phillips

listen to the pronunciation of phillips
English - Turkish
yıldız tornavida
phillips screwdriver
yıldız tornavida
phillips head
yıldız başlı
phillips head screw
yıldız başlı vida
phillips head screw
yıldız vida
family name
soyadı

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

Soyadınızın yazılışı nasıl? - What's the spelling of your family name?

family name
aile adı

Tom mahkum edilmişse aile adımız mahvolacak. - Our family name will be ruined if Tom is convicted.

Aile adınızın yazılımı nasıl? - What's the spelling of your family name?

English - English
A patronymic surname derived from Philip
An English patronymic surname derived from Philip
American abolitionist who served as president of the American Antislavery Society from 1865 to 1870. Feynman Richard Phillips Huntington Samuel Phillips Phillips curve Phillips Irna Phillips Wendell
{i} family name
unrelaxed
Phillips head
A screwdriver with a '+' shaped head for turning screws so socketed
Phillips head
A screw turned by such a screwdriver
Phillips screw
A screw with a Phillips head
Phillips screwdriver
A screwdriver having a cross-shaped tip rather than the rectangular tip of a standard (flat-blade) screwdriver
Phillips screwdrivers
plural form of Phillips screwdriver
Phillips screws
plural form of Phillips screw
Phillips curve
graph illustrating the level of inflation as a function of the level of unemployment (Economics)
Phillips curve
Graphic representation of the inverse relationship between the rate of unemployment and the rate of change in money wages. In 1958 A. W. Phillips plotted British unemployment rates and rates of change in money wages and found that when unemployment rates were low, employers were more likely to bid wages up to lure good employees away from their competitors. He claimed that this was a stable relationship. In the 1960s macroeconomists substituted the rate of price inflation for the rate of change in money wages and promulgated the curve as a tool of economic policy, arguing that the simultaneous achievement of low unemployment and low inflation was problematic. Monetarists, including Milton Friedman, claimed the relationship was not stable
Phillips screwdriver
(Otomotiv) A screwdriver with a pointed tip that's shaped to fit the crossed slots in the heads of Phillips screws
phillips screw
a screw with a special head having crossed slots
phillips screwdriver
a screwdriver for use with Phillips screws
Irna Phillips
born July 1, 1901, Chicago, Ill., U.S. died Dec. 22, 1973, Chicago U.S. radio producer and director. She worked as a teacher before turning to writing for radio and creating the first soap opera, Painted Dreams (1930). Later known as "Queen of the Soaps," she introduced techniques such as the organ bridge to give a smooth flow between scenes and the cliff-hanger ending to each episode. Her daytime radio serials included Today's Children (1933-38, 1943-50); The Guiding Light (1937-56; television, 1952-); Road of Life (1937-59); and Women in White (1938-42, 1944-48), the first hospital soap opera. She also created the television serials As the World Turns (1956) and Another World (1964)
Richard Phillips Feynman
a US scientist who won a Nobel Prize for his work on radioactivity (1918-88). born May 11, 1918, New York, N.Y., U.S. died Feb. 15, 1988, Los Angeles, Calif. U.S. theoretical physicist. He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University. During World War II he worked on the Manhattan Project. From 1950 he taught at the California Institute of Technology. The Feynman diagram was one of the many problem-solving tools he invented. With Julian Schwinger (b. 1918) and Shinichiro Tomonaga (1906-79), he shared a 1965 Nobel Prize for his brilliant work on quantum electrodynamics. He was principally responsible for identifying the cause of the 1986 Challenger disaster. Famed for his wit, he also wrote best-selling books on science. His work, which tied together all the varied phenomena at work in light, radio, electricity, and magnetism, altered the way scientists understand the nature of waves and particles
Samuel Phillips Huntington
born April 18, 1927, New York, N.Y., U.S. U.S. political scientist. After receiving a doctorate from Harvard University, he spent most of his career teaching at Harvard, specializing in defense and international affairs. He has been a consultant to many government agencies. Among his many books are Political Order in Changing Societies (1968), in which he suggested that developing countries are not always likely to create liberal-democratic institutions, and Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of the World Order (1996), in which he predicted conflicts between the world's major cultures in the post-Cold War era
Wendell Phillips
born Nov. 29, 1811, Boston, Mass., U.S. died Feb. 2, 1884, Boston U.S. reformer and abolitionist. A wealthy graduate of Harvard Law School, he sacrificed social status and a prospective political career in order to join the antislavery movement. His reputation as an inspirational orator was established with his address at an abolitionist meeting in 1837 to protest the murder of Elijah Lovejoy. He became an associate of William Lloyd Garrison and lectured widely at meetings of the American Anti-Slavery Society, serving as its president from 1865 to 1870. He also advocated prohibition, woman suffrage, prison reform, regulation of corporations, and labour reform
Turkish - English

Definition of phillips in Turkish English dictionary

phillips eğrisi
(Ticaret) phillips curve
phillips tornavida
phillips screwdriver
phillips

    Hyphenation

    Phil·lips

    Turkish pronunciation

    fîlîps

    Pronunciation

    /ˈfələps/ /ˈfɪlɪps/

    Videos

    ... from the National Security staff. I'm Macon Phillips, and we'll shortly be joined by Brian ...
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