paris

listen to the pronunciation of paris
English - Turkish
(Mitoloji) En ünlü kahramanlardan biri.Troia kralı Priamos ile Hekabe'nin oğlu. Çok kuvvetli olduğundan onu Aleksandros diye çağırırlardı. Yunanlı Helena'ya olan aşkı onun ve Troia'nın sonu oldu
(isim) Paris
{i} Paris
paris green
arsenikli yeşil boya
Paris black
Paris siyahi
plaster of Paris
alçı
Pari
parin
Parisian
parisli
female native of paris
paris kadın yerli
in paris
paris
the commune of paris
paris komün
university of paris
paris üniversite
Parisian
{s} Paris

Bütün Parisliler dışardaydı. - All the Parisians have gone outdoors.

Parisian
(isim) Parisli
Parisian
{s} Paris'e yakın
plaster of Paris
sıva
treaty of paris
(Avrupa Birliği) Avrupa Kömür ve Çelik Topluluğunu Kuran Antlaşma (Paris Antlaşması 1951)
English - English
A surname for someone who came from Paris, or a patronymic derived from Patrick
A Trojan prince who eloped with Helen
Any place named after the French city

Paris, Kiribati|Paris, Kiribati]].

A female given name of modern usage, usually from the French city
A male given name from the Trojan hero
A male given name from the surname
The capital city of France
A Trojan prince
English monk and chronicler. His Chronica Majora traced the history of the world from the creation to 1259. the capital city of France, on the River Seine, which is also the country's business and financial centre. Many people think of Paris as a very romantic city where many famous artists lived, especially in the 19th and early 20th centuries. People from Paris are called Parisians. in ancient Greek stories, a prince of Troy who caused the Trojan War by taking Helen away from Greece, and who killed Achilles in this war Iliad, the. City (pop., 1999: 2,125,246; metro. area, 9,644,507), river port, capital of France. It is now located on both banks of the Seine River. The original settlement from which Paris evolved, Lutetia, was in existence by the late 3rd century BC on an island in the Seine. Lutetia was captured and fortified by the Romans in 52 BC. During the 1st century AD the city spread to the left bank of the Seine. By the early 4th century it was known as Paris. It withstood several Viking sieges (885-87) and became the capital of France in 987, when Hugh Capet, the count of Paris, became king. The city was improved during the reign of Philip II, who formally recognized the University of Paris 1200. In the 14th-15th centuries its development was hindered by the Black Death and the Hundred Years' War. In the 17th-18th centuries it was improved and beautified. Leading events of the French Revolution took place in Paris (1789-99). Napoleon III commissioned Georges-Eugène Haussmann to modernize the city's infrastructure and add several new bridges over the Seine. The city was the site of the Paris Peace Conference, which ended World War I. During World War II Paris was occupied by German troops. It is now the financial, commercial, transportation, artistic, and intellectual centre of France. The city's many attractions include the Eiffel Tower, Notre-Dame de Paris, the Louvre, the Panthéon, Pompidou Centre, and the Paris Opera, as well as boulevards, public parks, and gardens. In Greek mythology, a son of King Priam of Troy and his wife, Hecuba. An evil portent prompted his parents to abandon him as an infant. Unknown to them, he was raised as a shepherd, and as a young man he was received home again after winning a boxing contest against Priam's other sons. Zeus chose him to determine which of three goddesses was most beautiful Hera, Athena, or Aphrodite. In the famous "judgment of Paris," he chose Aphrodite because she offered to help him win the most beautiful woman alive. His seduction of Helen was the cause of the Trojan War. Near the end of the war, Paris shot the arrow that killed Achilles and soon afterward was himself killed. John of Paris Jean de Paris Pact of Paris Notre Dame de Paris Paris Commune Commune of Paris Paris Opéra Paris Peace Conference Paris Congress of Paris Treaty of Paris University of Paris Match plaster of paris
A town in Tennessee
{i} capital city of France; city in Texas (USA); Trojan prince who abducted Helen of Troy which started the Trojan War, also known as Alexandros or Alexander (Greek Mythology)
of modern usage, referring to the French city
A town in Kentucky
A town in Arkansas
A city in Texas
A town in Illinois
the capital and largest city of France; and international center of culture and commerce
The Parental Acceptance-Rejection Interview Schedule is available in two versions, adult and child This is one of the procedures available to assess parents' accepting and rejecting behaviors
It has been used as a narcotic
A plant common in Europe (Paris quadrifolia); herb Paris; truelove
a town in northeast Texas
A term for USD FRF Spot Rate
The chief city of France
the capital and largest city of France; and international center of culture and commerce a town in northeast Texas sometimes placed in subfamily Trilliaceae
sometimes placed in subfamily Trilliaceae
Son of Priam and Hecuba; was the cause of the war of Troy by kidnapping Helen
Paris green
Copper(II) acetoarsenite, a highly toxic blue-green chemical used as a pigment, colorant, and poison
Paris syndrome
An alleged transient psychological disorder encountered by some people visiting or vacationing in Paris, France
Paris-Brest
A dessert consisting of a ring of choux pastry filled with praline and topped with flaked almonds
Paris Commune
or Commune of Paris (March 18-May 28, 1871) Insurrection of Paris against the French government. After France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War and the collapse of the Second Empire, the republican Parisians feared that the conservative majority in the National Assembly would restore the monarchy. On March 18 the National Guard in Paris resisted orders to disarm, and after municipal elections were won by the revolutionaries, they formed the Commune government. Factions included the so-called Jacobins, who wanted the Paris Commune to control the revolution (as its namesake had in the French Revolution); the Proudhonists, socialist followers of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon who supported a federation of communes; and the Blanquistes, socialist followers of Auguste Blanqui who demanded violent action. Government forces quickly suppressed communes elsewhere in France, then entered Paris on May
Paris Commune
In a week of fierce fighting, they crushed the Communards, who had set up barricades in the streets and burned public buildings, including the Tuileries Palace. About 20,000 insurrectionists and 750 government troops were killed. In the aftermath, the government took harsh repressive action; 38,000 suspects were arrested and more than 7,000 were deported
Paris Hilton
{i} (born 1981) U.S. model and actress who is heiress of the Hilton Hotel fortune, nicknamed "Paris the Heiress
Paris Peace Conference
(1919-20) Meeting that inaugurated the international settlement after World War I. It opened on Jan. 12, 1919, with representatives from more than 30 countries. The principal delegates were France's Georges Clemenceau, Britain's David Lloyd George, the U.S.'s Woodrow Wilson, and Italy's Vittorio Emanuele Orlando, who with their foreign ministers formed a Supreme Council. Commissions were appointed to study specific financial and territorial questions, including reparations. The major products of the conference were the League of Nations; the Treaty of Versailles, presented to Germany; the Treaty of Saint-Germain, presented to Austria; and the Treaty of Neuilly, presented to Bulgaria. The inauguration of the League of Nations on Jan. 16, 1920, brought the conference to a close. Treaties were subsequently concluded with Hungary (Treaty of Trianon, 1920) and Turkey (Treaties of Sèvres, 1920, and Lausanne, 1923)
Paris green
A poisonous emerald-green powder, C, used as a pigment, insecticide, and wood preservative
Paris-Dakar Rally
a race over public roads from Paris, France to Dakar, Senegal, including the crossing of the Sahara Desert. All kinds of motor vehicles can take part in the Paris-Dakar Rally
Paris-Match
Weekly pictorial magazine published in France since 1949 as the successor to L'Illustration (1843-1944). A popular news and current-events magazine aimed at the middle class, it features picture-stories on such subjects as public affairs, entertainment, fashion, and consumer products. Its format resembles that of Life, and it is similarly noted for topicality and outstanding photography. Under the ownership of Jean Prouvost (d. 1978), it achieved prestige and financial success. It is now published by Hachette Filipacchi Médias, one of the world's largest magazine publishers
paris green
a toxic double salt of copper arsenate and copper acetate
paris university
a university in Paris; intellectual center of France
Parisian
Of, relating, or pertaining to Paris, France

He lived in Paris for ten years, and became more Parisian than the natives.

Parisian
A person who was born in, or is a citizen or inhabitant of Paris, France
plaster of Paris
A hemihydrate of calcium sulfate, made by calcining gypsum, that hardens when moistened and allowed to dry; used to make casts, molds or sculpture
parisian
of or pertaining to the city of paris
parisian
{a} pertaining to Paris in France
parisian
{n} a native or inhabitant of Paris
plaster of paris
{n} a mixture of several sorts of gypsum, used also for gypsum
Congress of Paris
(1856) Conference in Paris to produce the treaty that ended the Crimean War. The treaty was signed between Russia on one side and France, Britain, Sardinia-Piedmont, and Turkey on the other. It guaranteed the independence and territorial integrity of Turkey. Russia was forced to surrender Bessarabia to Moldavia, warships of all nations were barred from the Black Sea, and the Danube River was opened to shipping of all countries. The congress also adopted the first codified law of the sea, which banned privateering and defined a legal naval blockade
John of Paris
or Jean de Paris or John the Deaf or John Quidort born 1255, Paris, France died Sept. 22, 1306, Bordeaux, Gascony Dominican monk and disciple of St. Thomas Aquinas. A lecturer at the University of Paris, he wrote on the separation of church and state and the limits of papal authority. His controversial view on the nature of the Eucharist was censured, and he was sentenced to perpetual silence; he died before his appeal could be decided
Last Tango in Paris
a US film in which Marlon Brando appears as a man living in Paris who has a sexual relationship with a young woman. Some people found it shocking when it was first shown because it contained a lot of sex scenes (1972)
Notre-Dame de Paris
(1163- 1350) Gothic cathedral on the Île de la Cité in Paris. Probably the most famous Gothic cathedral, Notre-Dame is a superb example of the Rayonnant style. Two massive Early Gothic towers (1210-50) crown the western facade, which is divided into three stories and has doors adorned with Early Gothic carvings and surmounted by a row of figures of Old Testament kings. The single-arch flying buttresses at the eastern end are notable for their boldness and grace. Its three great rose windows, which retain their 13th-century glass, are of awe-inspiring beauty
Parisian
{s} of Paris, from Paris; characteristic of Paris
Parisian
Parisian means belonging or relating to Paris. Parisian fashion
Parisian
{i} resident of Paris, citizen of Paris
Parisian
A Parisian is a person who comes from Paris. someone from the city of Paris in France
Parisians
plural of Parisian
The School of Paris
center of international art until after World War II (embodied many different artistic styles - Cubism, Fauvism, Orphism, etc.)
Treaty of Paris
(1229) Treaty by which Raymond VII of Toulouse conceded defeat to Louis IX of France after the Albigensian Crusade. It arranged the marriage of Raymond's daughter and Louis's brother and provided for the eventual return of Languedoc to the crown, thus destroying the independence of the princes of the south. (1259) Peace treaty signed by Henry III of England and Louis IX of France. It allowed the English to keep Aquitaine and nearby territories but obliged Henry to acknowledge himself the vassal of the French king. The agreement kept peace between England and France until the outbreak of the Hundred Years' War in 1337. (1763) Treaty concluding the Seven Years' War (including the French and Indian War). It was signed by Britain and Hanover on one side and France and Spain on the other. France renounced to Britain the mainland of North America east of the Mississippi, its conquests in India since 1749, and four West Indian islands. Britain restored to France four other West Indian islands and the West African colony of Gorée (Senegal). In return for recovering Havana and Manila, Spain ceded Florida to Britain and received Louisiana from the French. (1814) Treaty signed in Paris that ended the Napoleonic Wars between France and the Allies (Austria, Britain, Prussia, Russia, Spain, Sweden, and Portugal). The terms were generous to France, since Napoleon had abdicated and the Bourbon dynasty was restored. France was allowed to retain its boundaries of 1792 and ceded only several islands to Britain. Other terms were left to be discussed later. (1815) Second treaty between France and the Allies, following Napoleon's Hundred Days and final defeat. It was harsher than the first Treaty of Paris (1814). France was required to return to its borders of 1790 and was stripped of the Saar and Savoy regions; it was also obliged to pay an indemnity of 700 million francs and to support a 150,000-man army of occupation for three to five years
University of Paris
Second oldest European university (after the University of Bologna), founded 1170 in France. It grew out of the cathedral schools of Notre-Dame and, with papal support, soon became a great centre of Christian orthodox teaching. In the medieval period its professors included St. Bonaventure, Albertus Magnus, and Thomas Aquinas. Its most celebrated early college was the Sorbonne, founded 1257. The university declined somewhat under the impact of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation. With the French Revolution and Napoleon's reforms, teaching became more independent of religion and politics. By the mid-20th century the university had again become a preeminent scientific and intellectual centre. In May 1968 a Sorbonne student protest grew into a serious national crisis. This led to decentralizing reforms, the old university being replaced in 1970 by a system in Paris and its suburbs called the Universities of Paris I-XIII
commune of paris
brief socialist and reformist government formed in Paris (1792-1794) by an unlawful takeover of control of supreme power on the part of representatives chosen by the communes which represented urban workers and tradespeople and radical bourgeois
herb Paris
A European plant (Paris quadrifolia) having a whorl of four leaves and a solitary yellow or greenish flower
herb paris
European herb with yellow-green flowers resembling and closely related to the trilliums; reputed to be poisonous
pari
A combining form signifying equal; as, paridigitate, paripinnate
pari
pref. equal (Latin)
parisian
Of or pertaining to Paris
parisian
of or relating to or characteristic of Paris or its inhabitants; "Parisian restaurants can be expensive"
parisian
A native or inhabitant of Paris, the capital of France
parisian
a resident of Paris
parisian
a resident of Paris of or relating to or characteristic of Paris or its inhabitants; "Parisian restaurants can be expensive
plaster of Paris
Plaster of Paris is a type of plaster made from white powder and water which dries quickly. It is used to make plaster casts. Any of a group of gypsum cements, essentially hemihydrated calcium sulfate, CaSO France.]. a mixture of a white powder and water that dries fairly quickly and is used for making plaster casts and to decorate buildings. Quick-setting gypsum plaster consisting of a fine white powder, calcium sulfate hemihydrate, which hardens when moistened and allowed to dry. It is made by heating gypsum to 250-360°F (120-180°C). Used since ancient times, plaster of paris is so called because of its preparation from the abundant gypsum found in Paris. It is used to make molds and casts for ceramics and sculptures, to precast and hold ornamental plasterwork on ceilings and cornices, and for orthopedic bandages (casts). In medieval and Renaissance times, gesso (plaster of paris mixed with glue) was applied to wood panels, plaster, stone, or canvas to provide the ground for tempera and oil painting
plaster of Paris
{i} white gypsum powder that becomes a paste and hardens rapidly when mixed with water (used for making casts, sculptures, molds, etc.)
plaster of paris
Hydrate of calcium sulphate, made by calcinating gypsum at 150-160C
plaster of paris
any of several gypsum cements; a white powder (a form of calcium sulphate) that forms a paste when mixed with water and hardens into a solid; used in making molds and sculptures and casts for broken limbs
plaster of paris
Also known as plaster, it can be mixed with water, hardening to a smooth solid which does not shrink or lose volume, because it hardens before all the water can evaporate A common building material as well as a versatile medium in sculpture A kind of plaster that is popularly used for carving and making casts It is made up of dehydrated gypsum and is mixed with water
plaster of paris
A white powdery substance used chiefly for casts and molds in the form of a quick-setting paste with water
plaster of paris
A semi-hydrated form of calcium sulfate made by sintering gypsum to 120 - 130 C (248 - 266F)
plaster of paris
A fine white plaster made of dehydrated gypsum that is mixed with water and used for carving and making casts
the Last Tango in Paris
famous French movie starring Marlon Brando
Turkish - English
Paris
Parisian

All the Parisians have gone outdoors. - Bütün Parisliler dışardaydı.

in paris
Paris Antlaşması
(Hukuk) Treaty of Paris
Paris siyahı
Paris black
Paris yeşili
Paris green
paris'e yakın
Parisian
paris

    Hyphenation

    Pa·ris

    Turkish pronunciation

    pärîs

    Pronunciation

    /ˈparəs/ /ˈpærɪs/

    Etymology

    () From Ancient Greek Πάρις (Paris).

    Videos

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