jim

listen to the pronunciation of jim
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
A short form of the male given name James
a shortened form of James
Beckwourth Jim Bowie Jim Bridger Jim Brown Jim Henson Jim Wong Tung Jim Jim Crow Law Jones Jim Morrison Jim Player Gary Jim Thorpe Jim
{i} male first name (form of James)
now Sir James Baird; trained as doctor, joined Royal Army Medical Corps; with troops in North Africa and elsewhere in WW2 Rose to Lt General (head of) R A M C , and was knighted Married Lives now in London
Jakarta Informal Meeting (July 1988, February 1989, and February 1990)
Why are cache policies manged by CacheManagementMixin? If a cache is managed by a CacheManager, then why doesn't the cache manager manage the policies?
Jim Crow
A World War II code name for patrols along the British coastline to intercept enemy aircraft, originally intended to warn of invasion in 1940

flying cannon equipped Spitfires V’s mainly on ‘Jim Crow’ operations (operational Patrols along the home coastline intercepting any hostile aircraft and looking out for any invasion forces).

Jim Crow
That discriminates against African Americans
Jim Crow
A generic name for the Negro
Jim Crow
Segregated between African Americans and Caucasians

A Jim Crow audience.

Jim Crow
Southern United States racist and especially segregationist policies in the late 1800s and early to mid 1900s, taken collectively
Jim Crow law
Nickname for any law which racially segregated public facilities and which was enacted in Southern and border states in the United States between 1876 and 1965
Jim Crow laws
plural form of Jim Crow law
jim-dandy
US colloquial: Acceptable, satisfactory

As its speed increased, and the black masses of chaparral went whizzing past on either side, the express messenger, lighting his pipe, looked through his window and remarked, feelingly:What a jim-dandy place for a hold-up!.

jim-jams
pajamas
Jim Barksdale
{i} (born 1943) former president and CEO of the American software company "Netscape" (manufacturer of the WWW browser Navigator)
Jim Beckwourth
orig. James Pierson Beckwith born April 26, 1798, Virginia, U.S. died 1867?, Denver, Colo. U.S. mountain man. Born a slave, the son of a white man and a slave woman, he was taken by his father to St. Louis and set free. In 1823-24 he was hired by trading expeditions in the Rocky Mountains. He married a series of Indian women and lived among the Crow for about six years. During the California gold rush (1848) he established a route through the Sierra Nevada. In California he met Thomas D. Bonner, who in 1856 published many of Beckwourth's stories and recollections
Jim Bowie
orig. James Bowie born 1796?, Logan county, Ky., U.S. died March 6, 1836, San Antonio, Texas U.S. soldier. Bowie migrated with his parents to Missouri (1800) and then to Louisiana (1802), where later he owned a sugar plantation and served in the state legislature. In 1828 he settled in Texas, assumed Mexican citizenship, acquired land grants, and married the vice-governor's daughter. In opposition to Mexican legislation to curb the immigration of U.S. settlers, he joined the Texas revolutionary movement and became a colonel in the Texas army. He is remembered for his gallant role in the defense of the Alamo. He invented the knife that bears his name. He became a legendary hero through Western song and ballad
Jim Bridger
orig. James Bridger born March 17, 1804, Richmond, Va., U.S. died July 17, 1881, near Kansas City, Mo. U.S. frontiersman. From 1822 he led fur-trapping expeditions to Utah and Idaho. He was apparently the first white man to visit the Great Salt Lake (1824) and among the first to explore Wyoming's Yellowstone River region. In 1843 he established Fort Bridger, Wyo., as a fur-trading post on the Oregon Trail. After the 1850s he worked as a government scout. He became legendary for his knowledge of the territory and its Indian inhabitants
Jim Brown
orig. James Nathaniel Brown born Feb. 17, 1936, St. Simons, Ga., U.S. U.S. football player, often considered the greatest running back of all time. He was an All-American in football and lacrosse at Syracuse University. In his nine seasons with the Cleveland Browns (1957-65), he set NFL overall rushing and combined yardage records that stood until 1984. Averaging a record 5.22 yards per carry in his career, Brown led the NFL in rushing in eight of the nine years he played. After retiring from football, he became a movie actor
Jim Carrey
{i} James Eugene Carrey (born 1962), Canadian-born American film actor
Jim Crow
type of crowbar used to remove nails; official and traditional racial discrimination against blacks; (Offensive) black person
Jim Crow
Jim Crow. a system of laws and practices in the US that separated black and white people in the past
Jim Crow Law
legal racial discrimination against African-Americans
Jim Crow Law
Law that enforced racial segregation in the U.S. South between 1877 and the 1950s. The term, taken from a minstrel-show routine, became a derogatory epithet for African Americans. After Reconstruction, Southern legislatures passed laws requiring segregation of whites and "persons of colour" on public transportation. These later extended to schools, restaurants, and other public places. In 1954 the U.S. Supreme Court declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education; later rulings struck down other Jim Crow laws
Jim Davis
{i} (born 1945) USA cartoonist who created the comic strip "Garfield" in 1978
Jim Dine
a US painter who was a leader of the pop art movement (1935- )
Jim Henson
a US maker of puppets, who invented the Muppets, including characters such as Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy, and the Cookie Monster (1936-90). in full James Maury Henson born Sept. 24, 1936, Greenville, Miss., U.S. died May 16, 1990, New York, N.Y. U.S. puppeteer and producer. He created a puppet show for a television station while in college and developed the first Muppets (melding marionettes and puppets). In the 1960s he made TV commercials. When PBS featured the Muppets on Sesame Street (from 1969), Henson achieved nationwide notice. He premiered The Muppet Show on television in 1976 and gained audiences in over 100 countries. He also produced and directed The Muppet Movie (1979) and its sequels
Jim Henson
(1936-1990) U.S. entertainer, creator of "The Muppets
Jim Jones
(1931-1978) leader of the religious cult "The People's Temple" who led his followers to Guyana and orchestrated a mass suicide
Jim Jones
Jonestown. orig. James Warren Jones born May 13, 1931, near Lynn, Ind., U.S. died Nov. 18, 1978, Jonestown, Guyana U.S. leader of a New Religous Movement. He became a preacher in Indianapolis. He established the People's Temple, which was affiliated with the Disciples of Christ and opposed racism and poverty. The group moved to San Francisco in 1971. Accused of defrauding church members, Jones led his group to Guyana in 1977 and set up the agricultural commune of Jonestown, using threats and force to control his followers. In 1978 U.S. Congressman Leo Ryan went to Jonestown to investigate allegations against Jones. Ryan and four others were killed when they reached the airport to return to the U.S. In the aftermath, most of the Jonestown residents, in a mass rite of murder-suicide, were shot or poisoned; Jones died of a gunshot wound. The death toll was 913, including many children
Jim Morrison
the main singer with the rock group The Doors, known for his sexually exciting performances on stage. Many people see him as a typical example of someone whose life was destroyed by drugs, alcohol, and the problems of being famous (1943-71). orig. James Douglas Morrison born Dec. 8, 1943, Melbourne, Fla., U.S. died July 3, 1971, Paris, France U.S. rock singer and songwriter. He studied film at the University of California in Los Angeles, where he met Ray Manzarek (b. 1935); with Robbie Krieger (b. 1946) and John Densmore (b. 1945), they formed the psychedelic rock group the Doors, taking their name from Aldous Huxley's book on mescaline, The Doors of Perception. The dark-edged eroticism of Morrison's baritone voice and pseudo-poetic lyrics helped make the band one of one of rock's most potent, controversial, and theatrical acts. Their popular hits of the 1960s included "Light My Fire" and "Hello I Love You." Morrison was known for his drinking and drug use and outrageous stage behaviour. In 1971 he left the Doors to write poetry and moved to Paris, where he died of heart failure
Jim Morrison
(1943-1971) Untied States singer/songwriter and poet, lead singer of the rock band "The Doors
Jim Thorpe
in full James Francis Thorpe born May 28, 1888, near Prague, Indian Territory died March 28, 1953, Lomita, Calif., U.S. U.S. athlete. Of predominantly American Indian (Sauk and Fox) descent, he trained as a football halfback under Pop Warner while attending the Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pa. (1908-12), where he also excelled at baseball, basketball, boxing, lacrosse, swimming, and hockey. In 1912 he won the Olympic decathlon and pentathlon by wide margins, but he was deprived of his medals in 1913 after it was discovered he had played semiprofessional baseball. He later played professional baseball and football, and in 1920-21 he served as first president of what would become the National Football League. His Olympic medals were restored posthumously in 1983. Thorpe is generally regarded as the greatest American athlete of the 20th century
jim crow
a crowbar fitted with a claw for pulling nails
jim crow
Rice, a famous negro minstrel
jim crow
A negro; said to be so called from a popular negro song and dance, the refrain of which is "Wheel about and turn about and jump Jim Crow,"
jim crow
produced in 1835 by T
jim crow
A negro; said to be so called from a popular negro song and dance, the refrain of which is "Wheel about and turn about and jump Jim Crow," produced in 1835 by T
jim dandy
something pleasant
jim jams
{i} nervousness, stress, anxiety, jitters (Slang); pyjamas (British Slang)
sonny Jim
A familiar term of address for a boy; sonny, laddie

get uppish with me, sonny Jim: you're as dead as he is.

Diamond Jim Brady
{i} James Buchanan Brady, James "Diamond Jim" Brady (1856-1917), American businessman and entrepreneur and philanthropist
Gary Jim Player
born Nov. 1, 1935, Johannesburg, S.Af. South African golfer. Player entered the U.S. PGA circuit in 1957. He won the British Open three times (1959, 1968, 1974), the Masters three times (1961, 1974, 1978), the PGA twice (1962, 1972), and the U.S. Open once (1965). Player was the third man (after Gene Sarazen and Ben Hogan) to win the four tournaments composing the modern grand slam of golf (the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open, and the PGA Championship)
Lord Jim
{i} novel written by Joseph Conrad about a young British sailor named Jim who is on a ship full of pilgrims travelling to Mecca for the hajj
Lucky Jim
a humorous novel by Kingsley Amis about a young college lecturer, Jim Dixon, who has modern political and social ideas, and has a lot of problems with the rather old-fashioned people that he works with (1954)
Sonny Jim
used when speaking to a man or boy, especially when you are telling him that he has done something wrong
jim

    Расстановка переносов

    Jim

    Турецкое произношение

    cîm

    Произношение

    /ˈʤəm/ /ˈʤɪm/

    Видео

    ... becomes a bar room drunk.  But then one day, a bartender comes up to him and he says, "Jim, ...
    ... PRESIDENT OBAMA: Jim, if I ' if I can just respond very quickly, first of all, every ...
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