yayılmak (söylenti)

listen to the pronunciation of yayılmak (söylenti)
Turkish - English
get around
To transport oneself from place to place

Granny uses a wheelchair to get around.

To avoid or bypass an obstacle

Tax consultants look for ways to get around the law.

To come around something

Cross at the rocks when you get around the bend.

To move to the other side of an obstruction

There's no trail going through. We can't get around to the lake.

To circumvent the obligation and performance of a chore

My brother always gets around cleaning his room himself.

be a social swinger; socialize a lot
If you get around a rule or law, you find a way of doing something that the rule or law is intended to prevent, without actually breaking it. Although tobacco ads are prohibited, companies get around the ban by sponsoring music shows
bypass, circumvent, avoid; travel from place to place; obtain favor through flattery; become public knowledge
be released or become known; of news; "News of her death broke in the morning"
avoid something unpleasant or laborious; "You cannot bypass these rules!"
move around; move from place to place; "How does she get around without a car?
If you get around, you visit a lot of different places as part of your way of life. He claimed to be a journalist, and he got around
If news gets around, it becomes well known as a result of being told to lots of people. They threw him out because word got around that he was taking drugs I'll see that it gets round that you've arrived. = get about
To get around a problem or difficulty means to overcome it. None of these countries has found a way yet to get around the problem of the polarization of wealth. = get over
move around; move from place to place; "How does she get around without a car?"
If you get around someone, you persuade them to allow you to do or have something by pleasing them or flattering them. Max could always get round her
yayılmak (söylenti)
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