abduction

listen to the pronunciation of abduction
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
adam kaçırma

1965 yılından bu yana o kasabada hiçbir adam kaçırma olayı bildirilmemişti. - No abduction had been reported in that town since 1965.

(Tıp) Abductio
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) uzaklaşma
(Tıp) kaldırma
(Kanun) adam kaldırma
abdüksiyon
kaçırmak
kaçırma (bir kimseyi)
(kas) dışarı çekme
zorla kaçırma
dışaçekim
uğrulama
{i} (birini) kaçırma
{i} dışaçekim (tıp)
(Tıp) Çekilme, uzaklaşma, açılma (kol ve bacak), abdüksiyon (tebit) hareketi, sagital planda uzaklaşan bir uzvun yaptığı hareket
(Tıp) Ayırma (yara)
(Tıp) Uzaklaştırma, kırılmış bir kemiğin parçalarını ayırma, temizleme
dışarı çeken kas
(Tıp) Kendi merkezinden ayrılma hareketi yapan vücudun bir kısmı
kız kaçırma abductor kaçıran kimse
kaçırma
abduction of girl
(Kanun) kız kaçırma
abduction of girls
(Kanun) kız kaçırma
abduct
(Kanun) (adam) kaldırmak
abduct
(kas) dışarı çekmek
abduct
alıkoymak
abduct
adam kaçırmak
abduct
kaçırmak (birini)
abduct
tebit etmek
abduct
dağa kaldırmak
abduct
(Kanun) kadın veya çocuk kaçırmak
abduct
(Kanun) kız kaçırmak
abduct
(Kanun) zorla kaçırmak
abduct
{f} Çekme
abduct
birini zorla kaçırmak
abduct
alıkoy
abduct
uğrulamak
child abduction
çocuk kaçırma
abduct
{f} (birini) kaçırmak
abduct
kaçırmak
abduct
(Diş Hekimliği) Çekme, Uzaklaştırma, Ayırma
abduct
(Tıp) Ayırmak
abduct
zorla almak
abduct
{f} Uzaklaştırma (Anatomi)
abduct
(Tıp) Uzaklaştırmak
abduct
(Tıp) Çekmek
abduct
(Biyoloji) eksenden uzaklaştır
abduct
kaçır

Uzaylılar tarafından kaçırıldığımı hayal ettim. - I dreamed I had been abducted by aliens.

Tom gerçekten Mary'nin uzaylılar tarafından kaçırıldığına inanıyor mu? - Does Tom really believe that Mary was abducted by aliens?

Английский Язык - Английский Язык
Determining the best or most plausible of many possible explanations for a set of facts
The act of abducing or abducting; a drawing apart; a carrying away. — Roget
The wrongful, and usually the forcible, carrying off of a human being

the abduction of a child.

The process of inference to the best explanation; abductive reasoning
The movement which separates a limb or other part from the axis, or middle line, of the body
A syllogism or form of argument in which the major is evident, but the minor is only probable

The significance of such a step is that it is not morphologically triggered: it is a step of abduction, and what is required here is a meta-level process of reasoning.

The process used in getting students to see disciplinary regularity through the use of metaphor
a carrying away of a person against his will, or illegally
{n} the act of drawing back or away
The movement of a body part away from the midline
Moving or pushing an arm or leg away from the body
Moving a limb or any other part away from the midline of the body Abduction is the opposite of adduction (e g the "up" phase of a jumping jack involves the abduction of the legs and the arms, or spreading of the fingers and toes)
Backward chaining through fault models
To take someone away from a place without that person's consent or by fraud See also " kidnapping"
Movement away from midline of body in frontal plane; applied to hip, shoulder, fingers, thumb, and foot
Movement of one body part at an angle away from the rest of the body (e g , finger away from rest of hand; arm away from torso)
The movement of a body part away from the midline axis of the body [ compare adduction ]
To take someone away from a place without that person's consent or by fraud See also "kidnapping"
(Ab*duc"tion) n [L abductio: cf F abduction ]
move away from the midline
Development of a hypothesis to explain observations; frequently used in diagnostic expert systems; can lead to false conclusions For example, a particular instance of wind destruction by a microburst might be initially ascribed to a tornado Compare deduction, induction
particularly studied by Budd Hokins and John Mack, the word's used to describe cases of people taken inside UFOs and examined by their pilots
Movement away from the mid-line of the body I e Lateral Raises
close to the body
the criminal act of capturing and carrying away by force a family member; if a man's wife is abducted it is a crime against the family relationship and against the wife
Movement of the arms or legs away from the body
Movement of a limb away from middle of body, such as bringing arms to shoulder height from hanging down position
in conditional reasoning, the generation of an explanation for an event, taken from a theory of how the world works, the plausibility of which depends in large part on the number and the likelihood of the alternative explanations
(physiology) moving of a body part away from the central axis of the body
Moving away from the body
The wrongful taking away of a person Commonly refers to a child being taken by a parent in breach of a Court Order •Children - Movement
A method of reasoning by which one infers to the best explanation See induction, deduction <Discussion> <References> Chris Eliasmith
movement of the bone away from the central line of the body
a movement away from the mid-line of the body
Moving a limb away from the body
The act of abducing or abducting; a drawing apart; a carrying away
(physiology) moving of a body part away from the central axis of the body the criminal act of capturing and carrying away by force a family member; if a man's wife is abducted it is a crime against the family relationship and against the wife
The wrongful, and usually the forcible, carrying off of a human being; as, the abduction of a child, the abduction of an heiress
{i} kidnapping, seizure, carrying off by force; action of separating a limb or other part from the midline of the body (Medicine); abducing, drawing apart
abduct
To draw away, as a limb or other part, from its ordinary position
abduct
To take away secretly by force; to carry away (a human being) wrongfully and usually by violence; to kidnap
alien abduction
The claimed kidnapping,of a person by extraterrestrials
military abduction
A deceitful military operation performed to convince the targets of the operation that they have had an encounter with extraterrestrial beings which is actually a staged ploy

Whatever the answer might be, the idea of military involvement in abductions became a standard feature of the abduction scenario by the mid-1990s and, like the subject of implants, became a specialized focus for an on-going study by a small group of ufologists who formed Project MILAB.

Abduct
Motion to move extremity away from the body
Abduct
Physiology To draw away from the midline of the body or from an adjacent part or limb
Abduct
Movement of any extremity away from the midline of the body An abductor muscle achieves this action
Abduct
(Ab*duct") v t [imp & p p Abducted ; p pr & vb n Abducting ] [L abductus, p p of abducere See Abduce ]
Abduct
Movement of any extremity away from the midline of the body This action is achieved by an abductor muscle
Abduct
to carry off by force
Abduct
take away to an undisclosed location against their will and usually in order to extract a ransom; "The industrialist's son was kidnapped"
Abduct
To move apart, separate
Abduct
pull away from the body; "this muscle abducts"
Abduct
— To move away from the body
Abduct
kidnape, anlve
abduct
If someone is abducted by another person, he or she is taken away illegally, usually using force. His car was held up and he was abducted by four gunmen She was charged with abducting a six-month-old child. = kidnap + abduction abductions ab·duc·tion the abduction of four youths. + abductor abductors ab·duc·tor She co-operated with her abductor. to take someone away by force = kidnap
abduct
To take away surreptitiously by force; to carry away (a human being) wrongfully and usually by violence; to kidnap
abduct
pull away from the body; "this muscle abducts
abduct
{f} kidnap, carry off by force (especially of a person); pull away from the main axis of the body (Anatomy)
abductions
plural of abduction
abduction

    Расстановка переносов

    ab·duc·tion

    Турецкое произношение

    äbdʌkşın

    Произношение

    /abˈdəksʜən/ /æbˈdʌkʃən/

    Этимология

    () From Latin abductiō (“robbing; abduction”), from abdūcō (“take or lead away”). Compare French abduction.
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