to dust

listen to the pronunciation of to dust
English - Turkish
toz
toz etmek
tozlamak
toz almak
tozunu almak
toz

Maskeler sarı kum tozunu,polenlerden dahada küçük,ne kadar iyi engelleyebilir?Sanırım o polenden oldukça daha fazla bir baş belasıdır. - Just how well can masks block the, even smaller than pollen, yellow sand dust? I think it much more of a nuisance than pollen.

Tozu süpürmemiz gerekir. - We need to sweep up the dust.

{f} tozunu almak; fırçalamak: She is dusting the furniture - Mobilyanın tozunu alıyor
dust cover : eşyaları tozdan korumak için yapılan kılıf
toz,v.toz al: n.toz
yanıltmak
(Gıda) un serpmek
toz almak
tozlamak
tozlanmak
toz bulutu

Araba arkasında bir toz bulutu yükselterek geçti. - The car passed by, raising a cloud of dust behind it.

Her geçen araba bir toz bulutu kaldırdı. - Each passing car threw up a cloud of dust.

{f} tozunu almak

Onların işi mobilyanın tozunu almaktır. - Their job is to dust the furniture.

toz halinde madde
hiç

Bu yerin hiç tozunu almıyor musun? - Don't you ever dust this place?

Toz akarları için hiç ev çözümü var mı? - Is there any home remedy for dust mites?

toz halind
toz serpmek
toz halinde herhangi bir madde
(Tıp) Toz, toz şeklinde ufak tanecikler
değersiz şey
toz toprak
serpmek
öp
fırçalamak
pollen
tozlu yapmak
toprak
almak
(Gıda) serpmek (un, tuz vb)
toz halinde bir maddeyle kaplamak
çöp
{f} silkmek
karışıklık
{f} toz serpmek: dust a cake with sugar : keke şeker serpmek
dust bowl : kuraklık yüzünden toz fırtınalarına maruz kalan bölge
{f} pudralamak
{i} mangır
{i} pudra
{i} para
{i} kemik kalıntıları
küçültücü durum
{i} çiçek tozu
Turkish - Turkish
Toz halinde ilaçlar
English - English
to spray or cover something with fine powder or liquid

The mother dusted her baby's bum with talcum powder.

Of a bird, to cover itself in sand or dry, dusty earth
{n} earth dried to powder, the grave
{v} to throw dust upon, free from dust, beat
fine, dry particles of matter
{f} remove dirt; sprinkle, scatter
to remove dust; to clean by removing dust
To sprinkle with dust
one component of the interstellar medium that is made of thin, highly flattened flakes or needles of graphite and silicates coated with water ice and other frozen gases It is responsible for the reddening and extinction of starlight
the smallest grade of tea, this is typically associated with lower quality, but is prized for its quick extraction and is commonly used in teabags
rub the dust over a surface so as to blur the outlines of a shape; "The artist dusted the charcoal drawing down to a faint image"
solid particulate matter that can become airborne
If you dust something with a fine substance such as powder or if you dust a fine substance onto something, you cover it lightly with that substance. Lightly dust the fish with flour Dry your feet well and then dust between the toes with baby powder
Dust is very small dry particles of earth or sand. Tanks raise huge trails of dust when they move
A single particle of earth or other matter
emphasis If you say that something has bitten the dust, you are emphasizing that it no longer exists or that it has failed. In the last 30 years many cherished values have bitten the dust
Dust is a fine powder which consists of very small particles of a substance such as gold, wood, or coal. The air is so black with diesel fumes and coal dust, I can barely see
Dust is the very small pieces of dirt which you find inside buildings, for example on furniture, floors, or lights. I could see a thick layer of dust on the stairs
Fine grain particles light enough to be suspended in air
Figuratively, a low or mean condition
The earth, as the resting place of the dead
Tiny grains of material (e g , carbon and silicate grains) that are about 0 1-1 0 micron in size Dust in interstellar space blocks and scatters visible light The longer wavelengths of radio waves, however, are able to pass through dust in space, allowing astronomers to image previously hidden objects, such as the center of the Milky Way Galaxy
Small solid particles, conventionally taken as those particles below 75 mm in diameter, which settle out under their own weight but which may remain suspended for some time (ISO 1994) National standards may be more specific and include particle diameters or a definition in terms of a sieve of specified aperture Dust occurs in the atmosphere both naturally and as a result of the activities of man (Willeke 1993)
Storms of sand and dust sometimes overtake Eastern travellers They are very dreadful, many perishing under them Jehovah threatens to bring on the land of Israel, as a punishment for forsaking him, a rain of "powder and dust" (Deut 28: 24)
Loose flecks of fiber, filler and/or coating on the paper that sometimes sticks to the printing blanket and prevents ink from reaching the paper surface
To sprinkle lightly, as with sugar, crumbs, flour
Insidious interloping particles of evil that turn a home into a battle zone
If you say that something will happen when the dust settles, you mean that a situation will be clearer after it has calmed down. If you let the dust settle before doing something, you let a situation calm down before you try to do anything else. Once the dust had settled Beck defended his decision
free microscopic particles of solid material; "astronomers say that the empty space between planets actually contains measurable amounts of dust"
The smallest broken leaves left over after all manufacturing processes are finished
–Small particles or grains of material that are distributed throughout the disks of galaxies Dust absorbs and scatters starlight at optical wavelengths but is essentially transparent to infrared radiation
In meteor terminology, finely divided solid matter, with particle sizes in general smaller than micrometeorites, as meteoric dust, meteoritic dust
Figuratively, a worthless thing
An aerosol of solid particles (dispersion of solid particles in gas) in which the particle sizes are greater than 1 micrometre in diameter
The earthy remains of bodies once alive; the remains of the human body
micron-size solid particles of somewhat uncertain composition, probably carbon, iron or silicates For more info about dust and its role in nebulae see Dust Evolution in the Universe by Amara Graps
Solid particles generated by handling, crushing, grinding, rapid impact, detonation, and decapitation of organic or inorganic materials, such as rock, ore, metal, coal wood, and grain Dusts do not tend to flocculate except under electrostatic forces; they do not diffuse in air but settle under the influence of gravity
to remove dust from
Solid materials suspended in the atmosphere by turbulence Larger than aerosol particles Dust can be from volcanic eruptions, sea salt spray, blowing solid particles, plant pollen and bacteria, smoke and ashes of forest fires or from industry, etc
A solid, mechanically produced particle with a size ranging from submicroscopic to macroscopic NIOSH Definition
If you say that something is gathering dust, you mean that it has been left somewhere and nobody is using it or doing anything with it. Many of the machines are gathering dust in basements
{i} dirt, soil; corpse, dead body; riot, panic
To free from dust; to brush, wipe, or sweep away dust from; as, to dust a table or a floor
When you dust something such as furniture, you remove dust from it, usually using a cloth. I vacuumed and dusted the living room She dusted, she cleaned, and she did the washing-up. + dusting dust·ing I'm very fortunate in that I don't have to do the washing-up or the dusting
To reduce to a fine powder; to levigate
To sprinkle lightly with flour or sugar, shaking off excess
distribute loosely; "He scattered gun powder under the wagon"
A pesticide formulation in dry, finely-divided form (with particle size less than 30 µm) designed for application as a dry dressing without further preparation or dilution
Minute solid particles released into the air by natural forces or by mechanical processes such as crushing, grinding, milling, drilling, demolishing, shoveling, conveying, bagging, sweeping, etc
Completely decomposed human remains
fine powdery material such as dry earth or pollen that can be blown about in the air; "the furniture was covered with dust"
Gold dust Coined money; cash
cover with a light dusting of a substance; "dust the bread with flour"
Fine, dry particles of earth or other matter, so comminuted that they may be raised and wafted by the wind; that which is crumbled to minute portions; fine powder; as, clouds of dust; bone dust
fine powdery material such as dry earth or pollen that can be blown about in the air; "the furniture was covered with dust" free microscopic particles of solid material; "astronomers say that the empty space between planets actually contains measurable amounts of dust" remove the dust from; "dust the cabinets" rub the dust over a surface so as to blur the outlines of a shape; "The artist dusted the charcoal drawing down to a faint image" cover with a light dusting of a substance; "dust the bread with flour
the remains of something that has been destroyed or broken up
Mud with the juice squeezed out
cover with a light dusting of a substance; "dust the bread with flour
Small particles of earth or other matter suspended in the air It is reported as "DU" in an observation and for wide spread dust on the METAR
micron-size solid particles of somewhat uncertain composition, probably carbon, iron or silicates
remove the dust from; "dust the cabinets"
The smallest grade of tea, typically associated with lower quality Dust is prized for its quick extraction and is commonly used in teabags
afa
to dust

    Turkish pronunciation

    tı dʌst

    Pronunciation

    /tə ˈdəst/ /tə ˈdʌst/

    Videos

    ... Like clouds of interstellar dust gathering in material to form stars, ...
    ... 99.9% of the gas and dust in the solar system, ...
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