odder

listen to the pronunciation of odder
English - Turkish

Definition of odder in English Turkish dictionary

odd
tuhaf

Onun yüzünde tuhaf bir görünüm vardı. - He had an odd look on his face.

O, o giysilerin içinde tuhaf görünüyor. - She looks odd in those clothes.

odd
acayip

Onu acayip bulmadığını mı demek istiyorsun? - Do you mean you don't find that odd?

Tom bana en acayip görüntüyü verdi. - Tom gave me the oddest look.

odd
garip

Tom'un yüzünde garip bir ifade vardı. - Tom had an odd look on his face.

Garip bir şey hissetmiş olmalı. - She must have sensed something odd.

odd
sıradışı
odd
fark

Tom tuhaf bir şey fark etti. - Tom noticed something odd.

Tom bir şeyin tuhaf olduğunu fark etti. - Tom noticed something was odd.

odd
Tek sayı

Mary tek sayılardan hoşlanmaz. - Mary does not like odd numbers.

Bir, üç, beş, yedi ve dokuz tek sayılardır. - One, three, five, seven and nine are odd numbers.

odd
tek

Tapirler tek toynaklıdır. - Tapirs are odd-toed ungulates.

Bir, üç ve beş tek sayılardır. - One, three, and five are odd numbers.

odd
alelacayip
odd
antika
odd
eşi yok
odd
ara sıra meydana gelen
odd
tek (sayı)
odd
şaşılası
odd
(sayı) tek
odd
seyrek
odd
düzensiz
odd
çifti olmayan
odd
arada sırada olan
odd
(sayı) küsur
odd
Tek (sayı, rakam)
odd
{s} garip, tuhaf, acayip, bambaşka
odd
{s} ara sıra olabilen
odd
{s} küsur: ten thousand odd dollars on bin küsur dolar
odd
{s} artan

Leyla'nın giderek artan orandaki garip davranışları onun anne ve babasını çok endişelendiriyordu. - Layla's increasingly odd behavior worried her parents a lot.

odd
{s} tek: odd number tek sayı. odd sock tek çorap
odd
{s} teki olmayan
odd
{s} tek tük
odd
küsur

Şair, yirmi küsur yıl burada yaşadı. - The poet lived here some twenty odd years.

odd
garabet
English - English
comparative of odd
odd
Not divisible by two
odd
{s} strange; irregular; random; extra
odd
{a} uneven, particular, unaccountable, strande
odd
not easily explained; "it is odd that his name is never mentioned"
odd
not easily explained; "it is odd that his name is never mentioned" not divisible by two an indefinite quantity more than that specified; "invited 30-odd guests" of the remaining member of a pair, of socks e
odd
casual, irregular
odd
(Oppositional Defiant Disorder)
odd
Oppositional Defiant Disorder
odd
You use odd before a noun to indicate that you are not mentioning the type, size, or quality of something because it is not important. moving from place to place where she could find the odd bit of work I knew that Alan liked the odd drink. = occasional
odd
But for the odd exception
odd
Not paired with another, or remaining over after a pairing; without a mate; unmatched; single; as, an odd shoe; an odd glove
odd
not used up; "leftover meatloaf"; "she had a little money left over so she went to a movie"; "some odd dollars left"; "saved the remaining sandwiches for supper"; "unexpended provisions"
odd
are odd numbers
odd
left over, remaining when the rest have been grouped
odd
(1) of a level, as "one-odd" (at the one-level)
odd
Odd numbers, such as 3 and 17, are those which cannot be divided exactly by the number two. The odd numbers are on the left as you walk up the street There's an odd number of candidates. even
odd
not divisible by two an indefinite quantity more than that specified; "invited 30-odd guests"
odd
about, approximately
odd
of the remaining member of a pair, of socks e
odd
Different from what is usual or common; unusual; singular; peculiar; unique; strange
odd
You use odd after a number to indicate that it is only approximate. He has now appeared in sixty odd films `How long have you lived here?' --- `Twenty odd years.'
odd
You say that two things are odd when they do not belong to the same set or pair. I'm wearing odd socks today by the way. matching
odd
Remaining over; unconnected; detached; fragmentary; hence, occasional; inconsiderable; as, odd jobs; odd minutes; odd trifles
odd
1 of a level, as "one-odd" at the one-level 2 of tricks, six more than the number specified, as "two odd tricks" or eight tricks altogether
odd
If you describe someone or something as odd, you think that they are strange or unusual. He'd always been odd, but not to this extent What an odd coincidence that he should have known your family Something odd began to happen. see also odd-looking = peculiar + oddly odd·ly an oddly shaped hill His own boss was behaving rather oddly
odd
dròl, enpe
odd
Left over after a definite round number has been taken or mentioned; indefinitely, but not greatly, exceeding a specified number; extra
odd
an indefinite quantity more than that specified; "invited 30-odd guests"
odd
{s} leaving a remainder of one when divided by two, not divisible by two (Mathematics)
odd
We say that a function, f, is odd, if it satisfies the equation f(-x) = -f(x) for all values of x This terminology is based on the fact that all odd power functions (e g , x3, x5, x-1, etc ) satisfy this equation
odd
of the remaining member of a pair, of socks e g
odd
The odd man out, the odd woman out, or the odd one out in a particular situation is a person who is different from the other people in it. Azerbaijan has been the odd man out, the one republic not to hold democratic elections Mark and Rick were the odd ones out in claiming to like this cherry beer. see also odds, odds and ends. Variant of Od
odd
strange, unusual
odd
when divided by two, has a remainder of one -- "With practice it becomes easy to determine if a number is even or odd " (69)
odd
tests whether its argument, which must be an integer, is odd
odd
Not divisible by 2 without a remainder; not capable of being evenly paired, one unit with another; as, 1, 3, 7, 9, 11, etc
odd
beyond or deviating from the usual or expected; "a curious hybrid accent"; "her speech has a funny twang"; "they have some funny ideas about war"; "had an odd name"; "the peculiar aromatic odor of cloves"; "something definitely queer about this town"; "what a rum fellow"; "singular behavior"
odder

    Turkish pronunciation

    ädır

    Pronunciation

    /ˈädər/ /ˈɑːdɜr/

    Etymology

    [ 'äd ] (adjective.) 14th century. Middle English odde, from Old Norse oddi point of land, triangle, odd number; akin to Old English ord point of a weapon.
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