laden

listen to the pronunciation of laden
Turkish - Turkish
Lâdengillerden, Akdeniz ülkelerinde yetişen tüylü ve genellikle yapışkan yapraklı, beyaz veya pembe çiçekli, reçinesi hekimlikte kullanılan bir bitki (Cistus creticus)
Bu bitkiden elde edilen sürme, rastik
(Osmanlı Dönemi) f. Çamdan çıkarılan zift gibi siyah ve kokulu zamk
Kadınların yüzlerine ben yapmak için kullandıkları bir tür reçine
Tüylü ve yapışkan yapraklı bir çalı
çamdan çıkarılan zift gibi siyah ve kokulu zamk
Anadolu'nun sahil bölgelerinde ve iç Anadolu'da bolca yetişen, zamkı olan bir çalı türü
Cistus creticus olarak tanımlanan, Akdeniz ülkelerinde yetişen tüylü ve genellikle yapışkan yapraklı, beyaz veya pembe çiçekli, reçinesi hekimlikte kullanılan bir bitki
Ladengillerden, Akdeniz ülkelerinde yetişen tüylü ve genellikle yapışkan yapraklı, beyaz veya pembe çiçekli, reçinesi hekimlikte kullanılan bir bitki (Cistus creticus)
Reçinesi hekimlikte kullanılan bir ağaççık
Bu bitkiden elde edilen sürme, rastık
LADE
(Osmanlı Dönemi) f. Ahmak, akılsız, ebleh
English - English
Weighed down with a load, burdened

The other men were variously burthened; some carrying picks and shovels - for that had been the very first necessary they brought ashore from the Hispaniola - others laden with pork, bread, and brandy for the midday meal.

: In the form of an adsorbate or adduct

Once laden it is easy to regenerate the adsorbent and retrieve the adsorbed species as a gas.

Oppressed
Past participle of lade
Heavy

His comments were laden with deeper meaning.

If you describe a person or thing as laden with something, particularly something bad, you mean that they have a lot of it. Many of their heavy industries are laden with debt
filled with a great quantity; "a tray loaded with dishes"; "table laden with food"; "`ladened' is not current usage
fill or place a load on; "load a car"; "load the truck with hay"
filled with a great quantity; "a tray loaded with dishes"; "table laden with food"; "`ladened' is not current usage"
burdened psychologically or mentally; "laden with grief"; "oppressed by a sense of failure" filled with a great quantity; "a tray loaded with dishes"; "table laden with food"; "`ladened' is not current usage
burdened psychologically or mentally; "laden with grief"; "oppressed by a sense of failure"
{s} loaded, weighed down, bent under a heavy burden
remove with or as if with a ladle; "ladle the water out of the bowl"
If someone or something is laden with a lot of heavy things, they are holding or carrying them. I came home laden with cardboard boxes heavily-laden mules
Loaded; freighted; burdened; as, a laden vessel; a laden heart
fraught
bill of laden
Common misspelling of bill of lading
debt-laden
having a burden of debt
lade
To fill or load (related to cargo or a shipment)
theory-laden
Whose meaning depends upon a set of theoretical principles
full-laden
{a} deeply or very heavily laden
lade
{v} to freight, load, empty, throw out with a dipper
value laden
Presupposing the acceptance of a particular set of values: "governments' judgements are value-laden."
value-laden
Presupposing the acceptance of a particular set of values: "governments' judgements are value-laden."
Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg
born 1395, Mainz died probably Feb. 3, 1468, Mainz German inventor of a method of printing from movable type. Born to a patrician family in Mainz, he apparently worked at such crafts as goldsmithing and gem cutting in Mainz and Strasbourg and was experimenting with printing by 1438. He obtained backing in 1450 from the financier Johann Fust (. 1400-66); Fust's impatience and other factors led to Gutenberg's loss of his establishment to Fust in 1455. Gutenberg's masterpiece, and the first book ever printed from movable type, is the "Forty-Two-Line" Bible, completed no later than 1455. A magnificent Psalter was published in 1457, after the loss of his press. The only other works still attributed to him are minor. His invention's unique elements included a mold, with which type could be cast precisely and in large quantities; a type-metal alloy; a new press, derived from those used in winemaking, papermaking, and bookbinding; and an oil-based printing ink. None of these features existed in Chinese or Korean printing, in the existing European technique of stamping letters on various surfaces, or in woodblock printing. Gutenberg's invention, seminal to the course of Western civilization, remained the source of the basic elements of typesetting for 500 years
Osama Bin Laden
{i} (born 1957) Saudi billionaire living in Afghanistan (suspected of masterminding the terrorist bombings of two American embassies in Africa in 1998, and the crashing of hijacked planes into the Pentagon and the Twin Towers in the USA in 2001, causing thousands of deaths, and the destruction of the famous skyscrapers)
Osama bin Laden
born 1957, Riyadh, Saud.Ar. Leader of a broad-based Islamic extremist movement implicated in numerous acts of terrorism against the U.S. and other Western countries. The son of a wealthy Saudi family, he joined the Muslim resistance in Afghanistan after the 1979 Soviet invasion of that country. Following his homecoming, he became enraged at the presence of U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia during the Persian Gulf War (1990-91) and, through a network of like-minded Islamic militants known as al-Qaeda, launched a series of terrorist attacks. These acts included the bombings of the World Trade Center in New York City in 1993, the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, and the U.S. warship Cole in Aden, Yemen, in 2000. A self-styled Islamic scholar, bin Laden issued several legal opinions calling on Muslims to take up jihad (holy war) against the U.S., and in 2001 a group of militants under his direction launched the September 11 attacks, which led to the deaths of some 3,000 people. The U.S. thereafter demanded bin Laden's extradition from Afghanistan, where he was sheltered by that country's Taliban militia, and launched attacks on Taliban and al-Qaeda forces when that ultimatum was not met. With the collapse of the Taliban, bin Laden and his associates went into hiding
bin laden
Arab terrorist who established al-Qaeda (born in 1957)
care-laden
burdened by cares; "all ye that labor and are heavy-laden"-Matt
care-laden
11: 28
doom-laden
saying or making you feel that something very bad is going to happen soon
lade
To throw in or out, with a ladle or dipper; to dip; as, to lade water out of a tub, or into a cistern
lade
remove with or as if with a ladle; "ladle the water out of the bowl"
lade
To admit water by leakage, as a ship, etc
lade
To transfer (the molten glass) from the pot to the forming table
lade
fill or place a load on; "load a car"; "load the truck with hay"
lade
The mouth of a river
lade
To use a ladle or dipper to remove something (generally water)
lade
To draw water
lade
To load; to put a burden or freight on or in; generally followed by that which receives the load, as the direct object
lade
To weigh down, oppress, or burden
lade
{f} load; burden, weigh down; fill full; raise or remove (a liquid) with a dipper
lade
A passage for water; a ditch or drain
Turkish - English
(Ticaret) lade
cistus
(Botanik, Bitkibilim) rock rose
rockrose
labdanum
laden reçinesi
myrrh
laden ağacı
marsh marigold
laden reçinesi
labdanum
laden
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