relict

listen to the pronunciation of relict
English - Turkish
cinsi tükenmekte olan hayvan/bitki
{i} dul kadın
kalıcı
{i} soyu tükenmekte olan canlı
cinsi tükenmekte olan bir hayvan veya bitki türü
dul eş
relict lake
(Coğrafya) artıkgöl
relict lake
(Coğrafya) kalıntı göl
relict lake
(Coğrafya) bakiye göl
widow
{i} dul kadın

Tom John'un dul kadını ile evlendi. - Tom married John's widow.

Dul kadın siyah giyinmişti. - The widow was dressed in black.

widow
dul bırakmak
widow
Sayfanın tepesinde tek başına kalan
widow
{i} dul

Dul kadın siyah giyinmişti. - The widow was dressed in black.

Dul bir kadın ve bir kız evlat bırakıyor. - He leaves a widow and a daughter.

English - English
surviving, remaining
The surviving member of a married couple after one or the other has died; a widow or widower

But I am not the penniless nonentity I was when we first met; I can offer an honorable if not a brilliant marriage; and at the very lowest I can provide my wife – my widow, my relict – with a decent competence, an assured future.

A species or other structure which has survived from a previous age
A survival of an archaic word, language or other form
that is a relict, pertaining to a relict

In the lakes and in the streams were species of fish not known elsewhere on earth and birds and lizards and other forms of life as well all long relict here for the desert stretched away on every side.

{n} a widow, a woman left in widowhood
Widow; surviving spouse when one has died, husband or wife
widow
{i} item or organism that has survived in its original form
geological feature that is a remnant of a pre-existing formation after other parts have disappeared an organism or species surviving as a remnant of an otherwise extinct flora or fauna in an environment much changed from that in which it originated
a distribution area that is a mere remnant of a formerly wider range
A species which more accurately belongs to an earlier type than the one it is presently found in [16]
an organism or species surviving as a remnant of an otherwise extinct flora or fauna in an environment much changed from that in which it originated
Widow or widower of From Les Sheehy
A woman whose husband is dead; a widow
geological feature that is a remnant of a pre-existing formation after other parts have disappeared
widow, sometimes a widower
Descriptive of a geological feature surviving in its primitive form
relict

    Hyphenation

    rel·ict

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    () From Latin relictus, past participle of relinquō (“I leave behind, abandon, relinquish”) re- + linquō (“I leave, quit, forsake, depart from”).
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