stones

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English - Turkish

Definition of stones in English Turkish dictionary

stone
taş

Diller taşa kazınmamıştır. Diller hepimizin sayesinde yaşar. - Languages are not carved in stone. Languages live through all of us.

Yüce Allah sonradan kaldıramayacağı bir taş yaratabildi mi? - Could an almighty god create a stone that he would not be able to subsequently lift?

stepped stones
basamak taşları
stone
{i} dolu tanesi
stone
{i} çekirdek (meyve)
stone
{i} çekirdek
building stones
yapı taşları
facing stones
(İnşaat) kaplama taşları
pebble stones
çakıl taşları
precious stones
değerli taşlar
stone
erbezi
stone
enemek
stone
tas atmak
stone
taşa tutmak
stone
çekirdeğini çıkarmak
stone
meyve çekirdeği
stone
değerli taş
stone
{f} taşa tut
stone
mücevher

Mücevher Tom'a aitti. - The precious stone belonged to Tom.

stone
gr.lık ağırlık ölçüsü
casting stones
taş döküm
cobble stones
Arnavut kaldırımı taşları
consisting of stones
taş oluşan
hail stones
dolu taşlar
salute him with a shower of stones
Bir taş duş onu selamlamak
skip stones
Taş sektirmek
stone
taşa tut(mak)
barge for stones
(Askeri) taş mavnası
expel kidney stones
(Tıp) böbrek taşı düşürmek
fight with stones and rods
taşlı sopalı kavga
fight with stones and sticks
taşlı sopalı kavga
stone
{i} mezar taşı
stone
kâgir
stone
{i} (böbrekte/safrada oluşan) taş
stone
kaya

Eğer bitkiler ve taşlar suda ise o zaman bu olur: bitkiler yüzer ve kayalar batar. - If plants and stones are in the water then this will happen: the plants float and the rocks sink.

Tom bir kayanın üzerine oturdu ve ayakkabısından bir taş çıkardı. - Tom sat down on a rock and removed a stone from his shoe.

stone
mesane taşı
stone
taştan yapılmış şey
stone
stone crusher taş kırma makinası
stone
{f} taş döşemek
stone
meyva çekirdeği
stone
(Tıp) 14 librelik ağırlık ölçüsü
stone
{s} taştan

Tom bir taştan daha iyi yüzemez. - Tom can swim no more than a stone can.

Köprü taştan yapılmıştır. - The bridge is made of stone.

stone
Stone Age taş devri
stone
{f} taşlamak
stone
anat
stone
{i} İng. (etli meyvelerde) çekirdek
stone
{i} (mücevhere ait) taş
stone
{s} taştan yapılmış

Köprü taştan yapılmıştır. - The bridge is made of stone.

Bu ev taştan yapılmış. - This house is made of stone.

stone
mürettip masası
stone
{i} testis
stone
taşa benzer şey
stone
husye
stone
{f} İng. (etli bir meyvenin) çekirdeğini çıkarmak
stone
{i} haya

Simyagerler felsefe taşının kişinin hayatını uzatabileceğine inanıyordu. - Alchemists believed that the philosopher's stone was capable of extending a person's life.

stone
(Tıp) 1.Organizmada oluşturan taşlar, taş
wind-faceded stones
rüzgâr tarafından yüzey edinmiş taş yada çakıl
English - English
The Rolling Stones, a very successful British rock band formed in the 1960s, still together in the 21st century

And so the Stones somehow make Exile On Main St there, in a rigged-up studio in the basement.

Third-person singular simple present indicative form of stone
testicles, balls
plural form of stone
A piece of undissolved or crystallized refractory material or glass batch appearing in the glass as an opaque lump
Rock fragments 10 to 24 inches (25 to 60 centimeters) in diameter if rounded or 15 to 24 inches (38 to 60 centimeters) in length if flat
Rock or mineral fragments between 250 and 600 mm in diameter if rounded, and 380 to 600 mm if flat See also rock fragments
Old hard race tires that have long since lost their grip
In terms of soil science this is any particle greater than 2mm
third-person singular of stone
A game, something like a cross between marbles, Go, and table croquet Played without a grid, using pretty colored stones that would be called jewels elsewhere
plural of stone
intention
standing stones
plural form of standing stone
stepping stones
plural form of stepping stone
sticks and stones
Evocative of the saying "sticks and stones may (or will) break my bones, but words (or names) will never hurt (or harm) me"

Jack Sparrow: Sticks and stones, love.

Rolling Stones
A very successful British rock band formed in the 1960s, still together in the 21st century

Welker once referred to Blanc as the Beatles and Butler and Messick as the Rolling Stones of voice-over artists.

benben stones
plural form of benben stone
border stones
plural form of border stone
kidney stones
plural form of kidney stone
people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones
People who have a fault should not criticize others for having that same fault
precious stones
plural form of precious stone
pumice stones
plural form of pumice stone
rai stones
plural form of rai stone
reading stones
plural form of reading stone
stone
A hard, stone-like deposit

kidney stone.

stone
To form a stone during growth, with reference to fruit etc
stone
Having the appearance of stone

stone pot.

stone
Constructed of stone

stone walls.

stone
To pelt with stones, especially to kill by pelting with stones
stone
(plural: stone) A unit of mass equal to 14 pounds. Used to measure the weights of people, animals, cheese, wool, etc. 1 stone ≈ 6.3503 kilograms
stone
{v} to pelt or kill with stones, to harden
stone
{n} a concretion of earth, as clay, lime, silex usually combined with some kind of air, and often with sulphur or a metal; stones are hard, insoluble in water, inductile and unmalleable; also a concretion in the kidneys or bladder, a case containing the kernel of a seed, a testicle, a weight of 14 lb
stone
{a} made of or like stone
Rolling Stones
British rock group that started in the 1960s which includes the lead singer Mick Jagger and has greatly influenced the development of rock music
Rolling Stones
a British rock group who first became popular in 1963 and became one of the most successful groups ever. Their songs include (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, Jumping Jack Flash and Honky Tonk Woman. Most of their songs are written by Keith Richards, who also plays the guitar, and Mick Jagger, their main singer. British musical group. Its original members were Mick Jagger (b. 1943), Keith Richards (b. 1943), Brian Jones (1944-69), Bill Wyman (b. 1936), and Charlie Watts (b. 1941). The band was formed in 1962 when Jagger, Richards, and Jones, who had been performing sporadically in a blues band, recruited Wyman and formed their own group. Watts joined the band in 1963. Jagger was the lead vocalist, while Jones and Richards played guitars, Wyman played bass, and Watts played drums. The band's name was adopted from a Muddy Waters song. By 1966 a series of outstanding songs had made the band second in popularity only to the Beatles. Jagger and Richards wrote most of its songs, which are marked by a driving backbeat, biting and satirical lyrics, and simple but expressive instrumental accompaniments. The group reached the height of its popularity with albums such as Beggar's Banquet (1968) and Exile on Main Street (1972). Jones was succeeded by Mick Taylor (b. 1948) in 1969, who was replaced in turn by Ron Wood (b. 1947) in 1976. They continued to perform long after the other classic rock bands of the 1960s disbanded
The Stones
British rock and roll band (popular from the 1960s-90s)
casting stones
throwing rocks
kidney stones
Also known as renal calculi, kidney stones are the result of crystallization of certain substances found in urine, including calcium, phosphate, oxalic acid, and uric acid Stones may form in the urine collecting area (pelvis) of the kidney, as well as the ureters (narrow tubes connecting the kidney to the urinary bladder)
kidney stones
Walt's Kidney Stones Q&A Archive The presence of calculi in the kidney or collecting system
kidney stones
hardened crystal deposits that may form in the urinary system
kidney stones
A mass of hard material in the kidney
pelt with stones
throw stones at, hit with rocks
precious stones
valuable stones, good jewels, costly jewels
salute him with a shower of stones
greet him by throwing rocks
shower of stones
falling of stones, many stones falling at once
shower stones on
throw stones at, cast rocks at
stone
A hard earthen substance that can form large rocks and boulders
stone
Symbol of hardness and insensibility; torpidness; insensibility; as, a heart of stone
stone
To rub, scour, or sharpen with a stone
stone
Gond
stone
Concreted earthy or mineral matter; also, any particular mass of such matter; as, a house built of stone; the boy threw a stone; pebbles are rounded stones
stone
A calculous concretion, especially one in the kidneys or bladder; the disease arising from a calculus
stone
emphasis If you say that you will leave no stone unturned, you are emphasizing that you will try every way you can think of in order to achieve what you want. He said he would leave no stone unturned in the search for peace
stone
A small piece of stone
stone
The central part of some fruits, particularly drupes; consisting of the seed and a hard endocarp layer
stone
A unit of mass equal to 14 pounds. Used to measure the weights of people, animals, cheese, wool, etc
stone
G3037 lithos, lee'-thos; appar a prim word; a stone (lit or fig ): --(mill-, stumbling-) stone
stone
Stone is used in expressions such as set in stone and tablets of stone to suggest that an idea or rule is firm and fixed, and cannot be changed. Scientific opinions are not carved on tablets of stone; they change over the years
stone
building material consisting of a piece of rock hewn in a definite shape for a special purpose; "he wanted a special stone to mark the site" a lack of feeling or expression or movement; "he must have a heart of stone"; "her face was as hard as stone" United States architect (1902-1978) United States jurist who served on the United States Supreme Court as Chief Justice (1872-1946) United States journalist who advocated liberal causes (1907-1989) United States feminist and suffragist (1818-1893) United States filmmaker (born in 1946) the hard inner (usually woody) layer of the pericarp of some fruits (as peaches or plums or cherries or olives) that contains the seed; "you should remove the stones from prunes before cooking" an avoirdupois unit used to measure the weight of a human body; equal to 14 pounds; "a heavy chap who must have weighed more than twenty stone" kill by throwing stones at; "Adulterers should be stoned according to the Koran" of any of various dull tannish-gray colors
stone
A stand or table with a smooth, flat top of stone, commonly marble, on which to arrange the pages of a book, newspaper, etc
stone
A 42-pound, precisely shaped piece of granite with a handle attached, which is bowled down the ice
stone
Absolutely, completely (used with following adjective)
stone
A hard, one-seeded endocarp of a drupe
stone
Stones were commonly used for buildings, also as memorials of important events (Gen 28: 18; Josh 24: 26, 27; 1 Sam 7: 12, etc ) They were gathered out of cultivated fields (Isa 5: 2; comp 2 Kings 3: 19) This word is also used figuratively of believers (1 Pet 2: 4, 5), and of the Messiah (Ps 118: 22; Isa 28: 16; Matt 21: 42; Acts 4: 11, etc ) In Dan 2: 45 it refers also to the Messiah He is there described as "cut out of the mountain " (See ROCK )
stone
Complete, absolute, of the highest degree
stone
If people stone someone or something, they throw stones at them. A post office was set on fire and vehicles were stoned by looters
stone
The hard endocarp of drupes; as, the stone of a cherry or peach
stone
Small impurities in glass, such as a particle of furnace material
stone
{i} rock; piece of rock shaped or cut for some purpose; pebble; gem; seed, pit; unit of weight equal to fourteen pounds or 6.36 kilograms (British)
stone
To make like stone; to harden
stone
If you say that one place is a stone's throw from another, you mean that the places are close to each other. a two-bedroom apartment just a stone's throw from the beach Just a stone's throw away is the City Art Gallery
stone
A dull light grey or beige, like that of some stones
stone
A {lithographic} stone is a slab of stone, usually limestone, used as a matrix for a print Lithographic stones are used to make lithographs and chromolithographs
stone
material consisting of the aggregate of minerals like those making up the Earth's crust; "that mountain is solid rock"; "stone is abundant in New England and there are many quarries"
stone
A measurement of weight that equals approximately fourteen pounds
stone
Of a dull light grey or beige, like that of some stones
stone
A stone is a large piece of stone put somewhere in memory of a person or event, or as a religious symbol. The monument consists of a circle of gigantic stones
stone
One of the testes; a testicle
stone
A gemstone, a jewel, especially a diamond
stone
To free from stones; also, to remove the seeds of; as, to stone a field; to stone cherries; to stone raisins
stone
Fig
stone
Side of the elements representing the introvert sex at the low level Stone comprises the following Archetypes: Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn
stone
United States feminist and suffragist (1818-1893)
stone
completely
stone
Stone is a hard solid substance found in the ground and often used for building houses. He could not tell whether the floor was wood or stone People often don't appreciate that marble is a natural stone. stone walls
stone
A stone is a small hard ball of minerals and other substances which sometimes forms in a person's kidneys or gall bladder. He had kidney stones
stone
Quarried or artificially broken rock for use in construction
stone
United States filmmaker (born in 1946)
stone
To remove a stone from (fruit etc.)
stone
kill by throwing stones at; "Adulterers should be stoned according to the Koran"
stone
of Endocarp
stone
A monument to the dead; a gravestone
stone
a crystalline rock that can be cut and polished for jewelry; "he had the gem set in a ring for his wife"; "she had jewels made of all the rarest stones"
stone
a lump or mass of hard consolidated mineral matter; "he threw a rock at me"
stone
an avoirdupois unit used to measure the weight of a human body; equal to 14 pounds; "a heavy chap who must have weighed more than twenty stone"
stone
{s} of or pertaining to stone, made of stone
stone
A stone is a measurement of weight, especially the weight of a person, equal to 14 pounds or 6.35 kilograms. I weighed around 16 stone. see also stoned, foundation stone, paving stone, precious stone, stepping stone
stone
Something made of stone
stone
If you stone a fruit, you remove its stone. Then stone the fruit and process the plums to a puree
stone
Specifically: - The glass of a mirror; a mirror
stone
A weight which legally is fourteen pounds, but in practice varies with the article weighed
stone
the hard inner (usually woody) layer of the pericarp of some fruits (as peaches or plums or cherries or olives) that contains the seed; "you should remove the stones from prunes before cooking"
stone
An accidental inclusion in the glass Stones consist of unmelted particles of batch, fragments of refractory material from the pot, or devtrification crystals The first two varieties are generally rough but rounded; the third is angular
stone
a lack of feeling or expression or movement; "he must have a heart of stone"; "her face was as hard as stone"
stone
You can refer to a jewel as a stone. a diamond ring with three stones
stone
A stone is a small piece of rock that is found on the ground. He removed a stone from his shoe The crowd began throwing stones
stone
before printing; called also imposing stone
stone
building material consisting of a piece of rock hewn in a definite shape for a special purpose; "he wanted a special stone to mark the site"
stone
United States jurist who served on the United States Supreme Court as Chief Justice (1872-1946)
stone
United States architect (1902-1978)
stone
The plural is usually stone in meaning 10
stone
A playing piece made of any hard material, used in various board games such as backgammon, and go
stone
As a stone (used with following adjective)
stone
A playing piece or pawn Traditionally, the black pieces are actually made from stone (And the white pieces from bone, shell or coral )
stone
kill two birds with one stone: see bird. American architect who was an exponent of the International Style. Among his notable designs is the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. (1964). American jurist who served as an associate justice (1925-1941) and the chief justice (1941-1946) of the U.S. Supreme Court. American journalist who championed liberal causes in I.F. Stone's Weekly (1953-1971). American feminist and social reformer who organized the first national women's rights convention, held in Worcester, Massachusetts (1850), and was a founder of the American Woman Suffrage Association (1869). In building construction, rock cut into blocks and slabs or broken into pieces. It comes as hard as granite and as soft as limestone or sandstone. Where available, stone has generally been the preferred material for monumental structures. Its advantages are durability, adaptability to sculpting, and the fact that it can be used in its natural state. But it is difficult to quarry, transport, and cut, and its weakness in tension limits its use. The simplest stonework is rubble, roughly broken stones bound in mor(Tarih) Ashlar work consists of regularly cut blocks with squared edges. Building stone is quarried by sawing if it is soft, and split apart with wedges or by blasting if hard. Many devices are used to shape and dress stone, from handheld tools to circular saws, surfacing machines, and lathes. Some stones are strong enough to act as monolithic (one-piece) supports and beams; and in some styles (e.g., ancient Egyptian temples) stone slabs are employed even for roofing, supported by many closely spaced columns. Before the arch, builders were handicapped by the tendency of stone to break under its own weight. But stone in compression has great strength, and the Romans built huge stone bridges and aqueducts. Though stone has generally been abandoned for structural use in the 20th century, it is widely used as a thin, nonbearing surface cladding. See also masonry. bird stone Black Stone of Mecca kidney stone Middle Stone Age New Stone Age Old Stone Age Rosetta Stone Scone Stone of Stone Age Stone Edward Durell Stone Harlan Fiske Stone Isidor Feinstein Stone Lucy Stone Oliver Stone Robert Anthony stone tool industry Rolling Stones
stone
{f} put to death by pelting with stones, pelt with stones; fit or pave with stones; remove stones or pits from fruit
stone
The stone in a plum, cherry, or other fruit is the large hard seed in the middle of it
stone
United States journalist who advocated liberal causes (1907-1989)
stone
United States architect (1902-1978) United States jurist who served on the United States Supreme Court as Chief Justice (1872-1946) United States journalist who advocated liberal causes (1907-1989) United States feminist and suffragist (1818-1893) United States filmmaker (born in 1946) the hard inner (usually woody) layer of the pericarp of some fruits (as peaches or plums or cherries or olives) that contains the seed; "you should remove the stones from prunes before cooking"
stone
A lithographic stone is a slab of stone, usually limestone, used as a matrix for a print Lithographic stones are used to make lithographs and chromolithographs
stone
To wall or face with stones; to line or fortify with stones; as, to stone a well; to stone a cellar
stone
To intoxicate, especially with narcotics. (Usually in passive)
stone
remove the pits from; "pit plums and cherries"
stone
To pelt, beat, or kill with stones
stone
of any of various dull tannish-gray colors
stone
A precious stone; a gem
stone
The round granite playing piece, 11 inches in diameter and 39 to 41 ½ pounds in weight, fitted with a handle
stone
lithic
throw stones at
throw rocks at, hurl stones at
throwing stones
casting stones, tossing stones
stones

    Hyphenation

    Stones

    Turkish pronunciation

    stōnz

    Pronunciation

    /ˈstōnz/ /ˈstoʊnz/

    Videos

    ... So my mom and I walked through all of these stones in her ...
    ... So each one of these stones in the whole health cairn is ...
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