halle

listen to the pronunciation of halle
Turkish - Turkish
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Hâcet, ihtiyaç.* Kum içindeki yol ve gedik
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Fakirlik
English - Turkish

Definition of halle in English Turkish dictionary

hall
hol

Holde bir telefon vardır. - There's a telephone in the hall.

Tom hol dolabına ceketini astı. - Tom hung his jacket in the hall closet.

foyer
{i} giriş salonu

Ben sizi otelin giriş salonunda karşılayacağım. - I will meet you in the hotel foyer.

hall
malikane
hall
aralık
hall
giriş salonu
foyer
antre
foyer
giriş

Ben sizi otelin giriş salonunda karşılayacağım. - I will meet you in the hotel foyer.

foyer
tiyatroda ara salonu
hall
(mektep/birdem/vb.) salon
hall
koridor

Tom'u koridorda gördüm. - I saw Tom in the hall.

Tom karanlık koridorda aşağı doğru yürüdü. - Tom walked down the dark hallway.

foyer
Tiyatroda fuaye, giriş salonu
foyer
{i} fuaye
foyer
tiyatro fuaye
hall
{i} okul/üniversite binası
hall
{i} konak
hall
yurt/hôl/salon
hall
{i} yemekhane

Askerler yemekhanede yemek yerler. - The soldiers eat in the mess hall.

English - English
City (pop., 2002 est.: 243,045), east-central Germany. Lying on the Saale River, Halle's location was the site of settlements that centred around the local salt deposits and flourished 1000-400 BC. Halle and its valuable saltworks were granted to the archbishopric of Magdeburg in AD 968. It was a member of the Hanseatic League (1281-1478). The capital of Halle district in East Germany (1952-90), it is an important rail junction and a principal commercial and industrial centre. It was the birthplace of George Frideric Handel and the site of the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, founded in 1694
a city in the Saxony region of Germany on the Saale River; a member of the Hanseatic League during the 13th and 14th centuries
Halle an der Saale
City (pop., 2002 est.: 243,045), east-central Germany. Lying on the Saale River, Halle's location was the site of settlements that centred around the local salt deposits and flourished 1000-400 BC. Halle and its valuable saltworks were granted to the archbishopric of Magdeburg in AD 968. It was a member of the Hanseatic League (1281-1478). The capital of Halle district in East Germany (1952-90), it is an important rail junction and a principal commercial and industrial centre. It was the birthplace of George Frideric Handel and the site of the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, founded in 1694