phrases

listen to the pronunciation of phrases
İngilizce - Türkçe
tabirler
phrase
{i} anlatım tarzı
phrase
{i} cümle parçası
phrase
{f} uygun sözcük ve cümlelerle ifade etmek
phrase
{i} melodinin bir bölümünü oluşturan kısa parça
phrase
{i} birkaç sözcükten oluşan ifade
phrase
{i} tabir

Bu, benim geldiğim yerde çok yaygın bir tabir. - That's a very common phrase where I come from.

İhtiyacım olabilecek bazı Fransızca tabirleri bana öğretir misiniz? - Could you teach me some French phrases that I might need?

phrase
{i} ifade

Konuşmasında vurguladığı her ifadeyi not aldım. - I wrote down every phrase in his speech that he stressed.

O, ifadenin tam anlamını açıkladı. - He explained the literal meaning of the phrase.

phrase
{i} sözcük grubu

Sen bu sözcük grubunu tırnak içine alman gerekir. - You should put this phrase in quotation marks.

Bu sözcük grubunun anlamı nedir? - What is the meaning of this phrase?

phrase
{i} ibare
phrase
{f} sözcük seçerek anlatmak
phrase
{f} melodiyi ayrıştırarak çalmak
phrase
terkip
phrase
ifade etmek
phrase
dizilim
phrase
{i} deyiş
phrase
birkaç sözcükten oluşan anlamlı birim
phrase
uygun sözcük ya da tümcelerle ifade etmek
phrase
sözce
phrase
kısa ve uygun anlatım
phrase
tümcecik
phrase
sözcük öbeği

Neden sessiz ol yerine sakin ol sözcük öbeğini kullanıyorsun? - Why do you use the phrase calm down instead of calm up?

linking phrases
bağlayıcı sözcükler
inverted phrases
evrilmiş tümcecikler
phrase
seri halinde dans figürü
phrase
phrasemongeri
phrase
uygun cümle veya kelimelerle ifade etmek
phrase
phrase book hazır cümle kitabı
phrase
{f} müz. (bir parçayı) cümlelemek
phrase
prepositional phrase edat
phrase
{i} deyim, tabir
phrase
{f} cümle veya sözcüklerle anlatmak
phrase
tümcecik,v.ifade et: n.tabir
phrase
{i} müz. cümle
phrase
bir parçayı cümlelemek
phrase
süslü cümleler kullanan kimse
phrase
fraz
terms and phrases
terimler ve cümleler
terms and phrases.
kelimeler ve cümleler
İngilizce - İngilizce
it is true that I am an old man; broadly, however, it remains true that ; it also/ certainly/ equally/ indeed/ quite/ really/ surely/ undoubtedly true that ; it does seem to be true that ; to be the true successor of s o ; the true reason is that ; to reveal one´s true self; in general terms that situation was a true prisoner´s dilemma; to constitute true patriotism; to be the true owner of the land; that is true of all life; but I fear this is true only in the simplest cases; a statement is true or false; to give a true picture of s th ; it was true to this claim
plural of phrase
a group of words used together usually as part of a sentence (e g First of all )
third-person singular of phrase
Things you need to say
adverb phrases
plural form of adverb phrase Alternate name for adverbial phrases
adverbial phrases
plural form of adverbial phrase
catch phrases
plural form of catch phrase (alternative spelling of catchphrases)
noun phrases
plural form of noun phrase
phrase
To divide into melodic phrases
phrase
A word or group of words that functions as a single unit in the syntax of a sentence, usually consisting of a head, or central word, and elaborating words
phrase
To express (an action, thought or idea) by means of words
phrase
To perform a passage with the correct phrasing
prepositional phrases
plural form of prepositional phrase
set phrases
plural form of set phrase
signal phrases
plural form of signal phrase
verb phrases
plural form of verb phrase
phrase
{i} idiom, saying; expression; group of words that functions as a single unit (Grammar); short musical passage
phrase
{n} a mode of speech, a style
phrase
{v} to style, to term
hackneyed phrases
phrase which is used to often, commonplace phrase
phrase
A brief expression, sometimes a single word, but usually two or more words forming an expression by themselves, or being a portion of a sentence; as, an adverbial phrase
phrase
A short written or spoken expression
phrase
a short musical expression, several of which comprise an entire tune or melody The phrase structure provides insight into the shape, aesthetics, and psychodynamics of the tune The fiddle tunes in this collection typically have two strains, each of which is composed of four phrases or eight subphrases In the Musical Features section of the bibliographic record for each tune, phrases are indicated by capital letters and subphrases are in parentheses in lowercase letters Thus a phrase structure described as ABA'B QRQS (abcd ab'cd qrst qrud) indicates a tune of two strains, each composed of four phrases The first strain (ABA'B) consists of an initial phrase (A), a different second phrase (B), a third phrase repeating the first phrase with a significant alteration (A'), and a fourth phrase repeating the second phrase (B) The same first strain can be broken down into eight subphrases: (abcd) repeated with a significant alteration of the second subphrase (ab'cd)
phrase
put into words or an expression; "He formulated his concerns to the board of trustees"
phrase
When fencers manage to string words together rather than grunting monosyllabically
phrase
To group notes into phrases; as, he phrases well
phrase
A single musical idea, or element Usually very short, often consisting of only one or two measures Comparable to a line or sentence in poetry
phrase
A set of related actions by both fencers that continues until a hit is scored or action is stopped by the director
phrase
To express in words, or in peculiar words; to call; to style
phrase
A word or group of words that functions as a single unit in the syntax of a sentence, usually consisting of a head, or central word, and elaborating words. In the noun phrase the big bird, for example, the noun, bird is the head
phrase
an expression whose meanings cannot be inferred from the meanings of the words that make it up
phrase
A set of related actions and reactions in a fencing conversation
phrase
A short clause or portion of a period
phrase
A single musical idea, or element Usually very short, often consisting of only one or two measures
phrase
an expression forming a grammatical constituent of a sentence but not containing a finite verb a short musical passage
phrase
A mode or form of speech; the manner or style in which any one expreses himself; diction; expression
phrase
A phrase is a short group of words that people often use as a way of saying something. The meaning of a phrase is often not obvious from the meaning of the individual words in it. He used a phrase I hate: `You have to be cruel to be kind.'
phrase
a short musical passage
phrase
A short, pithy expression; especially, one which is often employed; a peculiar or idiomatic turn of speech; as, to err is human
phrase
If someone has a particular turn of phrase, they have a particular way of expressing themselves in words. Schwarzkopf's distinctive turn of phrase. to coin a phrase: see coin
phrase
an expression forming a grammatical constituent of a sentence but not containing a finite verb
phrase
{f} formulate in words, express in words; express in a certain manner
phrase
To use proper or fine phrases
phrase
A relatively short portion of a melodic line which expresses a musical idea, comparable to a line or sentence in poetry
phrase
A group of words used together to express a concept, but unlike a clause, it does not contain both a subject and a verb
phrase
A small section of music in a larger piece
phrase
A phrase is a group of related words that does not make a complete statement For example the following groups of words are phrases (specifically, prepositional phrases): in the beginning, behind the house, before the storm
phrase
A phrase is a 'clause element'; this means that a clause (and so a sentence ) is built from phrases (usually noun and verb phrases) A phrase is a group of words that act together as a kind of 'independent unit' - this means that it has meaning together rather than as individual words Each of the words in a phrase have a kind of invisible "word glue" that exists between them to give it its coherent quality Some examples of phrases are: the silly old man (a noun phrase); a fleeting moment (a noun phrase); at three o'clock (an adverbial phrase); almost perfectly spherical (an adjectival phrase); will not go (verb phrase); after a while (prepositional phrase) The important thing to notice about phrases is that they are built around a central word (called the head word of the phrase) In a noun phrase, the head word is a noun, and so on
phrase
a group of words, smaller than a clause, which forms a grammatical unit
phrase
a group of words that are used together in a fixed expression
phrase
More than one KEYWORD, searched exactly as keyed (all terms required to be in documents, in the order keyed) Enclosing keywords in quotations " " forms a phrase in AltaVista, , and some other search tools Some times a phrase is called a "character string "
phrase
A sequence of words Search engines will usually give the option of a phrase search The search engine will look for occurrences of the particular sequence of words entered
phrase
A brief sequence of related movements that have a sense of rhythmic completion
phrase
a group of two or more grammatically related words that form a sense unit expressing a thought The phrase has the force of a single part of speech, such as a noun or adverb For example, "two or more grammatically related words" is a phrase representing a noun
phrase
A melodic idea that acts as a complete thought, something like a sentence A melody will contain many phrases, just like a story contains many sentences This melody has four phrases
phrase
A phrase is a small group of words which forms a unit, either on its own or within a sentence. It is impossible to hypnotise someone simply by saying a particular word or phrase
phrase
Two or more words separated by spaces For example, Monterey otter is interpreted as a phrase and both must be present and together to be found Such a search would not find documents containing sea otter or Monterey Bay
phrase
If you phrase something in a particular way, you express it in words in that way. I would have phrased it quite differently They phrased it as a question
phrase
A self-contained portion of melody, such as what would correspond to one line of lyrics
phrase
in grammar, a group of words not containing a verb that act as one unit Some phrases act as nouns, for example a confident teacher; some as adjectives, for example 'she is exceptionally competent' and some as adverbs, for example 'he retired very recently ' Many phrases are prepositional phrases (See preposition )
phrase
See Phrase, n
phrase
– A musical statement or “sentence,” having a beginning, middle and end
phrase
1 A segment of a musical composition, usually consisting of four or eight measures (2, 4, 8, 12, or 16 measures in the music used for ice dancing) 2 A series of dance movements forming a unit in a choreographic pattern
phrase
phr

Just how tiresome was it to argue straight against the phrase Don't blindly follow America's lead! - Just how tiresome was it to argue straight against the phrase Don't blindly follow the lead of the United States!

Tom could have phrased his answer more politely. - Tom could've phrased his answer more politely.

phrases

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    freyzız

    Telaffuz

    /ˈfrāzəz/ /ˈfreɪzəz/

    Etimoloji

    [ 'frAz ] (noun.) 1530. Latin phrasis, from Greek, from phrazein to point out, explain, tell.