the language

listen to the pronunciation of the language
English - Turkish

Definition of the language in English Turkish dictionary

language
{i} dil

Yabancı dil öğrenmek zordur. - It's difficult to learn a foreign language.

Hiç şüphe yok ki İngilizce dünyada en çok konuşulan dildir. - It isn't a surprise that English is the world's most spoken language.

language
lisan

Lisan Laboratuvarını kullanabilir miyiz? - May we use the language lab?

Sizin lisanınızı anlamıyorum. - I can't understand your language.

language
{i} mesleki dil
language
(Dilbilim) dil yetisi
language
(Bilgisayar) konuşulur

Amerika'da hangi diller konuşulur? - What languages are spoken in America?

İspanya'da birçok dil konuşulur. - They speak many languages in Spain.

language
edebiyat
language
(Dilbilim) dilyetisi
language
(Bilgisayar) dili

İnternette Tatar dilinde çok az site vardır. - There are few sites in the Tatar language on the Internet.

Tayca, Tayland'ın resmi dilidir. - Thai is the official language in Thailand.

language
dilden

Kelimeler çok eski bir dildendi. - The words were from a very old language.

Birinin beş dilden daha fazlasını akıcı olarak konuştuğunu iddia ettiğini duyduğumda şüphe ederim. - I'm skeptical when I hear someone claim to speak more than five languages fluently.

language
dilde
language
dilin
flemish
flaman dilineflaman dili
language
sertlanguage
language
ağır söz
language
kompütör lisanı
language
(Askeri) DİL, MAKİNA DİLİ: Haber ve bilgileri göstermek ve bunları halk arasında veya halkla makina arasında alıp vermek için kullanılan bir sistem. Böyle bir sistem; dikkatle belirtilmiş bir harf grubu ile bu harfleri kelime veya ifade şeklinde daha geniş birimler halinde birleştiren kurallardan ve özel anlamlar meydana getirecek kelime düzme ve kullanma kurallarından ibarettir
language
finger language sağırların kullandığı parmak işaretleri ile konuşulanstrong language küfür
language
bir kabileye veya bir yere mahsus lehçe
language
herhangi bir ifade tarzı
language
konuşma kabiliyeti
English - English
{n} flemish
language
The vocabulary and usage used in a particular specialist field

legal language.

language
Profanity
language
A form of communication using words either spoken or gestured with the hands and structured with grammar, often with a writing system

sign language.

language
lingo
language
{n} all human speech, a tongue, a style
language
The forms of speech, or the methods of expressing ideas, peculiar to a particular nation
language
According to the Orthodox tradition, the Church adopts and uses the language of any particular country or ethnic group that she serves The main liturgical languages in the Orthodox Church are Greek, the various descendants of old Church Slavonic, and Arabic
language
a system of words used in a particular discipline; "legal terminology"; "the language of sociology"
language
Nonverbal communication
language
The inarticulate sounds by which animals inferior to man express their feelings or their wants
language
Language is the use of a system of communication which consists of a set of sounds or written symbols. Students examined how children acquire language
language
The language in which the data element is specified
language
The particular words used in speech or a passage of text
language
The words, their pronunciation, and the methods of combining them used and understood by a considerable community
language
A race, as distinguished by its speech
language
the use of an organised means of combining words in order to communicate [cf communication]
language
To communicate by language; to express in language
language
Information on the language or languages of the unit being described [RAD 1 8B14]
language
The ability to communicate using words
language
system for communicating ideas and feelings using sounds, gestures, signs, or marks
language
words chosen by authors to convey their ideas, attitudes and points of view and to guide our reactions to texts
language
The language in which the article is published
language
the mental faculty or power of vocal communication; "language sets homo sapiens apart from all other animals" a systematic means of communicating by the use of sounds or conventional symbols; "he taught foreign languages"; "the language introduced is standard throughout the text"; "the speed with which a program can be executed depends on the language in which it is written
language
The Dublin Core element used to designate the language of the intellectual content of the resource Recommended best practice for the values of the Language element is defined by RFC 3066 See also section 4 of the Dublin Core Users Guide
language
A language is a set of strings from the alphabet Σ The set may be empty, finite or infinite The symbol Σ* is the set of all possible strings from the alphabet Σ There are many ways to define a language See definitions below There are many classifications for languages See definitions below Because a language is a set of strings, the words language and set are often used interchangeably in talking about formal languages
language
The characteristic mode of arranging words, peculiar to an individual speaker or writer; manner of expression; style
language
A computer language
language
Language is the code we all use to express ourselves and communicate to others
language
You can refer to the words used in connection with a particular subject as the language of that subject. the language of business
language
The written and spoken methods of combining words to create meaning used by a particular group of people
language
You can use language to refer to various means of communication involving recognizable symbols, non-verbal sounds, or actions. Some sign languages are very sophisticated means of communication. the digital language of computers. System of conventional spoken or written symbols used by people in a shared culture to communicate with each other. A language both reflects and affects a culture's way of thinking, and changes in a culture influence the development of its language. Related languages become more differentiated when their speakers are isolated from each other. When speech communities come into contact (e.g., through trade or conquest), their languages influence each other. Most existing languages are grouped with other languages descended "genetically" from a common ancestral language (see historical linguistics). The broadest grouping of languages is the language family. For example, all the Romance languages are derived from Latin, which in turn belongs to the Italic branch of the Indo-European language family, descended from the ancient parent language, Proto-Indo-European. Other major families include, in Asia, Sino-Tibetan, Austronesian, Dravidian, Altaic, and Austroasiatic; in Africa, Niger-Congo, Afro-Asiatic, and Nilo-Saharan; and in the Americas, Uto-Aztecan, Maya, Otomanguean, and Tupian. Relationships between languages are traced by comparing grammar and syntax and especially by looking for cognates (related words) in different languages. Language has a complex structure that can be analyzed and systematically presented (see linguistics). All languages begin as speech, and many go on to develop writing systems. All can employ different sentence structures to convey mood. They use their resources differently for this but seem to be equally flexible structurally. The principal resources are word order, word form, syntactic structure, and, in speech, intonation. Different languages keep indicators of number, person, gender, tense, mood, and other categories separate from the root word or attach them to it. The innate human capacity to learn language fades with age, and languages learned after about age 10 are usually not spoken as well as those learned earlier. See also dialect. Common Business Oriented Language. HyperText Markup Language Practical Extraction and Reporting Language. Standard Generalized Markup Language Structured Query Language. Extensible Markup Language. Afrikaans language Akkadian language Assyro Babylonian language Albanian language Amharic language Arabic language Aramaic language Armenian language assembly language Avestan language Basque language Belarusian language Belarusan language Bengali language Breton language Bulgarian language Catalan language Circassian language Czech language Bohemian language Danish language Dutch language Egyptian language English language Etruscan language Finnish language fourth generation language French language Frisian language Georgian language German language Gothic language Greek language Hausa language Hebrew language Hindi language Hungarian language Icelandic language Irish language Gaelic language Italian language Japanese language Kannada language Kanarese language Khmer language Cambodian language Korean language Ladino language Sephardic language language philosophy of Latin language Latvian language Lettish language Lithuanian language machine language Malay language Malayalam language Maltese language markup language Nahuatl language Norwegian language Occitan language Provençal language Old Church Slavonic language Old Church Slavic language Old Norse language Oscan language Pali language Persian language Farsi language Polish language Portuguese language programming language Punjabi language Panjabi language Romanian language Romany language Russian language Sanskrit language Sardinian language Scottish Gaelic language Serbo Croatian language sign language Slovak language Slovene language Slovenian language Spanish language Swahili language Swedish language Tagalog language Tamil language Tatar language Volga Tatar language Telugu language Tibetan language Turkish language Ukrainian language Ruthenian language Umbrian language Urdu language Vietnamese language Welsh language Yiddish language Adamawa Ubangi languages Adamawa Eastern languages African languages Afro Asiatic languages Hamito Semitic languages Algonquian languages Algonkian languages Altaic languages American Indian languages Anatolian languages Arawakan languages Maipuran languages Athabaskan languages Athapaskan languages Atlantic languages West Atlantic languages Australian Aboriginal languages Austroasiatic languages Austronesian languages Malayo Polynesian languages Baltic languages Bantu languages Benue Congo languages Cariban languages Caucasian languages Celtic languages Chinese languages Sinitic languages Dravidian languages Eskimo Aleut languages Ethiopic languages Finno Ugric languages Germanic languages Gur languages Voltaic languages Hmong Mien languages Miao Yao languages Hokan languages Ijoid languages Indo Aryan languages Indic languages Indo European languages Iranian languages Iroquoian languages Italic languages Khoisan languages Kordofanian languages Kru languages Kwa languages Manchu Tungus languages Tungusic languages Mande languages Maya languages Mayan languages Mon Khmer languages Mongolian languages Munda languages Muskogean languages Niger Congo languages Nilo Saharan languages Otomanguean languages Paleo Siberian languages Paleo Asiatic languages Papuan languages Penutian languages Quechuan languages Romance languages Salishan languages Semitic languages Sino Tibetan languages Siouan languages Slavic languages Slavonic languages Tai languages Tocharian languages Tokharian languages Tupian languages Turkic languages Uralic languages Uto Aztecan languages
language
A language is a system of communication which consists of a set of sounds and written symbols which are used by the people of a particular country or region for talking or writing. the English language Students are expected to master a second language
language
Computer programs can be written in a variety of different languages Different languages are optimized for different tasks Common languages include Java, C, C++, ForTran, Pascal, Lisp, and BASIC Some people classify languages into two categories, higher-level and lower-level These people would consider assembly language and machine language lower-level languages and all other languages higher-level In general, higher-level languages can be either interpreted or compiled; many languages allow both, but some are restricted to one or the other Many people do not consider machine language and assembly language at all when talking about programming languages
language
the language learners use in completing a task (e g the mother tongue or English, or the particular vocabulary, structures or functions the task requires the learners to use)
language
Windows 3 1 and 95 can support foreign languages In most cases, the foreign country has a different set of accented characters and a different keyboard layout The UK and USA use the Qwerty keyboard layout (this describes the first keys on the top left hand row) France uses the Azerty layout If you want tp use a different language for display and printing you will have to change the language setup for the font used to support the accents and the keyboard layout for Windows If you want to use central European or Asian languages, you'll need to buy new fonts
language
The vocabulary and phraseology belonging to an art or department of knowledge; as, medical language; the language of chemistry or theology
language
  A set of characters, conventions, and rules that is used for conveying information   (188)
language
You can refer to someone's use of rude words or swearing as bad language when you find it offensive. Television companies tend to censor bad language in feature films There's a girl gonna be in the club, so you guys watch your language
language
The language of a piece of writing or speech is the style in which it is written or spoken. a booklet summarising it in plain language The tone of his language was diplomatic and polite
language
{i} body of spoken or written words with which people communicate thoughts and feelings; specialized vocabulary; nonverbal means of communication (system of symbols, etc.); manner in which a person writes or speaks; manner in which animals communicate
language
the cognitive processes involved in producing and understanding linguistic communication; "he didn't have the language to express his feelings"
language
The sounds, structure, meaning, and usage associated with some linguistic community Note that this definition refers to language in a general sense, and not merely the sounds uttered by its speakers
language
The expression of ideas by writing, or any other instrumentality
language
the mental faculty or power of vocal communication; "language sets homo sapiens apart from all other animals"
language
Any means of conveying or communicating ideas; specifically, human speech; the expression of ideas by the voice; sounds, expressive of thought, articulated by the organs of the throat and mouth
language
The term often used by semioticians and others in a very general sense to mean any system of signs It is also frequently used in a narrower sense to designate a system of verbal signs, talking verbal here to include both spoken (or auditory) and written signs Language is the most common English translation for langue, although some authors propose ''tongue'' to be the better choice In this paper, I will use language in a more general sense and langue as defined by Saussure
language
The Language in which the original article appeared in the primary journal is a separate information field in IPA
language
A system of organized and defining syntax errors
language
This is a system for communicating Written languages use symbols (i e characters) to build words The entire set of words is the language's vocabulary The ways in which the words can be meaningfully combined is defined by the language's syntax and grammar The actual meaning of words and combinations of words is defined by the language's semantics
language
A system of communication using the spoken word or using symbols that represent words or sounds
language
The suggestion, by objects, actions, or conditions, of ideas associated therewith; as, the language of flowers
language
[ISO] A set of characters, conventions, and rules, that is used for conveying information The three aspects of language are pragmatics, semantics, and syntax
language
the text of a popular song or musical-comedy number; "his compositions always started with the lyrics"; "he wrote both words and music"; "the song uses colloquial language"
language
This file should contain a single line with the name of the language for which you are creating a dictionary This information is used to create appopriate titles for the HTML files You should edit this file to adapt it to your language
language
A system for communicating ideas and feelings using sounds, gestures, signs, or marks
language
(language) communication by word of mouth; "his speech was garbled"; "he uttered harsh language"; "he recorded the spoken language of the streets"
language
a systematic means of communicating by the use of sounds or conventional symbols; "he taught foreign languages"; "the language introduced is standard throughout the text"; "the speed with which a program can be executed depends on the language in which it is written
Turkish - English

Definition of the language in Turkish English dictionary

language
{k} lang
the language

    Hyphenation

    the lan·guage

    Turkish pronunciation

    dhi länggwıc

    Pronunciation

    /ᴛʜē ˈlaɴɢgwəʤ/ /ðiː ˈlæŋɡwəʤ/

    Videos

    ... like voice recognition and natural language ...
    ... our science and technology to transfer into spoken language, ...
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