schreiner

listen to the pronunciation of schreiner
German - Turkish
{'şraynır} marangoz; dülger, doğramacıa
English - Turkish

Definition of schreiner in English Turkish dictionary

carpenter
{i} marangoz

O iyi bir marangozdur. - He is a good carpenter.

Ben çok iyi bir marangoz değilim. - I'm not a very good carpenter.

Schreiner finish
(Tekstil) ipek apresi
carpenter
{i} doğramacı
carpenter
{i} dülger
carpenter
marangozluk yapmak
carpenter
doğramacılık yapmak
woodworker
ağaç işçisi
carpenter
(İnşaat) kaba marangoz
carpenter
carpentery marangozluk
English - English

Definition of schreiner in English English dictionary

Olive Emilie Albertina Schreiner
born March 24, 1855, Wittebergen, Cape Colony died Dec. 11, 1920, Cape Town, S.Af. South African writer. She had no formal education but read widely, developing a powerful intellect and militantly feminist and liberal views. After working as a governess she published (as Ralph Iron) the semiautobiographical The Story of an African Farm (1883). The first great South African novel, it concerns a girl living on an isolated farm in the veld who struggles to attain independence in the face of rigid Boer social conventions. Her later works include Trooper Peter Halkett of Mashonaland (1897), attacking Cecil Rhodes, and Woman and Labour (1911), an acclaimed bible of the women's movement
Olive Schreiner
born March 24, 1855, Wittebergen, Cape Colony died Dec. 11, 1920, Cape Town, S.Af. South African writer. She had no formal education but read widely, developing a powerful intellect and militantly feminist and liberal views. After working as a governess she published (as Ralph Iron) the semiautobiographical The Story of an African Farm (1883). The first great South African novel, it concerns a girl living on an isolated farm in the veld who struggles to attain independence in the face of rigid Boer social conventions. Her later works include Trooper Peter Halkett of Mashonaland (1897), attacking Cecil Rhodes, and Woman and Labour (1911), an acclaimed bible of the women's movement