to tile

listen to the pronunciation of to tile
English - Turkish
karo için
karoyla kaplamak
kiremit kaplamak
kiremitle kaplamak
çini

Mutfak soluk sarı çinilerle kaplıydı. - The kitchen was lined with pale yellow tiles.

fayans

Bir elektrikli ısıtıcı banyo zemininin seramik fayanslarını ısıtır. - An electric heater warms up the ceramic tiles of the bathroom floor.

Onlar kırılan fayansları değiştirdikleri için havuz kapalı. - The pool is closed because they are changing the broken tiles.

karo

Komşunun kedisi süt fincanını zemin karoları üzerine döktü. - The neighbor's cat spilled its cup of milk on the floor tiles.

kiremit

Mahjong kiremitleri çok güzeldir. - Mahjong tiles are very beautiful.

Kaç tane kiremite ihtiyacın var? - How many tiles do you need?

fayans döşemek
karo mozaik
karo fayans
(Bilgisayar) yan yana koyma
(Bilgisayar) döşeme

Terasımızı yeniden döşemek istiyoruz ve bu nedenle dün bir çekiçle fayansları çıkardık. - We want to re-tile our terrace and therefore removed the tiles with a power hammer yesterday.

fayans kaplamak
(İnşaat) yer karosu
(İnşaat) tuğla
karo seramik
(İnşaat) levha
(Bilgisayar) desen
{f} döşe

Terasımızı yeniden döşemek istiyoruz ve bu nedenle dün bir çekiçle fayansları çıkardık. - We want to re-tile our terrace and therefore removed the tiles with a power hammer yesterday.

gizli tutmak
duvar cinisi
{f} tuğla döşemek (yer)
{f} 1. (damı) kiremitle kaplamak. 2
{f} kiremit kaplamak
(Mukavele) seramik, fayans
dili silindir şapka
taş
{i} künk
{f} kiremit döşe
birisine sır saklayacağına dair yemin ettirmek
çatı üzerine kiremit yerine konan demir veya taş parçası
{i} kep

Ben senin adını kepe koydum. - I put your name on the tile.

{i} tuğla (yassı)
mason locasında kapıcılık etmek
{i} karo; karo fayans, fayans; karo seramik, seramik; karo mozaik; çini
{i} silindir şapka
{f} mason locasında kapıda durmak
English - English
A regularly-shaped slab of clay or other material, affixed to cover or decorate a surface, as in a roof-tile, glazed tile, stove tile, etc
Any of various types of cuboid playing piece used in certain games, such as in dominoes, Scrabble, mahjong, or Rummikub
A rectangular graphic

Sprites and tiles that are hidden in the prototype ROM file can be recovered.

To arrange in a regular pattern, with adjoining edges (applied to tile-like objects, graphics, windows in a computer interface)
To reduce and reposition all windows so each one can be seen on-screen at the same time
{n} a plate of burnt clay to cover houses with
{v} to cover or secure with tiles, to guard
A coloured (yellow, green, brown, or grey) hexagonal piece of cardstock that companies lay on the map to represent track
A draintile
When someone tiles a surface such as a roof or floor, they cover it with tiles. He wants to tile the bathroom see also tiling. to cover a roof, floor etc with tiles. Thin, flat slab or block used structurally or decoratively in building. Tiles traditionally have been made of glazed or unglazed fired clay, but modern tiles are also made of plastic, glass, asphalt, and even cork. Ceramic tiles, used for walls, floors, and countertops, are usually machine-pressed, made of fine clays, and very hard. Quarry tiles (used for flooring) and terra-cotta, made of natural clays, are less hard and more porous but very popular for economic and aesthetic reasons. Structural tile, made of fired clay, is a hollow tile containing parallel cells or cores and is used for building partitions. Roof tiles of baked clay and of marble were used in ancient Greece. Tiles came to be widely used in Islamic architecture. Multicoloured, glazed tiles were common in Spain from an early period (see azulejo), and from there spread to Portugal and Latin America. By the 15th century, tilework was used widely in northern Europe; blue-painted tiles from Delft, Holland, were especially renowned. Modern clay roofing tiles may be flat or curved; in the Mediterranean countries, S-shaped tiles (pantiles), laid with alternate convex and concave surfaces uppermost, are common. Modern wall tiles may be highly glazed and semivitreous
A unit of an image or page that has been divided into smaller units so it can be printed
Tiles are flat pieces of baked clay which are used for covering roofs. a fine building, with a neat little porch and ornamental tiles on the roof
To cover with tiles; as, to tile a house
Tiles are flat, square pieces of baked clay, carpet, cork, or other substance, which are fixed as a covering onto a floor or wall. Amy's shoes squeaked on the tiles as she walked down the corridor The cabins had linoleum tile floors
To protect from the intrusion of the uninitiated; as, to tile a Masonic lodge
Fig
a thin flat slab of fired clay used for roofing
v t to cover with or as with tiles -n Thin slab of baked clay, terra-cotta, glass, cement, or asbestos-cement, used for roofing or for covering walls or floors
a flat thin rectangular slab (as of fired clay or rubber or linoleum) used to cover surfaces
To cover with tiles
In Windows A way of arranging open windows so that no windows overlap but all windows are visible Each window takes up a portion of the screen
Texas Index for Level of Effort   Factors that are based upon the amount of direct service and assistance a person needs, which determines how much Texas will pay a nursing home to provide care of a particular client
Repeating an image across the background of a web page and then dropping down a row to repeat again until the whole page is covered
A Two-Dimensional sub-section of a bitmap Improves the random access of an image
A mostly rectangular shaped sheet of ceramic or fired clay to cover surfaces, as in a roof-tile, stove tile, etc
A plate of metal used for roofing
The spatial unit by which geographic data can be organized, subdivided, and stored in a geographic database
A stiff hat
A rectangular area used to cover a surface with a pattern or visual texture For example: The Workspace Manager supports tiling, enabling users with limited system color availability to create new color tiles blended from existing colors
{i} slab of fired clay for covering roofs or lining walls or floors
is a subset of a GIS database that contains information about one subarea of the overall digital map Tiles are an effective way of dividing a continuous map into units which can be easily created, edited, and analyzed The terms tile and facet are synonymous and are, in some ways, the opposite of a continuous map
{f} pave, cover with tiles
A method used when a page is too large to be output in its entirety by the output device The page is divided into pieces that allow for overlap so that it can be reassembled as a whole
1 - Either an 8x8, 16x16, or some other size image that can be placed in the game to allow laying out and planning the display
a flat thin rectangular slab (as of fired clay or rubber or linoleum) used to cover surfaces a thin flat slab of fired clay used for roofing cover with tiles; "tile the wall and the floor of the bathroom
A small, flat piece of dried earth or earthenware, used to cover vessels in which metals are fused
The portion of the page in an oversize publication that is printed on a single sheet of paper To make a complete page, you must assemble and paste together the tiles
A part of a database in GIS representing a discrete part of the earth's surface By splitting a study area into tiles, considerable savings in access times and improvements in system performance can be achieved; facets or map sheet edges that divide a large area into manageable pieces
Used in VQ compression, a small 4D hypercube of pixels For example, a common tile is a 2x2x2x2 hypercube, which would include 16 pixels In VQ compression, the light field is cut up into tiles, and the codebook consists of a list of tiles
A pixmap can be replicated in two dimensions to tile a region The pixmap itself is also known as a tile
A small slab of marble or other material used for flooring
Acoustical ceiling board, usually 12" x 12", which is stapled, cemented, or suspended by a concealed grid system Edges are often kerfed and cut back
A plate, or thin piece, of baked clay, used for covering the roofs of buildings, for floors, for drains, and often for ornamental mantel works
(1) (n ) A rectangular area used to cover a surface with a pattern or visual texture For example, Workspace Manager supports tiling, enabling users with limited color availability to create new color tiles blended from existing colors (2) (v ) To cover a surface with non-overlapping polygons or other geometric objects
The spatial unit by which geographic data is organized, subdivided, and stored in a map library Tiles subdivide the area covered by a map library and organize the library data by location (e g , counties might be the tiles in a statewide database) A tile can be a regular, geometric shape (e g , a map sheet), or an irregular shape, such as a county boundary See also LIBRARIAN
cover with tiles; "tile the wall and the floor of the bathroom"
A data structure used to build linked lists of rectangles, such as a list of the damaged parts of an interface
To cover, as if with tiles
A tile is a subpart of a plane A plane is partitioned into multiple tiles all of the same size The number of tiles depends on the physical size of the CAAPP as each tile is exactly the same size as the physical CAAPP We use the term tile when discussing how a plane that is larger than the CAAPP is utilized by the CAAPP When a plane contains more than one tile, then each physical PE is mapped to more than one element in the plane
Any of the plastic pieces which represent a space on the Acquire board Agents have six of these in their hand, invisible to the other agents, at all times during the game They must play a tile at the beginning of their turn, and must choose a new random tile to signify the end of their turn Two adjacent tiles are candidates for a new hotel chain
A pixmap can be replicated in two dimensions to ``tile'' a region The pixmap itself is also known as a ``tile''
In Windows, a way of arranging open windows so that no windows overlap but all windows are visible Each window takes up a portion of the screen
to tile
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