candled

listen to the pronunciation of candled
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык

Определение candled в Английский Язык Турецкий язык словарь

candle
mum

Mum kendiliğinden söndü. - The candle went out by itself.

Mum söndürmeye gerek kalmadan söndü. - The candle went out instead of having been put out.

candle
(Askeri) SİS MUMU, GAZ MUMU: Gaz veya duman meydana getiren kimyasal bir madde ile doldurulmuş kap. Ayrıca bakınız: "smoke candle" ve "gas candle"
candle
(Askeri) sis mumu
candle
(Askeri) gaz mumu
candle
{i} kandil

Tom kandili yaktı ve kibriti söndürdü. - Tom lit the candle and then blew out the match.

Tom onun kandillerini yaktı. - Tom lighted his candles.

Английский Язык - Английский Язык
past of candle
candle
A light source consisting of a wick embedded in a solid, flammable substance such as wax, tallow, or paraffin
candle
The protruding, removable portion of a filter, particularly a water filter
candle
To dry greenware prior to beginning of the firing cycle, setting the kiln at 200° Celsius until all water is removed from the greenware
candle
A unit of luminous intensity, now replaced by the SI unit candela
candle
To observe the growth of an embryo inside an egg, using a bright light source
candle
To check an item (such as an envelope) by holding it between a light souce and the eye
candle
a fast growing, light colored, upward-growing shoot on a pine tree in the spring. As growth slows in summer, the shoot darkens and is no longer highlighted to one’s view
candle
A candle is a stick of wax with a wick through the middle which is burnt to provide light
candle
Ardminenglish | adronato
candle
Abbreviated term for Roman candle
candle
{n} light made of tallow, wax
candle
examine eggs for freshness by holding them against a light
candle
The new bright green and tender growth of conifers in the spring
candle
{i} wax cylinder having a wick in the center which gives off light when lit
candle
That which gives light; a luminary
candle
In forestry, a fast growing, light colored, upward-growing shoot on a pine tree in the spring. As growth slows in summer, the shoot darkens and is no longer highlighted to one's view
candle
stick of wax with a wick in the middle the basic unit of luminous intensity adopted under the Systeme International d'Unites; equal to 1/60 of the luminous intensity per square centimeter of a black body radiating at the temperature of 2,046 degrees Kelvin examine eggs for freshness by holding them against a light
candle
the basic unit of luminous intensity adopted under the Systeme International d'Unites; equal to 1/60 of the luminous intensity per square centimeter of a black body radiating at the temperature of 2,046 degrees Kelvin
candle
The new bright green and tender growth of all conifers grow in the spring
candle
A method of observing the growth of an embryo inside an egg, using a bright light source
candle
{f} examine eggs by holding them up to a bright light; examine a bottle of wine by holding it in front of a candle flame
candle
The new bright green and tender shoot growth all conifers produce in the spring
candle
- short term for roman candle
candle
The unit of luminous intensity of a light source
candle
In pottery A method for drying greenware prior to beginning of the firing cycle, setting the kiln at 200° Celsius until all water is removed from the greenware
candle
n lilin
candle
An old unit of luminous intensity, now replaced by the SI unit candela
candle
A unit of luminous intensity of a light source See candela
candle
The newly emergent growth of needles and shoots at the branch tip of a pine tree, usually having a white or white-green color
candle
stick of wax with a wick in the middle
candle
A slender, cylindrical body of tallow, containing a wick composed of loosely twisted linen of cotton threads, and used to furnish light
candle
A candle is a stick of hard wax with a piece of string called a wick through the middle. You light the wick in order to give a steady flame that provides light. The bedroom was lit by a single candle
candle
Altar decoration and processions with candles were invariably a part of solemn devotional moments Margery Kempe also speaks of celebrating the feast of Corpus Christi when a "solemn procession with many candles and great solemnity (that) went through the town (Ch 45) Candles were expensive and major objects of donor piety, the giving of candles often being commemorated in church records The number of candles used marked the great or lesser solemnity of a mass in official accounts For example, the merchant guild of Bridgewater in 1393 stipulated that their chantry priest (one saying special prayers at a designated altar or chapel within a church) should provide Two torches which are to burn and illuminate every day during the elevation of Christ's body in the mass for the Blessed Virgin in the said choir, weighing 16 lb; see Rubin, Miri Corpus Christi: The Eucharist in Late Medieval Culture Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991, 60-62 [Chapter 28] [Chapter 82]
candle
A cylinder shaped object made of tallow or wax with a wick through its center, which gives light when it is burned
candle
If you burn the candle at both ends, you try to do too many things in too short a period of time so that you have to stay up very late at night and get up very early in the morning to get them done
candle
Fiber tube, which covers the sockets of a chandelier and simulates a candle
candle
A unit of luminous intensity of a light source