yapmak (çocuk)

listen to the pronunciation of yapmak (çocuk)
Turkish - English
{f} father
A term of address for an elderly man

Come, father; you can sit here.

The founder of a discipline or science
To take as one's own child; to adopt; hence, to assume as one's own work; to acknowledge one's self author of or responsible for a statement, policy, etc
n ayah 2 n bapak
In some Christian churches, priests are addressed or referred to as Father. Father Cats Father Coughlin Damien Father Divine Father Joseph Father Mother's Day and Father's Day power of the father
padre
{f} sire, beget; affirm one's fatherhood; care for as a father; invent, found; be responsible for
To give rise to
The first electroformed part made from a glass master and containing a reversed data image of the final disc
A familiar or direct way of referring to some ordained clergy "Low Church" Episcopalians usually never use the term The title is abbreviated as "Fr " (e g Fr Alvin Kimel)
`Father' is a term of address for priests in some churches (especially the Roman Catholic Church or the Orthodox Catholic Church); `Padre' is frequently used in the military a person who holds an important or distinguished position in some organization; "the tennis fathers ruled in her favor"; "the city fathers endorsed the proposal
A respectful mode of address to an old man
a familiar or direct way of referring to some ordained clergy: the Reverend John F Marks, but--in personal conversation or in the salutation of a letter--Father Marks, Dear Father Marks Typically used of all Roman Catholic clergy and of some Episcopal clergy Be careful in using or not using this term: some clergy do not like it; others are offended if it is not used Usually the people who prefer the term assume that you know they prefer it There is no easy way to tell what the clergy preference is except by paying attention to letters, conversations, etc
the head of an organized crime family
In three-generation backup, the second oldest copy of the file 13 16
A male ancestor more remote than a parent; a progenitor; especially, a first ancestor; a founder of a race or family; in the plural, fathers, ancestors
a person who holds an important or distinguished position in some organization; "the tennis fathers ruled in her favor"; "the city fathers endorsed the proposal"
In Roman Catholicism, in Orthodoxy, and to some degree in Anglicanism, people often address priests as father In general usage, if John Smith is a priest, he is called Father John, but if he is an Anglican priest, he might be called Father Smith Protestants do not call their clergy father, based on Matthew 23: 9, but they do not use the same reasoning to ban the term teacher (Matthew 23: 10), so the prohibition is mainly a reaction against Roman Catholic practice Groups who do use this term argue that the context (Matthew 23: 1-12) only forbids Christian leaders to use titles such as father and teacher hypocritically or for self-promotion They use 1 Corinthians 4: 15 as an example of how the term father can rightly be applied to a Christian leader However, if you are writing a letter to Father John, the address on the envelope should say The Reverend John
A person who plays the role of a father in some way
A male parent
çocuk yapmak
have children
çocuk yapmak
have a child
çocuk yapmak
father
kaka yapmak (çocuk dilinde)
poo-poo on
kaka yapmak (çocuk dilinde)
poop on
çocuk bakıcılığı yapmak
sit in
çocuk bakıcılığı yapmak
to baby-sit
çocuk yapmak
to have a child/children
çocuk yapmak
to produce a child, have a child
yapmak (çocuk)
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