry's fourth wife. After Henry had his marriage to Anne annulled, he married Catherine (1540). In 1541 he learned that Catherine had had several affairs before their marriage and that she also had probably committed adultery. Incensed, he had Parliament pass a bill in 1542 declaring it treason for an unchaste woman to marry the king. Catherine was beheaded two days later in the Tower of London
Catherine II
Empress of Russia (1762-1796) after her husband, Peter III (1728-1762), was deposed by a group led by her lover. She vastly increased the territory of the empire through conquest and three partitions of Poland
Catherine Mackinnon
{i} Dr. Catharine Alice MacKinnon (born 1946), prominent American feminist and professor of Law
Catherine Parr
born 1512 died Sept. 7, 1548 Sixth and last wife of King Henry VIII of England. The daughter of an official in the royal household, she had been widowed twice by the time she married Henry in 1543. She exerted a beneficial influence on the increasingly paranoid king and developed close friendships with his children by previous marriages. After Henry's death in 1547, she married Baron Thomas Seymour but died shortly after giving birth to a daughter
Catherine Scorsese
{i} (1912-1997) United States actress and author, mother of the film director Martin Scorsese
Catherine Zeta-Jones
{i} (born 1969) English born U.S. movie actress, won an Oscar as best supporting actress for her role in the 2002 movie "Chicago", wife of movie actor Michael Douglas
Catherine of Aragon
the first wife of King Henry VIII of England and the mother of Mary I (1485-1536). born Dec. 16, 1485, Alcalá de Henares, Spain died Jan. 7, 1536, Kimbolton, Huntingdon, Eng. First wife of Henry VIII. The daughter of Ferdinand II and Isabella I, she married Henry in 1509. She gave birth to six children, but only one daughter (later Mary I) survived infancy. Henry's desire for a legitimate male heir prompted him in 1527 to appeal to Rome for an annulment, but Pope Clement VII refused, triggering the break between Henry and Rome and leading to the English Reformation. In 1533 Henry had his own archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, annul the marriage, and Catherine spent her last years isolated from public life
Catherine of Braganza
born Nov. 25, 1638, Vila Viçosa, Port. died Dec. 31, 1705, Lisbon Portuguese wife of Charles II of England. She was married to Charles in 1662 as part of an alliance between England and Portugal, bringing England trading privileges and the port cities of Tangier and Bombay (now Mumbai). She produced no heir. Though not a faithful husband, Charles defended her against accusations of scheming to poison him. She helped convert him to Catholicism shortly before his death. In 1692 she returned to Portugal, and in 1704 she governed the country as regent for her ailing brother, Pedro II
Catherine the Great
(1729-96) German-born Empress of Russia (1762-96) credited with expanding Russian territory after defeating the Turks
Catherine the Great
the empress of Russian from 1762 to 1796. She greatly increased the size of the Russian empire (1729-96)
Catherine wheel
A Catherine wheel is a firework in the shape of a circle which spins round and round. a round flat firework that spins around as it burns (Saint Catherine of Alexandria (4th century), who was sentenced to be killed on a wheel)
Catherine wheel
instrument of torture used in the Middle Ages
catherine de medicis
queen of France as the wife of Henry II and regent during the minority of her son Charles IX (1519-1589)
catherine i
Empress of Russia who succeeded her husband Peter the Great (1684-1727)
catherine ii
Empress of Russia who greatly increased the territory of the empire (1729-1796)
catherine of aragon
first wife of Henry VIII; Henry's divorce from her was the initial step of the Reformation in England (1485-1536)
catherine wheel
Called also Catherine-wheel window
catherine wheel
circular-shaped firework; spins round and round
catherine wheel
A revolving piece of fireworks resembling in form the window of the same name
catherine wheel
Same as Rose window and Wheel window
Louise Catherine Breslau
{i} (1856-1927) German painter
Maureen Catherine Connolly
"Little Mo" won her first National Women's title in 1951. In 1953 she became the first woman to win the grand-slam (the Wimbledon, U.S., Australian, and French singles competitions). Her career was ended in 1954 by a horseback-riding accident
Maureen Catherine Connolly
born Sept. 17, 1934, San Diego, Calif., U.S. died June 21, 1969, Dallas, Texas U.S. tennis player. She became the youngest winner of the National Girl's Tournament at age
Saint Catherine of Alexandria
died early 4th century, Alexandria, Egypt; feast day November 25 Early Christian martyr. According to tradition, she was a learned girl of noble birth who protested the persecution of Christians during the reign of the Roman emperor Maxentius. She converted the emperor's wife and defeated in debate the best scholars he sent to oppose her. She was sentenced to be killed with a spiked wheel (the Catherine wheel), but, when it broke, she was beheaded instead. Her body was transported by angels to the top of Mount Sinai. One of the most popular saints of the Middle Ages, she was patron of philosophers and scholars. Her historicity is doubtful
Saint Catherine of Siena
orig. Caterina Benincasa born March 25, 1347, Siena, Tuscany died April 29, 1389, Rome; canonized 1461; feast day April 29 Dominican mystic and patron saint of Italy. She joined the Dominican third order in Siena in 1363 and soon became known for her holiness and severe asceticism. Catherine called for a Crusade against the Muslims as a means of calming domestic conflict in Italy. She also played a major role in returning the papacy from Avignon to Rome (see Avignon papacy). Her writings include four treatises on religious mysticism known as The Dialogue of St. Catherine
catherine

    Hyphenation

    Cath·er·ine

    Turkish pronunciation

    käthrîn

    Pronunciation

    /ˈkaᴛʜrən/ /ˈkæθrɪn/

    Etymology

    () Ancient Greek Αἰκατερίνη, ‘Εκατερινη (Hekaterine), of debated meaning, possibly from ‘εκατερος (hekateros) "each of the two", or from the name of the goddess Hecate. The spelling with 'h' in Latin languages, German and English, is due to a folk etymology, dating from Roman times, which associated the name with the Ancient Greek καθαρος (katharos) "pure". The name belonged to a 4th-century saint and martyr from Alexandria who was tortured on the wheel.
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