holing

listen to the pronunciation of holing
İngilizce - Türkçe
açıyorum
hole
delik

Tom duvardaki kurşun deliklerini farketmedi. - Tom didn't notice the bullet holes in the wall.

Tom'un sadece bir çift çorabı vardı ve onların delikleri vardı. - Tom only had one pair of socks and they had holes in them.

hole
çukur

Köpek bir çukur kazıyordu. - The dog was digging a hole.

Tom ön avlusunda bir çukur kazdı. - Tom dug a hole in his front yard.

holing through
bağlama delmesi
holing-through
bağlama delmesi
hole
zor durum
hole
{i} oyuk

Çocuklar bilye oyunları için yerde küçük bir oyuk açtılar. - The children made a small hole in the ground for their game of marbles.

hole
yuva
hole
top çukuru
hole
kovuk
hole
in
hole
izbe
hole
(golf) delik
hole
karanlık ve pis yer
hole
(golf) topu deliğe sokmak
hole
{f} köşesine çekilmek
hole
iki maden damarını birleştirmek için dehliz açmak
hole
{i} hücre

Tutukluluğu sırasında Tom hücrede birkaç ay geçirdi. - During his detention, Tom spent several months in the hole.

hole
{f} deliğe sokmak
hole
{i} derin yer
hole
magara
hole
{i} boşluk

Neden 5 ve 50 yenlik bozuk paraların ortasında boşluk var? - Why do the five yen coin and the fifty yen coin have holes in the center?

Anlatı boşluklarla dolu. - The story is full of holes.

hole
dili güç durum
hole
(Tıp) Foramen, delik
hole
{f} yuvasına girmek
hole
{f} kapanmak
hole
{f} delik açmak
hole
hole out golfta topu deliğe düşürmek
hole
{i} k.dili. berbat yer
hole
{f} delmek
hole
karanlık ve pisyer
hole
{f} deliğe girmek

Sadece bir deliğe girmek ve asla çıkmak istemiyorum. - I just want to crawl into a hole and never come out.

hole
{f} kazmak

Bir metre çapında ve iki metre derinliğinde bir çukur kazmak yaklaşık 2.5 saatimi aldı. - It took me about two and a half hours to dig a hole one meter in diameter and two meters in depth.

hole
delik,v.deliğe sok: n.delik
hole
{i} kodes
hole
deşik
hole
delim
İngilizce - İngilizce
present participle of hole
Undercutting in a bed of coal, in order to bring down the upper mass
holing out
Present participle of hole out
holing up
Present participle of hole up
hole
A container or receptacle

car hole; brain hole.

hole
A security vulnerability in software which can be taken advantage of by an exploit
hole
An orifice, in particular the anus
hole
An excavation pit or trench
hole
A hollow spot in a surface

Get some popcorn out of that popcorn bucket hole.

hole
A weakness, a flaw

I have found a hole in your argument.

hole
A subsurface standard-size hole, also called cup, hitting the ball into which is the object of play. Each hole, of which there are usually eighteen as the standard on a full course, is located on a prepared surface, called the green, of a particular type grass
hole
A high-security prison cell, often used as punishment
hole
The rear portion of the defensive team between the shortstop and the third baseman

The shortstop ranged deep into the hole to make the stop.

hole
To destroy

She completely holed the argument.

hole
An undesirable place to live or visit; a hovel

His apartment is a hole!.

hole
The part of a game in which a player attempts to hit the ball into one of the holes

I played 18 holes yesterday. The second hole today cost me three strokes over par.

hole
To make holes in (an object or surface)

Shrapnel holed the ship's hull.

hole
aperture
hole
{v} to dig or make holes, to drive into a bag as in billiards
hole
{n} a hallow place, cell, mean habitation, shift
Hole
Ana
hole
To drive into a hole, as an animal, or a billiard ball
hole
A hole is one of the places on a golf course that the ball must drop into, usually marked by a flag
hole
an opening deliberately made in or through something
hole
hit the ball into the hole
hole
A hole is an opening in something that goes right through it. These tiresome creatures eat holes in the leaves kids with holes in the knees of their jeans
hole
In semiconductors, a lack of an electron in an occupied band behaving like a positively charged particle
hole
A small cavity used in some games, usually one into which a marble or ball is to be played or driven; hence, a score made by playing a marble or ball into such a hole, as in golf
hole
noun - a gap that separates two objects in planespace or lower
hole
the portion of a game in which the players attempt to hit the ball into a particular hole
hole
The rear portion of the defensive seam between the shortstop and the third baseman
hole
one playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course; "he played 18 holes"
hole
(Spatial User's Guide and Reference; search in this book)
hole
an opening into or through something a depression hollowed out of solid matter an unoccupied space a fault; "he shot holes in my argument"
hole
An unused square in a Grid that is left empty rather than being shown as a Block Holes are used to create spaces in the middle of grids, or create unconventional outlines such as in Diagramless puzzles
hole
If you say that you are in a hole, you mean that you are in a difficult or embarrassing situation. He admitted that the government was in `a dreadful hole'
hole
Same as the pocket
hole
A hole is the home or hiding place of a mouse, rabbit, or other small animal. a rabbit hole
hole
a fault; "he shot holes in my argument"
hole
This can mean the actual hole that you putt into or the entire area between tee and green
hole
informal terms for the mouth
hole
make holes in
hole
A hole is a hollow space in something solid, with an opening on one side. He took a shovel, dug a hole, and buried his once-prized possessions a 60ft hole
hole
A gap in system memory that is unallocated and unused More casually, a hole is any means by which an intrusion may occur Also, Security Hole
hole
To cut, dig, or bore a hole or holes in; as, to hole a post for the insertion of rails or bars
hole
a fictitious mobile particle that behaves as though it is a positively charged particle; holes are produced in the valence band when electrons from the valence band are promoted to the conduction band or an acceptor level of a p-type dopant
hole
The area in front of the goal between the two and four-meter lines Thus the center forward who plays in this position is generally called the hole-man, shots taken by this player are called hole-shots and the defender is called the hole-guard TOP
hole
» A chordless polygon (usually, of length at least 4)
hole
1) The 1-3 pocket, 1-2 for lefties; 2) another name for "split" (railroad), 4) an open
hole
an opening into or through something
hole
make holes in hit the ball into the hole
hole
To go or get into a hole
hole
The opening between two linemen through which the ballcarrier plunges
hole
hollow place or cavity, as in: The groundhog peeped out of his hole in the ground
hole
A hole is also one of the nine or eighteen sections of a golf course. I played nine holes with Gary Player today
hole
for semi-conductors and insulators, a vacant electron state in the valence band that behaves as a positive charge carrier in an electric field
hole
an electron that isn't there! Imagine a tiny bubble of nothing, not even air, in a great sea of water That would be a hole in the water If some of the surrounding water fills the hole, that creates a new hole, so even though it is really the water that moves, you can think of the hole moving through the water In some kinds of semiconductor the electrons responsible for electrical conduction are a bit like water which is packed so tightly in the container that it can't move except to fill any holes that might be there So in electricity a hole is a mobile vacancy in a sea of electrons In many ways it behaves like a positively charged electron
hole
an opening deliberately made in or through something one playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course; "he played 18 holes" an opening into or through something a depression hollowed out of solid matter an unoccupied space a fault; "he shot holes in my argument" make holes in hit the ball into the hole
hole
The "hole" shall be 4 1/4 inches (108mm) in diameter and at least 4 inches (100 mm) deep If a lining is used, it shall be sunk at least 1 inch (25mm) below the putting green surface unless the nature of the soil makes it impracticable to do so; its outer diameter shall not exceed 4 1/4 inches (108mm)
hole
a hollow in a surface
hole
In PHOTOVOLTAIC CELLs, the vacancy where an electron would normally exist in a solid; behaves like a positively charged particle
hole
{f} excavate, create a hole, perforate
hole
an opening in a solid
hole
informal terms for a difficult situation; "he got into a terrible fix"; "he made a muddle of his marriage"
hole
1 41/4 inch diameter hole in the green into which the ball is to be played A flagstick with a flag is usually inserted so the approaching golfers can see more accurately where it is 2 the entire length of the playing area from the teeing ground/tee deck to the putting green (all inclusive) There are 18 holes in a regulation round of golf
hole
An excavation in the ground, made by an animal to live in, or a natural cavity inhabited by an animal; hence, a low, narrow, or dark lodging or place; a mean habitation
hole
If you pick holes in an argument or theory, you find weak points in it so that it is no longer valid. He then goes on to pick holes in the article before reaching his conclusion
hole
The place where a prisoner is kept
hole
a depression hollowed out of solid matter
hole
emphasis If you say that you need something or someone like a hole in the head, you are emphasizing that you do not want them and that they would only add to the problems that you already have. We need more folk heroes like we need a hole in the head
hole
{i} opening, gap; cavity, hollow; burrow, den; pothole; prison cell; dingy dirty place
hole
A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; an opening in or through a solid body, a fabric, etc
hole
an opening deliberately made in or through something one playing period (from tee to green) on a golf course; "he played 18 holes"
hole
To make holes in (an object)
hole
Your first two down cards in seven card stud If they're both jacks, you have a pair of jacks "in the hole " See also pocket
hole
Whole
hole
An undesirable place to live or visit
hole
At Eton College, England, that part of the floor of the court between the step and the pepperbox
hole
an unoccupied space
hole
An area on the surface which is not allowed to be covered by any stencil is called a hole A hole is described by its polygonal contour
hole
1 4¼ inch diameter hole in the ground into which the ball is to be played 2 the entire length of the playing area and immediate vicinity from the teeing ground to the putting green (all inclusive) 3 (also "hole out, make, drain, sink") to play the ball into the hole Example: 1 The hole contains the cup which holds the flagstick 2 The difficult par 3 4th hole was considered impossible to par by many golfers 3 All that remained for me to shoot 62 was to hole/hole out/make/drain/sink my putt on the 18th but I woke up
hole
a perforation; a rent; a fissure
hole
A mobile electron vacancy in a semiconductor that acts like a positive electron charge Under the application of an electric field, holes move in the opposite direction of electrons, thereby producing an electric current
hole
A mobile vacancy in the electronic valence structure of a semiconductor which acts like an electron with a positive charge
hole
If you get a hole in one in golf, you get the golf ball into the hole with a single stroke
hole
A hole in a law, theory, or argument is a fault or weakness that it has. There were some holes in that theory, some unanswered questions
hole
ferme
holing