miller

listen to the pronunciation of miller
English - Turkish
değirmenci

Bir zamanlar fakir olan ama güzel bir kızı olan bir değirmenci vardı. - Once upon a time there was a miller who was poor, but he had a beautiful daughter.

Çok fazla su değirmenciyi boğdu. - Too much water drowned the miller.

{i} değirmen makinası
{i} pervane (böcek)
pervane
miller holder
freze bıçağı tutucusu
miller's thumb
{i} dere iskorpiti
miller's thumb
(isim) dere iskorpiti
miller's watershrew
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) bataklık sivri faresi
molly miller
(Denizbilim) horozbina
family name
soyadı

Çin'de önce soyadımızı sonra adımızı koyarız. - In China, we put our family name first, then our name.

Sadece soyadınızı büyük harflerle yazın. - Write only your family name in capitals.

mil
bir incin binde biri
millers
değirmenciler
road miller
yol miller
family name
aile adı

Watanabe benim aile adımdır. - Watanabe is my family name.

Aile adın nasıl yazılır? - How is your family name written?

mil
{i} bin

Önümüzdeki dört yıl boyunca On beş bin milyon euro tasarruf edilmeli. - Fifteen thousand million euros must be saved over the course of the next four years.

Kuşlar binlerce kilometre uzağa uçup, her yıl aynı yere dönebilirler. - Birds can fly thousands of miles away and return to the same place every year.

mil
00254 cm
mil
(Askeri) MİLYEM: Bir daire çevresinin 1/6400'ünü kaplayan açı esasına göre elde edilmiş açı ölçüsü birimi. Bir milyem; 1000 ölçü birimi mesafede (1) birimin kapladığı açıdır
mil
{k} military
mil
{i} binde bir
mil
bir pusun binde biri olan tel kalınlığı ölçüsü
mil
yarbaylık
mil
tanksavar
mil
manga
mil
talimname
mil
kurmay
mil
obüs
mil
subaylık
mil
başçavuşluk
mil
yüzbaşılık
mil
tuğgeneral
mil
barbata
mil
muharebe
mil
tuğgenerallik
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of miller in Turkish Turkish dictionary

MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Bir kilometreden fazla mesafe, uzaklık
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Mesafeyi gösteren işaret çubukları
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Göze sürme çekecek âlet
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) İğne gibi ince ve uzun bir âlet
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Elektromotordan iş tezgâhına kuvvet nakleden uzun çelik çubuk
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Ucu sivri çelik kalem
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Selin bıraktığı en verimli münbit toprak
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Sivri dağ tepesi
MİL
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Bir çarkın, üzerinde döndüğü mihver, eksen
arthur miller
Bütün Oğullarım, Satıcının ölümü, Cadı Kazanı gibi tiyatro yapıtlarıyla tanınan ve geçenlerde 90 yaşındayken ölen ABD'li oyun yazarı
mil
Balçık
mil
Göze sürme çekmeye yarayan kemik veya fil dişinden yapılmış, ince ve uzun araç
mil
Dantel örülen tığ
mil
Türlü işlerde kullanmak için yapılan ince ve uzun metal çubuk
mil
Selin getirdiği çamur
mil
Türlü işlerde kullanılmak için yapılan ince ve uzun metal çubuk
mil
Uzaklık ölçü birimi: "Köprü ile Kadıköy arasındaki mesafenin kaç mil olduğunu bilmiyordum."- A. Rasim
mil
Elişi yapılan tığ
mil
Selin getirdiği kumlu toprak
mil
ince ve uzun metal çubuk
mil
Göze sürme çekmeye yarayan, kemik veya fil dişinden yapılmış ince ve uzun araç
mil
Uzaklık ölçü birimi
mil
Selin sürükleyip getirdiği çok küçük taneli çamurlaşmış kum ve toprak karışımı
mil
Sivri çelik kalem
English - English
An English and Scottish occupational surname for a miller
A person who owns or operates a mill, especially a flour mill
The common name of a flour-smelling mushroom, Clitopilus prunulus
A milling machine
Any of several moths that have powdery wings
{n} one who attends a mill, a fly
{i} family name
A miller is a person who owns or operates a mill in which grain is crushed to make flour. American bandleader and composer whose orchestra was one of the most popular groups of the big-band era. American writer whose novels Tropic of Cancer (1934) and Tropic of Capricorn (1939) were banned in the United States because of their sexual content. American poet whose work is based on his adventures in the West. His collections include Specimens (1868) and Joaquin et al. (1869). American economist. He shared a 1990 Nobel Prize for contributions to financial economics. American religious leader who preached that Christ's Second Coming would take place in 1843. Miller's followers later organized the Advent Christian Church (1860). someone who owns or works in a mill which makes flour. or owlet moth Any of the more than 20,000 moth species in the lepidopteran family Noctuidae, common worldwide. Some species have a 1-ft (30-cm) wingspan, the largest of any moth, but most species have a wingspan of 1.5 in. (4 cm) or less. The wings are usually dull-coloured. Both larvae and adults of most species feed at night. Adults feed on fruits, sap, and nectar. The larvae of many species are agricultural pests (e.g., cutworm, bollworm) that feed on foliage and seeds, bore into stems and fruits, and eat or sever roots. A few species prey on scale insects. Mary Boykin Miller Hemingway Ernest Miller Miller Arthur Miller George Armitage Miller Alton Glenn Miller Henry Valentine Miller Jonathan Wolfe Miller Neal Elgar Richardson Dorothy Miller Shreve Henry Miller
Called also moth miller
machine tool in which metal that is secured to a carriage is fed against rotating cutters that shape it
The hen harrier
any of various moths that have powdery wings
United States playwright (born 1915)
{i} mill operator, mill owner; any of several types of moths
United States novelist whose novels were originally banned as pornographic (1891-1980)
A maneuver on the balance beam, a back dive with a quarter twist to a handstand, followed by a half pirouette Named for U S gymnast Shannon Miller, who created it
Three twists followed by a backward double somersault
machine tool in which metal that is secured to a carriage is fed against rotating cutters that shape it someone who works in a mill (especially a grain mill) United States playwright (born 1915) United States novelist whose novels were originally banned as pornographic (1891-1980) United States bandleader of a popular big band (1909-1944)
A triple-twisting double Back Somersault, originally performed as "2½ In - ½ Out", nowadays usually performed as "Full In - Double Full Out", with 1 twist in the 1st Somersault, and 2 twists in the 2nd Somersault; Named after Wayne Miller (USA) - Winner, 1966 & 1970 World Championships
A moth or lepidopterous insect; so called because the wings appear as if covered with white dust or powder, like a miller's clothes
One who keeps or attends a flour mill or gristmill
someone who works in a mill (especially a grain mill)
A triple-twisting double Back Somersault, originally performed as "2½ In - ½ Out", nowadays usually performed as "Full In - Double Full Out", with 1 twist in the 1st Somersault, and 2 twists in the 2nd Somersault; Named after Wayne Miller (USA) - Winner, 1966 & 1970 World Championships
United States bandleader of a popular big band (1909-1944)
The eagle ray
molecular(a)
Miller syndrome
A particular genetic disease, characterized by facial anomalies and missing toes
miller moth
Any of several species of moths with pale, dusty wings

They caught a large moth called a miller for its dusty white wings, after which they crushed the miller-moth for his misdeeds.

miller's thumb
European bullhead
miller's thumbs
plural form of miller's thumb
miller's thumb
{i} tiny flat and spiny freshwater fish shaped like a thumb
miller's-thumb
small freshwater sculpin of Europe and North America
dusty miller
A formulaic phrase for a miller, related to the dust generated in the milling process
dusty miller
One of several species of plants with leaves of a dusty appearance: Centaurea cineraria, Senecio cineraria, and Lychnis coronaria
johnny miller
Newfoundland term for a common moth. Often simply referred to as "millers"
mil
Abbreviation of million

You can get things done without money, but you can do a hell of a lot more with it, and $10 mil is a good starting point.

mil
A unit of measurement equal to 1⁄1000 of an inch, usually used for thin objects, such as sheets of plastic
mil
a former subdivision (1/1000) of the Maltese lira
Alton Glenn Miller
born March 1, 1904, Clarinda, Iowa, U.S. died Dec. 16, 1944, at sea U.S. trombonist and leader of one of the most popular dance bands of the swing era. Miller formed his band in 1937. His music was characterized by the precise execution of arrangements that featured a clarinet leading the saxophone section. Miller disbanded in 1942 to join the war effort by leading a military band. He was traveling from London to Paris by plane when the craft disappeared over the English Channel and was never recovered. His recordings of numbers such as "Moonlight Sonata," "Chattanooga Choo-Choo," "In the Mood," and "String of Pearls" are classics of the era
Arthur Miller
a US writer of plays that deal with political or moral problems. His most famous plays include The Crucible, about the Salem Witchcraft Trials in 17th century America, and Death of a Salesman. He is also famous for having been married to Marilyn Monroe (1915- ). born Oct. 17, 1915, New York, N.Y., U.S. U.S. playwright. He began writing plays while a student at the University of Michigan. His first important play, All My Sons (1947), was followed by his most famous work, Death of a Salesman (1949, Pulitzer Prize), the tragedy of a man destroyed by false values that are in large part the values of his society. Noted for combining social awareness with a searching concern for his characters' inner lives, Miller wrote many other plays, including The Crucible (1953), which uses a plot about the Salem witch trials to attack McCarthyism, A View from the Bridge (1955), After the Fall (1964), and The Last Yankee (1992). He also wrote short stories, essays, and the screenplay for The Misfits (1961), which starred his second wife, Marilyn Monroe
Arthur Miller
{i} (1915-2005) United States playwright, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the Tony Award (his plays include "Death of a Salesman" and "The Crucible")
Dorothy Miller Richardson
born May 17, 1873, Abingdon, Berkshire, Eng. died June 17, 1957, Beckenham, Kent English novelist. From age 17 she engaged in teaching, clerical work, and journalism. For much of her life she worked on her sequence novel Pilgrimage, comprising 13 volumes beginning with Pointed Roofs (1915). The final volume, March Moonlight, was published a decade after her death. A sensitive autobiographical account of a woman's developing consciousness, it was a pioneering work in stream-of-consciousness fiction
Ernest Miller Hemingway
born July 21, 1899, Cicero [now in Oak Park], Ill., U.S. died July 2, 1961, Ketchum, Idaho U.S. writer. He began work as a journalist after high school. He was wounded while serving as an ambulance driver in World War I. One of a well-known group of expatriate writers in Paris, he soon embarked on a life of travel, skiing, fishing, and hunting that would be reflected in his work. His story collection In Our Time (1925) was followed by the novel The Sun Also Rises (1926). Later novels include A Farewell to Arms (1929) and To Have and Have Not (1937). His lifelong love for Spain (including a fascination with bullfighting) led to his working as a correspondent during the Spanish Civil War, which resulted in the novel For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940). Other short-story collections include Men Without Women (1927), Winner Take Nothing (1933), and The Fifth Column (1938). He lived primarily in Cuba from 1940, the locale of his novella The Old Man and the Sea (1952, Pulitzer Prize). He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954. He left Cuba shortly after its 1959 revolution; a year later, depressed and ill, he shot himself. The succinct and concentrated prose style of his early works strongly influenced many British and American writers for decades
Ernest Miller Hemingway
{i} Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961), American novelist and journalist, winner of the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature
George A Miller
born Feb. 2, 1920, Charleston, W.Va., U.S. U.S. psychologist. He taught at Harvard, Rockefeller, and Princeton universities. He is known for his work in cognitive psychology, particularly communication and psycholinguistics. In Plans and the Structure of Behavior (with Eugene Galanter and Karl Pribram, 1960), Miller examined how knowledge is accumulated and organized into a practical "image" or plan. His other works, including Language and Communication (1951) and The Science of Words (1991), focus on the psychology of language and communication. He received the National Medal of Science in 1991
George Armitage Miller
born Feb. 2, 1920, Charleston, W.Va., U.S. U.S. psychologist. He taught at Harvard, Rockefeller, and Princeton universities. He is known for his work in cognitive psychology, particularly communication and psycholinguistics. In Plans and the Structure of Behavior (with Eugene Galanter and Karl Pribram, 1960), Miller examined how knowledge is accumulated and organized into a practical "image" or plan. His other works, including Language and Communication (1951) and The Science of Words (1991), focus on the psychology of language and communication. He received the National Medal of Science in 1991
Glenn Miller
a US musician, band leader, and composer, whose swing music was very popular during World War II. His most famous pieces of music are In the Mood and Moonlight Serenade (1904-44). born March 1, 1904, Clarinda, Iowa, U.S. died Dec. 16, 1944, at sea U.S. trombonist and leader of one of the most popular dance bands of the swing era. Miller formed his band in 1937. His music was characterized by the precise execution of arrangements that featured a clarinet leading the saxophone section. Miller disbanded in 1942 to join the war effort by leading a military band. He was traveling from London to Paris by plane when the craft disappeared over the English Channel and was never recovered. His recordings of numbers such as "Moonlight Sonata," "Chattanooga Choo-Choo," "In the Mood," and "String of Pearls" are classics of the era
Henry Miller
a US writer whose novels include Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn (1891-1980). born Dec. 26, 1891, New York, N.Y., U.S. died June 7, 1980, Pacific Palisades, Calif. U.S. writer and perennial bohemian. Miller wrote about his Brooklyn, N.Y., childhood in Black Spring (1936). Tropic of Cancer (1934), a monologue about his life as an impoverished expatriate in Paris, and Tropic of Capricorn (1939), which draws on his earlier New York phase, were banned as obscene in the U.S. and Britain until the 1960s. The Air-Conditioned Nightmare (1945) is a critical account of a tour of the U.S. He settled on the California coast, where he became the centre of a colony of admirers and wrote his Rosy Crucifixion trilogy, Sexus, Plexus, and Nexus (U.S. ed., 1965)
Henry Miller Shreve
born Oct. 21, 1785, Burlington county, N.J., U.S. died March 6, 1851, St. Louis, Mo. U.S. inventor and explorer. He grew up on the western Pennsylvania frontier and began making trading voyages after his father's death in 1799. In the War of 1812 he was skipper of the Enterprise, the second steamboat on the Mississippi, carrying supplies for Andrew Jackson's army. Though it was the first steamboat to reach Louisville, Ky. (1815), the trip convinced Shreve of the need for a new design for river steamers. His design for the Washington with a flat shallow hull, a steam engine on the main deck, and a second deck established the Mississippi steamboat type. To clear rivers of debris, he later designed the first snag boat. His camp on the Red River in Louisiana grew into a permanent settlement as Shreveport
Henry Valentine Miller
born Dec. 26, 1891, New York, N.Y., U.S. died June 7, 1980, Pacific Palisades, Calif. U.S. writer and perennial bohemian. Miller wrote about his Brooklyn, N.Y., childhood in Black Spring (1936). Tropic of Cancer (1934), a monologue about his life as an impoverished expatriate in Paris, and Tropic of Capricorn (1939), which draws on his earlier New York phase, were banned as obscene in the U.S. and Britain until the 1960s. The Air-Conditioned Nightmare (1945) is a critical account of a tour of the U.S. He settled on the California coast, where he became the centre of a colony of admirers and wrote his Rosy Crucifixion trilogy, Sexus, Plexus, and Nexus (U.S. ed., 1965)
Jonathan Miller
born July 21, 1934, London, Eng. British director, writer, and actor. After earning a medical degree at Cambridge University, he made his professional stage debut at the Edinburgh Festival in the hit satirical revue Beyond the Fringe (1960). As a director of plays, he gained notoriety for his controversial interpretations of classic works. His innovative opera productions, such as Pyotr Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin, for the English National Opera and other groups have become internationally celebrated. He wrote the BBC medical series The Body in Question (1977) and States of Mind (1982)
Jonathan Wolfe Miller
born July 21, 1934, London, Eng. British director, writer, and actor. After earning a medical degree at Cambridge University, he made his professional stage debut at the Edinburgh Festival in the hit satirical revue Beyond the Fringe (1960). As a director of plays, he gained notoriety for his controversial interpretations of classic works. His innovative opera productions, such as Pyotr Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin, for the English National Opera and other groups have become internationally celebrated. He wrote the BBC medical series The Body in Question (1977) and States of Mind (1982)
Neal E Miller
born Aug. 3, 1909, Milwaukee, Wis., U.S. died March 23, 2002, Hamden, Conn. U.S. psychologist. He earned his Ph.D. from Yale University and remained at Yale's Institute of Human Relations to continue his experiments on learning. In Social Learning and Imitation (1941) and Personality and Psychotherapy (1950), he and John Dollard presented a theory of motivation based on the satisfaction of psychosocial drives, combining elements of earlier reinforcement theories of behaviour and learning. Miller suggested that behaviour patterns were produced through the modification of biologically or socially derived drives by conditioning and reinforcement. He taught at Rockefeller University (1966-81)
Neal Elgar Miller
born Aug. 3, 1909, Milwaukee, Wis., U.S. died March 23, 2002, Hamden, Conn. U.S. psychologist. He earned his Ph.D. from Yale University and remained at Yale's Institute of Human Relations to continue his experiments on learning. In Social Learning and Imitation (1941) and Personality and Psychotherapy (1950), he and John Dollard presented a theory of motivation based on the satisfaction of psychosocial drives, combining elements of earlier reinforcement theories of behaviour and learning. Miller suggested that behaviour patterns were produced through the modification of biologically or socially derived drives by conditioning and reinforcement. He taught at Rockefeller University (1966-81)
dusty miller
herb with grayish leaves found along the east coast of North America; used as an ornamental plant a plant having leaves and stems covered with down that resembles dust stiff much-branched perennial of the Mediterranean region having very white woolly stems and leaves; sometimes placed in genus Cineraria shrubby perennial of the Canary Islands having white flowers and leaves and hairy stems covered with dustlike down; sometimes placed in genus Chrysanthemum
dusty miller
Any of various plants of the genera Artemisia, Centaurea, Chrysanthemum, Lychnis, and Senecio, having leaves and stems covered with dustlike down
joe miller
A jest book; a stale jest; a worn-out joke
mil
A unit of length equal to one thousandth of an inch
mil
Military

Up till now America has called itself the world's police and continued suppression relying on military force. - Up till now the United States has called itself the world's police and continues suppression relying on military force.

In reports in the United States, guerrilla resistance by the Iraq military is called terrorism. - In reports in America, guerrilla resistance by the Iraq military is called terrorism.

mil
A unit used in measuring diameter of a wire or thickness of insulation over a conductor One one-thousandth of an inch ( 001")
mil
{i} unit of volume that is equal to one thousandth of a liter
mil
{i} unit of length equal to one thousandth of an inch that is used to measure thickness; smallest Cypriot monetary unit; one thousand, one thousandth
mil
one mil is one one-thousandth of an inch (0 001")
mil
One-thousandth of an inch (10^-3 inch) Equal to 25 4 microns
mil
an angular unit used in artillery; equal to 1/6400 of a complete revolution a unit of length equal to one thousandth of an inch; used to specify thickness e
mil
A measure of paint film thickness, equal to one one-thousandth of an inch (0 001 inch)
mil
One thousandth of an inch (0 0254 mm)
mil
One one-thousandth of an inch; the measurement used to gauge the thickness of PVC and rubber pond liners
mil
The top-level domain created for United States military entities
mil
a unit of length equal to one thousandth of an inch; used to specify thickness (e g , of sheets or wire)
mil
One thousandth of an inch (0 001 ")
mil
One thousandth of an inch ( 001 inch)
mil
An angular mil, a unit of angular measurement equal to 1⁄6400 of a complete circle. At 1000 metres one mil subtends about one metre (0,98 m). Also 1⁄6000 and 1⁄6300 are used in other countries
mil
One-thousandth of an inch (x10-3 inches) Equal to 25 4 microns
mil
Unit of length equal to one thousandth of an inch (0 001 inch)
mil
a metric unit of volume equal to one thousandth of a liter
mil
U S military sites
mil
One thousandth of an inch, the unit of measure often used to quantity bar code printing and scanning dimensions
mil
(pronounced MILL) : A domain name suffix denoting an abbreviation for military In Internet addresses, mil indicates a site belonging to a military branch or organization
mil
One thousandth (0 001) of an inch (1 mil = 25 4 microns )
mil
a Cypriot monetary unit equal to one thousandth of a pound
mil
One-thousandth of an inch
mil
of sheets or wire a Cypriot monetary unit equal to one thousandth of a pound
mil
One thousandth of an inch, or 0 0254 millimeter
mil
Mil means the same as million. Zhamnov, 22, signed for $1.25 mil over three years. U.S. military organization (in Internet addresses). Slang. A million dollars
mil
(US military)
mil
= One thousandth of an inch
mil
an angular unit used in artillery; equal to 1/6400 of a complete revolution
mil
- One thousandth (0 001) of an inch (1 mil = 25 4 microns)
mil
A unit of linear measure equaling a thousandth of an inch, or 0 0254 mm For example, 5 mils is 0 005 inches
mil
One thousandth of an inch
millers
plural of miller
molly miller
inhabits both coasts of tropical Atlantic
moth miller
any of various moths that have powdery wings
Turkish - English

Definition of miller in Turkish English dictionary

mil
{i} mile

It is no more than half a mile to the sea. - Denize yarım milden daha fazla değil.

When I have finished writing the letter, I will take you to the lake about two miles beyond the hill. - Ben mektubu yazmayı bitirdiğimde, seni yaklaşık olarak tepenin iki mil ötesindeki göle götüreceğim.

mil
(İnşaat) shaft
mil
axle
mil
style

The term ‘milonguero style tango’ was coined in the early 1990s to describe the style of dancing tango that was prevalent in the milongas of downtown Buenos Aires in the 1950s. - 1950'li yıllarda şehir Buenos Aires'in milangolarında yaygın olan tangoyu dans etme stilini tanımlamak için 'Milonguero stili tango' terimi 1990'ların başında uyduruldu.

mil
arbor
mil
{i} tree

More than a century ago, a comet or a meteor exploded in the sky above the Tunguska River valley in Russia. The explosion knocked down millions of trees over hundreds of miles. - Bir asırdan fazla bir süre önce, Rusya'daki Tunguska Nehri vadisinin üzerindeki gökyüzünde bir kuyrukluyıldız veya bir göktaşı patladı. Patlamada yüzlerce mildeki milyonlarca ağaç yıkıldı.

The emerald ash borer has killed more than a hundred million ash trees across North America. - Zümrüt kül kurdu Kuzey Amerika genelinde yüz milyondan daha fazla kül ağacını daha öldürdü.

mil
{i} cannon
mil
statute mile
mil
mill

I'd like to be a millionaire. - Milyoner olmak isterim.

Their losses reached one million yen. - Zararları bir milyon yene ulaştı.

mil
sound
mil
metal bar
mil
(Mekanik) stem
mil
shank
mil
spindle
mil
mandrel
mil
axis
mil
silt
mil
miles

The island is about two miles off the coast. - Ada kıyıdan yaklaşık iki mil uzaklıktadır.

A dreary landscape spread out for miles in all directions. - Kasvetli bir manzara, her yöne millerce yayıldı.

mil
gudgeon
mil
probe
mil
axle tree
mil
milliary
mil
stylus
mil
axle, pivot; metal bar
mil
pin
mil
milestone (placed beside a road)
mil
pintle
mil
pivot
mil
sullage
mil
{s} cambered
mil
sounder
miller

    Hyphenation

    Mill·er

    Turkish pronunciation

    mîlır

    Pronunciation

    /ˈmələr/ /ˈmɪlɜr/

    Etymology

    () From mill.

    Videos

    ... George Miller have a bill to fix that by lifting the minimum wage to ...
    ... miller says persecuted several hundred years old residences as well as ...
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