january

listen to the pronunciation of january
English - Turkish
{i} ocak

Yılın ilk ayı Ocaktır. - The first month of the year is January.

Ocak ayında onunla birlikteydim. - I was with him in January.

(isim) ocak
Ocak ayı

Onunla ocak ayında tanıştım. - I met him in January.

Ocak ayında onunla birlikteydim. - I was with him in January.

ikinci kânun obs
yılın ilk ayı
ocak (ayı)
january thaw
(Meteoroloji) ocak ayı buz erimesi
mid january
ocağın ortası
4th of january
4 Ocak
mid january
okcak ayı ortası
English - English
The first month of the Gregorian calendar, following the December of the previous year and preceding February. Abbreviation: Jan or Jan

01/01/09 : Thursday, January 1st, 2009.

January is the first month of the year in the Western calendar. We always have snow in January She was born on January 6, 1946. the first month of the year, between December and February next/last January (Januarius, from Janus ancient Roman god of doors, gates, and new beginnings)
{i} first month of the Gregorian calendar
The month dedicated by the Romans to Janus (q v ) Janus had two faces, and January could look back to the year past, and forwards to the current year
the first month of the year; begins 10 days after the winter solstice
{i} family name; female first name
The first month of the year, containing thirty-one days
1/2 3: 23PM 12 degree Capricorn 1/18 5: 48 AM 28 degree Capricorn/Cancer
janvye
Garnet Garnet Deep Red
adj Januari 2 n bulan Januari
{n} the first month in the year
Postcards/Rack Cards
Garnet
jan
mid-January
Any time in the middle of January
mid-January
Happening in the middle of January
mid-January
In the middle of January
slow as molasses in January
Extremely slow
mid-january
the middle part of January
the month of January
first month of the Gregorian calendar
Turkish - English
{k} Jan
january

    Hyphenation

    Ja·nu·a·ry

    Turkish pronunciation

    cänyueri

    Pronunciation

    /ˈʤanyo͞oˌerē/ /ˈʤænjuːˌɛriː/

    Etymology

    [ jan-y&-"wer-E ] (noun.) 14th century. Re-Latinized from Middle English Ieneuer genever Latin iānuārius (“(month) of Janus”), perhaps from Proto-Indo-European base *ei-, "to go".

    Videos

    ... on january third she felt a sharp pain on January 6 ...
    ... but on January 1st she got Cup ...
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