sears

listen to the pronunciation of sears
English - Turkish

Definition of sears in English Turkish dictionary

sear
dağlamak
sear
(Askeri,Avcılık) tetik tulumbası
sear
yak

Yerel polis ve FBI kaçakları yakalamak için bir araştırma planı hazırladı. - The local police and the FBI formulated a search plan to capture the fugitives.

sear
(etin dış tarafını) kızartmak
sear
sararmış
sear
{f} (kızgın demir gibi bir şey) (başka bir şeyi) yakmak
sear
kavurmak
sear
kurumuş
sear
kızartmak
sear
kuru
sear
körletmek
sear
{f} koterize etmek
sear
{f} kurumak
sear
{f} yakmak
sear
(isim) emniyet tetiği
sear
kurut/dağla
sear
{f} kurutmak
sear
kızgın tavada çevirmek
sear
çok kurutup yakmak
sear
{f} katılaştırmak (vicdan)
sear
{f} (bir et parçasının yüzeyini) şöyle bir kızartmak
sear
{f} alazlamak
sear
tüfek veya tabanca horozunun emniyet tetiği
sear
kurumuş kuruyup sararmış
sear
{i} emniyet tetiği
sear
hissini iptal etmek
sear
(Askeri) TETİK TULUMBASI: Bir silahta, tetik tertibatı tarafından serbest bırakılıncaya kadar ateşleme iğnesini veya horozu yerinde tutan kilit mandalı veya mandal
English - English
American merchant who founded (1886) the mail-order business that became Sears, Roebuck and Company. Sears Tower Sears Isaac Sears Roebuck and Company
third-person singular of sear
Sears Tower
Skyscraper office building in Chicago. With 110 floors and a height of 1,450 ft (442 m), it became the world's tallest building at its completion in 1974. Its architect, Fazlur Khan (1928-1982), designed it as a bundled-tube (see skyscraper) structure to resist lateral forces. It is modular in plan, with nine 75-ft-(23-m-) square, column-free units. The exterior is sheathed in black aluminum and bronze-tinted glass. Louvers clad the four floors devoted to the building's mechanical operations. It was the world's tallest building until 1996, when it was surpassed by the Petronas Towers (1,483 ft [452 m]) in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
sear
A scar produced by searing
sear
Part of a gun that retards the hammer until the trigger is pulled
sear
to burn on the surface
sear
{a} dry, withered
sear
{v} to burn, to scroch
Isaac Sears
born July 1?, 1730, West Brewster, Mass. died Oct. 28, 1786, Canton, China American patriot. A merchant in New York City, he supported the patriots' cause in the Stamp Act riots. As a member of the radical Sons of Liberty, he headed a boycott of British goods to protest the Townshend Acts. He led the ouster of loyalist officials from New York City and seized control of the municipal government until George Washington's troops arrived (1775). From Boston he organized privateers to prey on British ships. He died while on a trading venture in China
Roebuck and Company Sears
U.S. merchandising company, one of the world's largest retailers. It was founded in 1893 by Richard W. Sears (1863-1914) and Alvah C. Roebuck (1864-1948). The company grew rapidly, selling mail-order merchandise at low prices to rural dwellers who lacked access to competitive retail outlets. Under Robert E. Wood (president 1928-54), Sears built retail stores across the U.S., and by 1931 its retail sales had topped its mail-order sales. It diversified into financial services in the 1980s and introduced the Discover credit card in 1985, but in 1992 it began shedding its financial-services subsidiaries. It discontinued its famous catalog in 1993 and spun off insurance subsidiary Allstate (founded by Sears in 1931) in 1995. In 2002 Sears acquired catalog retailer Land's End, Inc
sear
To brown the surface of food in fat over a high heat before finishing cooking by another method, in order to add flavour
sear
To brown meat quickly by subjecting it to very high heat either in a skillet, under a broiler or in a very hot oven
sear
To char, scorch, or burn the surface of something with a hot instrument
sear
{i} scar or mark caused by a burn
sear
To brown meat quickly at a high temperature
sear
To brown the surface of meat by applying intense heat for a short period of time
sear
Dry; withered; no longer green; applied to leaves
sear
To brown meat on all sides over high heat
sear
cause to wither or parch from exposure to heat; "The sun parched the earth"
sear
The catch in a gunlock by which the hammer is held cocked or half cocked
sear
v to brown the surface of a food quickly at high temperatures Seasoning: - mostly a combination of salt and white pepper The white pepper tastes different than black, is colourless, and blends well with many foods
sear
become superficially burned; "my eyebrows singed when I bent over the flames"
sear
make very hot and dry; "The heat scorched the countryside"
sear
Holds the firing pin in a cocked position against the compression of a spring until the trigger is activated, which allows the spring to drive the firing pin into the primer
sear
If something sears a part of your body, it causes a painful burning feeling there. I distinctly felt the heat start to sear my throat. see also searing. The catch in a gunlock that keeps the hammer halfcocked or fully cocked. Variant of sere
sear
To sear something means to burn its surface with a sudden intense heat. Grass fires have seared the land near the farming village of Basekhai
sear
To burn (the surface of) to dryness and hardness; to cauterize; to expose to a degree of heat such as changes the color or the hardness and texture of the surface; to scorch; to make callous; as, to sear the skin or flesh
sear
(as in Searing Arrow) v To burn the surface of something with a heated instrument; to char or scorch To cauterize Sere or seared vegetation applies to withered crops, as might occur during a drought
sear
{s} parched, dry, withered
sear
To brown the surface of food, usually meat, by exposing it to high heat for a comparatively short time
sear
To wither; to dry up
sear
Also used figuratively
sear
(used especially of vegetation) having lost all moisture; "dried-up grass"; "the desert was edged with sere vegetation"; "shriveled leaves on the unwatered seedlings"; "withered vines"
sear
To brown the surface of meat by quick cooking over high heat in order to seal in the meat's juices
sear
Cook at a high temperature over direct heat until surface is brown
sear
To quickly brown the outside of meat at a high temperature Simmer: To cook in liquid close to the boiling point (bubbles form slowly and burst before reaching surface)
sear
{f} scar, burn, brand; scorch, parch; harden, become callous or unfeeling; become parched or scorched
sear
To brown meat quickly over high heat Meat may be seared under a broiler or in a skillet on top of the stove
sear
make very hot and dry; "The heat scorched the countryside
sears

    Turkish pronunciation

    sîrz

    Pronunciation

    /ˈsərz/ /ˈsɪrz/

    Etymology

    [ 'sir ] (verb.) before 12th century. Middle English seren, from Old English sEarian to become sere, from sEar sere.
Favorites