nomad

listen to the pronunciation of nomad
English - Turkish
{i} göçebe

Ben yaşam için bir göçebeyim. - I'm a nomad for life.

Bu göçebe kabilelerin üyeleri yetenekli okçu ve biniciydiler; rüzgar gibi hızla saldırıp kaçabiliyorlardı. - The members of these nomadic tribes were skilled archers and riders; they were able to attack and run away as fast as the wind.

göçer
Yörük
(isim) göçebe
(sıfat) göçebe
s., i. göçebe
bedevi

Bedeviler göçebeydiler. - The bedouins were nomads.

yürük
konargöçer
nomad group
oba
nomad tent
oba
nomadically
göçebe olarak
nomadically
göçebe bir şekilde
nomadism
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) göçerlik
nomadism
{i} göçebelik
nomadism
(isim) göçebelik
English - English
a member of a group of people who, having no fixed home, move around seasonally in search of food, water and grazing etc
a wanderer
having no fixed abode
{i} wanderer; member of a tribe that relocates seasonally in order to find better resources (e.g. pastureland, water, etc.)
A nomad is a member of a group of people who travel from place to place rather than living in one place all the time. a country of nomads who raise cattle and camels. a member of a tribe that travels from place to place instead of living in one place all the time, usually in order to find grass for their animals (nomas, from , from nemein )
(noun)- a person who travels and lives off the land
An individual, often a member of a group, who migrates from place to place In Central Asia, the nomadic way of life is often attributed to the ability to feed horses and livestock
– a person who belongs to a group of people who have no permanent home, but wander from place to place searching for water, food, or grazing land
{s} wandering, nomadic
Human Resources Management and pay system
One of a race or tribe that has no fixed location, but wanders from place to place in search of pasture or game
Roving; nomadic
a member of a people who have no permanent home but move about according to the seasons
nomad tribes
tribes which move from place to place to earn a living, migrant tribes
grey nomad
Retired person travelling continually, such as on a cruise or in a caravan or motorhome
nomadism
Way of life of peoples who do not live continually in the same place but move cyclically or periodically
A nomad
nomadian
nomadically
in a nomadic manner, wanderingly; like nomads
nomadism
The way of life of a nomad
nomadism
The state of being a nomad
nomadism
{i} vagrancy, state of being nomadic, vagabondism, practice of being a nomad
nomadism
Way of life of peoples who do not live continually in the same place but move cyclically or periodically. It is based on temporary centres whose stability depends on the available food supply and the technology for exploiting it. A hunting and gathering society is a type of nomadic group. Pastoral nomads, who depend on domestic livestock, migrate in an established territory to find pasture for their animals. Tinker or trader nomads, such as the Roma (Gypsies; see Rom) and the Irish and Scottish Travellers, are associated with a larger society but maintain their mobile way of life. Nomadism declined in the 20th century as urban centres expanded and governments sought to regulate or eliminate it
nomads
plural of nomad
nomads
Peoples who live in no fixed place but wander periodically according to the seasonal availability of food, and pasture
nomads
no permanent place to live; wandering from place to place
nomads
people with no fixed residence who wander from place to place, usually following a seasonal pattern in a fixed territory, in pursuit of their food and water supply or way of life
nomads
people who travel around, usually with animals looking for pasture
nomads
North Sea Model Advection Dispersion Study EU MAST project
nomads
People who live on the move, with no fixed home Often cattleherders
nomad

    Hyphenation

    no·mad

    Turkish pronunciation

    nōmäd

    Pronunciation

    /ˈnōˌmad/ /ˈnoʊˌmæd/

    Etymology

    [ nO-"mad, British also n ] (noun.) 1579. From Middle French nomade, from Latin nomas (genitive nomadis (“wandering shepherd”)), from Ancient Greek νομάς (nomas, “roaming, roving, wandering (to find pastures for flocks or herds)”), related to Ancient Greek νομός (nomos, “pasture”).
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