kemp

listen to the pronunciation of kemp
English - Turkish
yünde kalın kıl
kaba kıl
(Tekstil) kaba kıl, yünde kalın kıl, kemp Açıklama: Kemp; korteks tabakası gelişmemiş yün liflerinde kütikül tabakasının kalın ve kaba olması nedeniyle kısa ve kalın olup, boyamada güçlük çıkartan liflere verilen addır. Bu tip liflere köpek kılı da denir
(isim) kaba yün
{i} kaba yün
kalın kıl
English - English
Coarse, rough hair wool or fur
brittle, chalky white, weak fiber found as an impurity in the fleece
says French economy developed to post-Waterloo conditions, not attempt comparative history but suggests better results could have been achieved if resources had been allocated from agric to industry contriubiton agric & national output smaller Sees structural terms failure to adapt British methods of factories and mass production methods - source of backwardness in failure to adopt British technology and factory system
a coarse fiber especially of wool that is usually short, wavy, and white, has little affinity for dye, and is used in mixed wools
A short, coarse wool or hair fiber with a large (>60% of fiber diameter) unevenly developed medulla that causes uneven dyeing
Coarse, rough hair in wool or fur, injuring its quality
{i} bristly coarse fiber used mainly in the making of carpets
A short, coarse wool or hair fiber with a large (>60% of fiber diameter) unevenly developed medulla that causes uneven dyeing
coarse, white, dead animal-hair mixed with animal fibre which shows up in a finished yarn or fabric as a lighter colour
Jack French Kemp
born July 13, 1935, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S. U.S. politician. He played professional gridiron football with the Buffalo (N.Y.) Bills. As a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1971-89), he championed conservative causes but also strongly supported civil rights legislation. After a failed presidential bid in 1988, he was appointed secretary of housing and urban development by Pres. George Bush (1989). In 1996 he ran unsuccessfully for vice president on a ticket with Republican Bob Dole
Jack Kemp
born July 13, 1935, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S. U.S. politician. He played professional gridiron football with the Buffalo (N.Y.) Bills. As a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1971-89), he championed conservative causes but also strongly supported civil rights legislation. After a failed presidential bid in 1988, he was appointed secretary of housing and urban development by Pres. George Bush (1989). In 1996 he ran unsuccessfully for vice president on a ticket with Republican Bob Dole
Sir Michael Kemp Tippett
born Jan. 2, 1905, London, Eng. died Jan. 8, 1998, London British composer. Tippett studied composition (1923-28) at the Royal College of Music. His early music was conservative, but in the late 1930s he developed a personal, modernistic idiom that was marked by rhapsodic lyricism, intricate counterpoint, and polyphonic rhythms that have a lilting, bounding quality. He devoted most of his energies to compositions with words (generally his own), including the cantatas A Child of Our Time (1941) and The Mask of Time (1984), and the operas The Midsummer Marriage (1952), King Priam (1961), The Knot Garden (1969), and The Ice Break (1976). Beginning with King Priam, his surging rhythms and lush harmonies gave way to a starker, more taut style. His instrumental works include symphonies and string quartets
kemp

    Hyphenation

    Kemp

    Turkish pronunciation

    kemp

    Pronunciation

    /ˈkemp/ /ˈkɛmp/

    Etymology

    [ 'kemp ] (noun.) 1641. Middle English kempe "coarse hairs" from Old English cenep "mustache"
Favorites