savage

listen to the pronunciation of savage
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
yabani
vahşi

O günlerde orada vahşi bir kabile yaşadı. - A savage tribe lived there in those days.

Vahşi hayat çok basit ve toplumlarımız çok karmaşık makine! - The savage life is so simple, and our societies are such complex machinery!

yabanıl
acımasız

Ağlamamış genç bir adam acımasızdır ve gülmeyecek yaşlı bir adam bir aptaldır. - The young man who has not wept is a savage, and the old man who will not laugh is a fool.

ısırmak (köpek)
parçalamak
azılı
uygarlaşmamış
vahşet
{f} vahşice saldır

Fadıl dokuz yaşındaki bir kıza vahşice saldırdı. - Fadil savagely assaulted a nine-year-old girl.

paralamak
saldırıp ısırmak
gaddar adam
tepesi atmış
öfkeli
yırtıcı
zalim
vahşi adam
çok sinirli
gözü dönmüş
canavar ruhlu
{i} yaban
medeniyet görmemiş
medeniyet görmemiş kimse
{f} (hayvan) vahşice
ısırmak (köpek vb.)
savagelyvahşicesine
{i} zalim ve canavar ruhlu kimse
{i} barbar

Onlar, barbar dediklerinden çok daha vahşidirler. - They are much more savage than those they call barbarians.

Kendilerine uygar diyorlar ama barbar dedikleri kadar vahşiler. - They call themselves civilized, but they're just as savage as those they call barbarians.

savagenessyabanilik vahşet
savagism i
yaban adamı
adamcıl
savage mind
yaban düşünce
savage mind
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) yaban düşünce (lévi-strauss)
savage pcychoanalysis
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) kaba psikanaliz
savagely
vahşice

O, onu bağladı ve onun ağzını tıkadı, sonra onu vahşice dövmeye başladı. - She tied him up and gagged him, then she started to beat him savagely.

Leyla vahşice öldürüldü. - Layla was savagely murdered.

wild; not cultivated
vahşi; ekili değil
wild; savage
vahşi; vahşi
savagely
(zarf) vahşice
savageness
{i} barbarlık
savageness
i., bak. savagery
savageness
{i} yabanilik
savageness
{i} vahşilik
savageness
{i} gaddarlık
savageness
{i} vahşet
to savage
vahşice saldırmak
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
An uncivilized or feral human; a barbarian

'Well, my lord, I don't know,' said Freeman with a sort of jolly sneer; 'we have been dining with the savages.''They are not savages, Freeman.''Well, my lord, they have not much more clothes, anyhow; and as for knives and forks, there is not such a thing known.'.

fierce and ferocious
To criticise vehemently

His latest film was savaged by most reviewers.

A defiant person
wild; not cultivated
brutal, vicious, or merciless

The woman was killed in a savage manner.

barbaric; not civilized

I observed a place where there had been a fire made, and a circle dug in the earth, like a cockpit, where I supposed the savage wretches had sat down to their human feastings upon the bodies of their fellow-creatures.

To attack or assault someone or something ferociously or without restraint
To attack with the teeth
a wild and uncivilized human being
{s} barbaric, uncivilized; wild, untamed; cruel, fierce; ruthless, brutal; very angry, furious
[n] A term commonly applied to American Indians by Europeans (Fr sauvage), meaning wild or uncivilized
{v} to make cruel or barbarous
{a} wild, uncultivated, cruel, barbarous
{n} a person uncivilized, a genus of flies
A savage person
A human being who does not feel the restraints of civilization Savages are at the stage of cultural "childhood" according to such nineteenth-century thinkers as the anthropologist Lewis Henry Morgan See Noble Savage and Primitive
A human being in his native state of rudeness; one who is untaught, uncivilized, or without cultivation of mind or manners
A man of extreme, unfeeling, brutal cruelty; a barbarian
Characterized by cruelty; barbarous; fierce; ferocious; inhuman; brutal; as, a savage spirit
disapproval If you refer to people as savages, you dislike them because you think that they do not have an advanced society and are violent. their conviction that the area was a frozen desert peopled with uncouth savages
without civilizing influences; "barbarian invaders"; "barbaric practices"; "a savage people"; "fighting is crude and uncivilized especially if the weapons are efficient"-Margaret Meade; "wild tribes"
a cruelly rapacious person
a member of an uncivilized people
Of or pertaining to the forest; remote from human abodes and cultivation; in a state of nature; wild; as, a savage wilderness
criticize harshly or violently; "The press savaged the new President"; "The critics crucified the author for plagiarizing a famous passage"
a member of an uncivilized people criticize harshly or violently; "The press savaged the new President"; "The critics crucified the author for plagiarizing a famous passage"
wild and menacing; "a ferocious dog"
If someone or something that they have done is savaged by another person, that person criticizes them severely. The show had already been savaged by critics Speakers called for clearer direction and savaged the Chancellor. a very offensive word for someone who has a simple, traditional way of life
brutal, vicious or merciless
(of persons or their actions) able or disposed to inflict pain or suffering; "a barbarous crime"; "brutal beatings"; "cruel tortures"; "Stalin's roughshod treatment of the kulaks"; "a savage slap"; "vicious kicks"
{i} barbarian, uncivilized person; brutal or cruel person
marked by extreme and violent energy; "a ferocious beating"; "fierce fighting"; "a furious battle"
Uncivilized; untaught; unpolished; rude; as, savage life; savage manners
attack brutally and fiercely
To make savage
Someone or something that is savage is extremely cruel, violent, and uncontrolled. This was a savage attack on a defenceless young girl. a savage dog lunging at the end of a chain. = vicious + savagely sav·age·ly He was savagely beaten
Wild; untamed; uncultivated; as, savage beasts
If someone is savaged by a dog or other animal, the animal attacks them violently. The animal then turned on him and he was savaged to death
The heat on Canberra spring evenings
inhuman
salvage
butcherly
Savage Island
{i} Niue, self-governing island (dependency of New Zealand) in central Pacific Ocean that was discovered by Capt. James Cook in 1774
savage review
harsh review, sever criticism
savage tribe
wild group of people
savagely
In a wild, uncontrolled, or savage manner
savageness
The property of being or behaving savagely
savageness
ferocity
savagely
{a} cruelly, barbarously, inhumanly
savageness
{n} great cruelty, barbarity
John Savage
{i} (born 1950) United States film actor (known for his role in "The Deer Hunter")
To savage
maul
Walter Savage Landor
born Jan. 30, 1775, Warwick, Warwickshire, Eng. died Sept. 17, 1864, Florence, Italy British writer. He was educated at Rugby School and Oxford but left both over disagreements with the authorities. A classicist, he originally wrote many of his works in Latin. Though he wrote lyrics, plays, and heroic poems, he is best remembered for his multivolume Imaginary Conversations, prose dialogues between historical personages (1824-53). He spent much of his life in France and Italy
savaged
past of savage
savagely
wildly; like an animal; "she cried out savagely"
savagely
In a savage manner
savagely
wildly; like an animal; "she cried out savagely
savagely
in a vicious manner; "he was viciously attacked"
savagely
wildly, in an untamed manner; barbarically, in an uncivilized manner; cruelly, fiercely; ruthlessly, brutally; angrily, furiously
savageness
The state or quality of being savage
savageness
{i} state of being uncivilized; wildness, state of being untamed; cruelness, fierceness; ruthlessness, brutality; angriness, furiousness
savageness
the trait of extreme cruelty
savages
plural of savage
savaging
present participle of savage
savage
Избранное