georgia

listen to the pronunciation of georgia
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
(isim) Georgia
Amerika Birleşik Devletlerinden biri
{i} Georgia
{i} Gürcistan
A.B.D.eyaletlerinden biri
georgia pine
(Çevre) çıralı çam
georgia:ge
(Bilgisayar) gürcistan: ge
republic of georgia
Gürcistan Cumhuriyeti
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
A country in West Asia. Official name: Georgia. Capital: Tbilisi
A female given name

Georgia? his mother said. Why in the world would a mother want to give her daughter such an outlandish name? It's no more outlandish than Jesse Griffith. Why, Jesse G., thee's named for thy two grandfathers. Georgia's named for a whole state..

A state of the United States of America. Capital: Atlanta
A channel between Vancouver Island, Canada, and mainland British Columbia and northern Washington State. Part of the Inland Passage to Alaska, the strait links Puget Sound with Queen Charlotte Sound. State (pop., 2000: 8,186,453), southeastern U.S. It is bordered by Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, and Alabama; the Atlantic Ocean lies to the southeast. The last of the original 13 English colonies, Georgia covers 58,930 sq mi (152,629 sq km) and is the largest state east of the Mississippi River; its capital is Atlanta. The area was inhabited by the Creek and Cherokee Indians when Spanish missionaries arrived in the 16th century. English settlement began in 1733 at Savannah when James Oglethorpe established a refuge for debtors. European settlement accelerated after the American Revolution, and the last of the Indians were forcibly removed in the 1830s. Georgia seceded from the Union in 1861, and the American Civil War was particularly hard on the state. It was the last former Confederate state to be readmitted to the Union in 1870. Its landscape sweeps from the Blue Ridge in the north to the Okefenokee Swamp (which it shares with Florida) in the south. For most of the 19th century it was the capital of the cotton empire of the South; in the 20th century industry predominated. The state's population grew throughout the 20th century, with Atlanta especially attracting national corporations. officially Republic of Georgia Country, Transcaucasia. Republic of Georgia Georgia Institute of Technology Georgia Tech Georgia Strait of O'Keeffe Georgia South Georgia
one of the British colonies that formed the United States
a republic in Asia Minor on the Black Sea separated from Russia by the Caucasus mountains; formerly an Asian soviet but became independent in 1991 a state in southeastern United States; one of the Confederate states during the American Civil War one of the British colonies that formed the United States
a state in southeastern United States; one of the Confederate states during the American Civil War
a republic in Asia Minor on the Black Sea separated from Russia by the Caucasus mountains; formerly an Asian soviet but became independent in 1991
{n} the most southern of the U. States
{i} female first name; state in the USA; Republic of Georgia, country bordering on the Black Sea in the southern Transcaucasia region in Asia (formerly part of the Soviet Union)
A country in West Asia or East Europe. Official name: Georgia. Capital: Tbilisi
Georgia Institute of Technology
known as Georgia Tech Public institution of higher learning in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., founded in 1885. It consists of colleges of architecture, computing, engineering, sciences, and public policy and administration. Undergraduate and graduate degrees are offered. Georgia Tech is home to a nuclear research centre and several other research and development centres
Georgia Institute of Technology
large public university located in Atlanta (Georgia, USA)
Georgia O'Keeffe
a US artist who painted large beautiful paintings of flowers and animal bones. Her later paintings were often influenced by the desert scenery of New Mexico, where she went to live (1887-1986). born Nov. 15, 1887, near Sun Prairie, Wis., U.S. died March 6, 1986, Santa Fe, N.M. U.S. painter. She studied art in Chicago and New York City, where she met and married the photographer Alfred Stieglitz. By the early 1920s, her highly individualistic painting style had emerged, as typified by such works as Black Iris (1926). Her subjects were often enlarged views of the skulls and other bones of animals, flowers and plant organs, shells, rocks, mountains, and other natural forms. Her mysteriously suggestive images of bones and flowers set against a perspectiveless space have inspired a variety of erotic, psychological, and symbolic interpretations. Her later works celebrate the clear skies and desert landscapes of New Mexico, where she moved after her husband's death in 1946. She is regarded by critics as one of the most original and important American artists, and her works are highly popular among the general public
Georgia State University
large public university located in Atlanta (Georgia, USA)
Georgia Tech
large public university located in Atlanta (Georgia, USA)
South Georgia
An island in the southern Atlantic Ocean, part of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, a British-owned territory
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
A British-owned territory of inhospitable islands in the southern Atlantic Ocean
hell and half of Georgia
a very large region; everywhere

The hitch is that the ship is so powerful—it must be, to do the things for which it has been designed—that its twin rotors blast away Hell and half of Georgia with the turbulence it causes on landing or taking off.

New Georgia Island
An island of the Solomon Islands in the southwest Pacific Ocean. It was occupied by the Japanese in 1942 and recaptured by the Allies in August 1943
Republic of Georgia
{i} Georgia, country bordering on the Black Sea in the southern Transcaucasia region in Asia (formerly part of the Soviet Union)
South Georgia
A British-administered island in the southern Atlantic Ocean east of Cape Horn. A dependency of the Falkland Islands, it was claimed by Capt. James Cook in 1775. an island in the South Atlantic, East of Cape Horn, which is under British control. Nobody lives there except British soldiers and a few scientists. Both the UK and Argentina think the island should belong to them. Mountainous, barren island, southern Atlantic Ocean. It is located 800 mi (1,300 km) east of the British Falkland Islands, of which it is a dependency. With an Antarctic climate, it has perpetual snow covering three-fourths of the island. It is home to reindeer, several penguin and seal species, and abundant marine life. Capt. James Cook claimed it for Britain in 1775, and Ernest Shackleton first crossed it in 1916 while in search of aid for his ill-fated expedition; Shackleton died on the island on a later expedition and was buried there. Formerly a whaling base, it is now the site of an Antarctic research station
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
{i} islands in the South Atlantic Ocean that are a dependent territory of the UK
Strait of Georgia
Channel in the Pacific Ocean, southwestern Canada and northwestern U.S. Located between Vancouver Island, the southwestern mainland of British Columbia, and northwestern Washington state, it is 150 mi (241 km) long and 30 mi (28 km) at its widest. To the north the strait ends in a jumble of islands separating it from Johnstone and Queen Charlotte straits. The southern end is marked by the San Juan Islands of Washington and joins Haro Strait, forming a link in the Inside Passage sea route between Seattle, Wash., and Skagway, Alaska
University of Georgia
large public university located in Athens (Georgia, USA)
strait of georgia
the strait separating Vancouver Island from the Canadian mainland
Турецкий язык - Английский Язык
Georgia
georgia eyaletinden
Georgian
georgia

    Расстановка переносов

    Geor·gia

    Турецкое произношение

    côrcı

    Синонимы

    gruzia, sakartvelo, jawjuh

    Произношение

    /ˈʤôrʤə/ /ˈʤɔːrʤə/

    Этимология

    () Disputed, with several explanations offered (see Wikipedia entry): * From Latin Georgius, from Ancient Greek Γεώργιος (georgios, “farmer”). * From the name of Saint George, itself from Ancient Greek Γεώργιος (georgios, “farmer”). * Under various Persian empires, Georgians were known as Gurjhān and the country as Gurjistan (compare modern Russian Грузия (Grúzija)). This could have evolved or contributed to the modern name.

    Видео

    ... a film crew from the Science Channel, fly down to Fort Benning, Georgia, and have a ...
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