robertson

listen to the pronunciation of robertson
English - Turkish

Definition of robertson in English Turkish dictionary

family name
soyadı

Onların soyadı posta kutusunda yazılıdır. - Their family name is written on their mailbox.

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

argyll Robertson Pupil
(Tıp) n.Uyum yapabilen, ancak ışığa karşı reaksiyon göstermeyen gözbebeği
family name
aile adı

Aile adınızı nasıl hecelersiniz? - How do you spell your family name?

Aile adın nasıl yazılır? - How is your family name written?

English - English
An English patronymic surname derived from the given name Robert
{i} family name
Davies William Robertson Anna Mary Robertson Robertson Oscar Palmer Robertson Pat Marion Gordon Robertson
United States basketball guard (born in 1938)
Robertson screw
A type of screw having a square recess in the head
Robertson screwdriver
A type of screwdriver having a square tip, designed to drive a Robertson screw
Robertson Davies
born Aug. 28, 1913, Thamesville, Ont., Can. died Dec. 2, 1995, Orangeville, Ont. Canadian novelist and playwright. Educated at the University of Oxford, Davies for many years edited the Peterborough (Ont.) Examiner and taught at the University of Toronto. He is best known for three trilogies: the Deptford trilogy consists of Fifth Business (1970), The Manticore (1972), and World of Wonders (1975), novels examining the intersecting lives of three men from a small Canadian town; the Salterton trilogy, three comedies of manners set in a provincial university town; and the so-called Cornish trilogy The Rebel Angels (1981), What's Bred in the Bone (1985), and The Lyre of Orpheus (1988). Davies's novels are notable for satirizing bourgeois provincialism and exploring the relationship between mysticism and art
George Robertson
{i} (born 1946) British Minister of Defense in Tony Blair's government
Oscar Palmer Robertson
born Nov. 24, 1938, Charlotte, Tenn., U.S. U.S. basketball player. He was the first African American to play for the University of Cincinnati. Drafted by the Cincinnati Royals of the NBA in 1960, he averaged double figures in points (30.8), rebounds (12.5), and assists (11.4) per game in 1961-62, a feat unmatched by any other player. He played for the Milwaukee Bucks (1970-74) and helped the team win a championship in 1970. He ended his career with 26,710 points, 7,804 rebounds, and 9,887 assists
Oscar Robertson
born Nov. 24, 1938, Charlotte, Tenn., U.S. U.S. basketball player. He was the first African American to play for the University of Cincinnati. Drafted by the Cincinnati Royals of the NBA in 1960, he averaged double figures in points (30.8), rebounds (12.5), and assists (11.4) per game in 1961-62, a feat unmatched by any other player. He played for the Milwaukee Bucks (1970-74) and helped the team win a championship in 1970. He ended his career with 26,710 points, 7,804 rebounds, and 9,887 assists
Pat Robertson
who owns a television company called The Christian Broadcasting Network Inc. He started the Christian Coalition, a right wing Christian political group, in 1989. He is also a politician in the Republican Party (1930- ) a US Christian leader and televangelist (=someone who talks about religion on television). orig. Marion Gordon Robertson born March 23, 1930, Lexington, Va., U.S. U.S. evangelist. He attended Washington and Lee University, served in the Marine Corps, and earned a law degree from Yale University. After undergoing a religious conversion, he studied at New York Theological Seminary and was ordained a Southern Baptist minister in 1959. In 1960 he started the nation's first Christian television station, at Portsmouth, Va., and he built it into the Christian Broadcasting Network. Its mainstay was his talk show, The 700 Club. In 1988 he campaigned for the Republican presidential nomination. In 1989 he founded the Christian Coalition, a conservative political organization that went on to exercise wide influence
William Robertson Davies
born Aug. 28, 1913, Thamesville, Ont., Can. died Dec. 2, 1995, Orangeville, Ont. Canadian novelist and playwright. Educated at the University of Oxford, Davies for many years edited the Peterborough (Ont.) Examiner and taught at the University of Toronto. He is best known for three trilogies: the Deptford trilogy consists of Fifth Business (1970), The Manticore (1972), and World of Wonders (1975), novels examining the intersecting lives of three men from a small Canadian town; the Salterton trilogy, three comedies of manners set in a provincial university town; and the so-called Cornish trilogy The Rebel Angels (1981), What's Bred in the Bone (1985), and The Lyre of Orpheus (1988). Davies's novels are notable for satirizing bourgeois provincialism and exploring the relationship between mysticism and art
robertson

    Hyphenation

    Rob·ert·son

    Turkish pronunciation

    räbırtsın

    Pronunciation

    /ˈräbərtsən/ /ˈrɑːbɜrtsən/
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