manastır haline getirmek

listen to the pronunciation of manastır haline getirmek
Turkish - English
cloister
To become a Roman Catholic religious
To confine in a cloister, voluntarily or not
The monastic life
{v} to shut up in a cloister, to confine
{n} a place of religious retirement, monastery, nunnery, kind of square with piazzas
A square or rectangular courtyard sometimes with gardens, surrounded on all sides by a vaulted arcade Typically devoted to spiritual contemplation or scholarly reflection, a cloister is usually part of a monastery, a church, or occasionally a university
To protect or isolate
{i} convent; monastery; covered walkway
surround with a cloister, as of a garden
A court, usually with covered walks or ambulatorie along its sides
A covered passage around a quadrangle, found in monasteries (and in buildings imitating monasteries)
An inclosed place
a courtyard with covered walks (as in religious institutions) seclude from the world in or as if in a cloister; "She cloistered herself in the office"
seclude from the world in or as if in a cloister; "She cloistered herself in the office"
that of a monastery or a college
A covered walk with an open colonnade on one side, running along the walls of buildings that face a quadrangle
A cloister is a covered area round a square in a monastery or a cathedral. Four-sided enclosure surrounded by covered walkways and usually attached to a monastic or cathedral church; also, the walkways themselves. The earliest cloisters were open arcades, usually with sloping wooden roofs. This form was generally superseded in England by a range of windows lighting a vaulted ambulatory (aisle). In southern climates, the open-arcaded cloister remained standard. An especially fine example is Donato Bramante's two-story open arcade at Santa Maria della Pace, Rome (1500-4)
a courtyard with covered walks (as in religious institutions)
A monastic establishment; a place for retirement from the world for religious duties
manastır haline getirmek
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