grasses

listen to the pronunciation of grasses
English - Turkish

Definition of grasses in English Turkish dictionary

grass
çimen

Ben kendimi çimenlerin üzerine attım. - I laid myself on the grass.

Köpeğim sık sık çimene uzanır. - My dog often lies on the grass.

grass
çim

Köpeğim sık sık çimene uzanır. - My dog often lies on the grass.

Inek, uzun, yeşil çimenlerin arasında çok yavaş hareket ediyordu. - The cows were moving very slowly through the long green grass.

grass
ot
grass
otlak
grass
çimenlik
grass
çimenli
grass
ispiyoncu
grass
vurmak kuş
grass
esrar
grass
marihuana
grass
(İİ) ispiyoncu
grass
gammaz
grass
çayır

İnekler çayırda ot yiyorlar. - Cows are eating grass in the meadow.

Çayırda rüzgar esiyor. - The wind is blowing on the grass.

grass
İspiyoncu, gammaz
grass
çimenler
grass
çimleri
grass
çimler
cut down grasses
çayır biçmek
grass
{f} çimenle kaplamak
grass
{f} yere sermek
grass
{f} çimlere yaymak
grass
(Nükleer Bilimler) çimlenme, gürültü
grass
{f} vurmak (kuş)
grass
{f} ot yemek
grass
{f} ele vermek
grass
spor yere düşürmek
grass
(Askeri) ÇİMEN: Radarda, özellikle devre gürültüsünden ileri gelen rastgele karışım. Karışımlar; radar ekranı baz hattında keskin ve yakın aralıklarla görülür
grass
{f} çim kaplamak
grass
Bermuda grass domuz ayrığ
grass
{i} argo (sigara halinde içilen) hintkenevirinin kurutulmuş yaprakları
grass
argo haşiş
grass
otla

Tavşanlarımı otla besliyorum. - I feed my hares with grass.

Biz kilisenin etrafındaki bütün çimenleri ve yabani otları kestik. - We cut away all the grass and weeds around the church.

grass
kaplamak
grass
{f} çimlemek
grass
{f} çayıra salmak
grass
otlar üzerine sermek
grass
{f} ihbar etmek
grass
çay şekeri
grass
otlamak
grass
israfil
grass
cuk
grass
otlatmak
grass
ampes
English - English
— a group of plants that are monocotyledons (have long narrow leaves with veins that run parallel to their length) They are usually herbs Some are larger and woody like bamboo Leaf bases wrap around the stem of the grass Flowers are called inflorescences and have many florets with powdery anthers
third-person singular of grass
Related Topics: [wetlands] Grasses are sufficiently familiar that we probably pay them very little attention Few families can match the grasses for number of species, or for the diversity of habitats they encompass With the exception of the bamboos grasses are herbaceous A quick glance at the leaves will tell a grass from a sedge Whereas a sedge's leaves come out in three directions, grass leaves come out in only two directions - that is, if you were to look at a blade of grass from above, the leaves would appear to form a straight line Unlike the reeds, grass flowers are usually extremely compact and simple: whereas reed flowers are usually somewhat rounded and bear six tiny petal-like structures, grass flowers are usually restricted to just two tiny modified leaves (glumes) at the base of the flowers
plural of grass
plants having narrow leaves and jointed stems Bangs Field Trip 
Johnson grasses
plural form of Johnson grass
cogon grasses
plural form of cogon grass
grass
Marijuana
grass
A lawn
grass
Noise on an A-scope or similar type of radar display
grass
To lay out on the grass; to knock down (an opponent etc.)

He flew at me with his knife, and I had to grass him twice, and got a cut over the knuckles, before I had the upper hand of him.

grass
Sharp, closely spaced discontinuities in the trace of a cathode-ray tube, produced by random interference
oat grasses
plural form of oat grass
saw grasses
plural form of saw grass (alternative spelling of sawgrasses)
grass
{n} the name of a great variety of plants, many of which are the food of cattle
grass
{v} to grow over with grass
Grass
gres
grass
Marijuana, weed, pot, etc
grass
Court surface composed of a well-tended lawn Grass is the fastest type of surface Wimbledon is the most famous grass court tournament
grass
Any plant of the family Poaceae, characterized by leaves that arise from nodes in the stem, wrap around it for a distance, and leave, especially those grown as ground cover rather than for grain
grass
narrow-leaved green herbage: grown as lawns; used as pasture for grazing animals; cut and dried as hay
grass
Grass is a very common plant consisting of large numbers of thin, spiky, green leaves that cover the surface of the ground. Small things stirred in the grass around the tent The lawn contained a mixture of grasses
grass
To produce grass
grass
Metaphorically used for what is transitory
grass
HERBO
grass
> refocused FLASH
grass
cover with grass
grass
Geographical Resource Analysis Support System A public-domain raster GIS modeling product of the U S Army Corp of Engineers' Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (USACERL)
grass
If you talk about the grass, you are referring to an area of ground that is covered with grass, for example in your garden. I'm going to cut the grass
grass
The season of fresh grass; spring
grass
An endogenous plant having simple leaves, a stem generally jointed and tubular, the husks or glumes in pairs, and the seed single
grass
An informer, police informer; one who betrays a group (of criminals, etc) to the authorities
grass
disapproval A grass is someone who tells the police or other authorities about criminal activities that they know about. = informer
grass
A plant found in flower gardens that needs little or no care
grass
animal food for browsing or grazing
grass
To act as a grass or informer, to betray; to report on (criminals etc) to the authorities
grass
Type of plant that has long slender leaves that extend from a short stem or the soil surface
grass
Plants of the family Poaceae (Gramineae) Grasses are characterized by rounded, hollow or pithy jointed stems (culms), and narrow sheathing leaves with parallel veins The leaves alternate on two sides of the stem The junction of the blade and sheath often bears an erect fringe of hairs (ligule) and sometimes also earlike projections (auricles) Flowers are borne in reduced spikes (spiklets) See drawing of plant group characteristics
grass
Gone to grass Dead The allusion is to the grass which grows over the dead Also, "Gone to rusticate," the allusion being to a horse which is sent to grass when unfit for work Not to let the grass grow under one's feet To be very active and energetic "Captain Cuttle held on at a great pace, and allowed no grass to grow under his feet " - Dickens: Dombey and Son To give grass To confess yourself vanquished To be knocked down in a pugilistic encounter is to "go to grass;" to have the sack is also to go to grass, as a cow which is no longer fit for milking is sent to pasture A grass-hand is a compositor who fills a temporary vacancy
grass
Members of the plant family Poaceae
grass
GRASS (Geographical Resource Analysis Support System): it is the name of a software for image elaboration, also used to define the corresponding format of raster data
grass
{f} cover with grass; feed grass to livestock; produce grass; inform on (British Slang)
grass
sedge-like plant, usually with round (rarely flat) stems
grass
1 Sharp, closely space discontinuities in the trace of a cathode-ray tube, produced by random interference; so named because of their resemblance to blades of lawn grass
grass
Utility; Submission
grass
feed with grass
grass
give away information about somebody; "He told on his classmate who had cheated on the exam"
grass
German writer of novels and poetry and plays (born 1927)
grass
Rye grass for seed
grass
German writer of novels and poetry and plays (born 1927) narrow-leaved green herbage: grown as lawns; used as pasture for grazing animals; cut and dried as hay shoot down, of birds feed with grass spread out clothes on the grass to let it dry and bleach cover with grass; "The owners decided to grass their property
grass
Popularly: Herbage; the plants which constitute the food of cattle and other beasts; pasture
grass
street names for marijuana
grass
n A type of plant that grows best in flower beds, but is intended to cover large areas of lawn and have a carpet like appearance Supposed to be green when not dormant
grass
There is something in the order of 9000 species worldwide Only a handful are used in turfgrass situations in the UK: Bentgrass species, Fescue species, Perennial ryegrass and Smooth stalked meadow grass being the main ones
grass
To bring to the grass or ground; to land; as, to grass a fish
grass
disapproval If you say that one person grasses on another, the first person tells the police or other authorities about something criminal or wrong which the second person has done. His wife wants him to grass on the members of his own gang He was repeatedly attacked by other inmates, who accused him of grassing. = inform Grass up means the same as grass. How many of them are going to grass up their own kids to the police?
grass
To expose, as flax, on the grass for bleaching, etc
grass
shoot down, of birds
grass
To cover with grass or with turf
grass
If you say the grass is greener somewhere else, you mean that other people's situations always seem better or more attractive than your own, but may not really be so. He was very happy with us but wanted to see if the grass was greener elsewhere. German writer whose novels, notably The Tin Drum (1959) and Dog Years (1963), concern the political and social climate of Germany during and after World War II. He won the 1999 Nobel Prize for literature. grass sb up to tell the police about a criminal's activities grass on. Any of many low, green, nonwoody plants that make up the families Poaceae (or Gramineae), Cyperaceae (sedges), and Juncaceae (rushes). Only the approximately 8,000-10,000 species in the family Poaceae are true grasses. They are the most economically important of all flowering plants because of their nutritious grains and soil-forming function, and they are the most widespread and most numerous of plants. The cereal grasses include wheat, corn, rice, rye, oats, barley, and millet. Grasses provide forage for grazing animals, shelter for wildlife, and construction materials, furniture, utensils, and food for humans. Some species are grown as garden ornamentals, cultivated as turf for lawns and recreational areas, or used as cover plants for erosion control. Most have hollow, segmented, round stems, bladelike leaves, and extensively branching fibrous root systems. bear grass bent grass couch grass quack grass Grass Günter Wilhelm
grass
{i} green plant with flat leaves and jointed stems (used as a ground cover in lawns, fields, etc.); area covered with such plants; pasture; marijuana (Slang); police informer (British Slang)
grass
A basic Energy Type
grass
(Gramineae) Any plant of this genus characterized by jointed stems, sheathing leaves, flower spikelets and fruit consisting of a seed-like grain or caryopsis Plants ordered by Johnson included: Black grass Orchard grass (Dactylis glomerata) a weedy grass grown for pastures "Ray" [Rye] grass (Lolium) any of several European grasses grown for forage Timothy grass (Phleum pratense) A coarse grass having cylindrical spikes, used for fodder 'Named after Timothy Hanson, 18th century farmer who grew this grass and spread its cultivation
grass
Geographical Resource Analysis Support System A public-domain raster GIS modeling product of the U S Army Corp of Engineers’ Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (USACERL)
grass
Grass is the same as marijuana
grass
spread out clothes on the grass to let it dry and bleach
grass
= GAny non-broadleaf plant that does not have a woody stem
grass
cover with grass; "The owners decided to grass their property"
grasses

    Turkish pronunciation

    gräsız

    Pronunciation

    /ˈgrasəz/ /ˈɡræsəz/

    Etymology

    [ 'gras ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English gras, from Old English græs; akin to Old High German gras grass, Old English grOwan to grow.

    Videos

    ... Keeping their heads up above the tall grasses to watch for predators. ...
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