Olabildiğince tuhaf, o ölü olduğu söylenilen biriyle karşılaştı.
- As strange as it may be, he met with somebody who is said to be dead.
Öyle ucuz bir otelde misafir edilmesi tuhaf.
- It is strange that he should be put up at such a cheap hotel.
Garip bir keşif yaptılar.
- They made a strange discovery.
Dün gece, Tom'un odasından gelen garip bir ses duydum.
- I heard a strange noise coming from Tom's room last night.
Buralarda bir yabancıyım.
- I'm a stranger in these parts.
Bir köpek yabancılara havlar.
- A dog will bark at strangers.
Bu evle ilgili acayip bir şey var.
- There's something strange about this house.
Onları hayat görüşü acayip görünebilir.
- Their view of life may appear strange.
Onun hobisi bilinmeyen kelebekler toplamaktır.
- His hobby is collecting strange butterflies.
Adam tam bir yabancıydı.
- The man was a total stranger.
Bir köpek yabancılara havlar.
- A dog will bark at strangers.
Evin garip bir şekilde sakin görünüyordu.
- The house seemed strangely quiet.
Garip bir şekilde, öğrencilerin sayısı her yıl azalıyor.
- Strangely, the number of students is decreasing each year.
Burası garip biçimde sessiz.
- It's strangely quiet here.
Garip biçimde sakin hissettim.
- I felt strangely calm.
Bana tuhaf tuhaf bakıyorsun.
- You are looking at me strangely.
O tuhaf biçimde davranmaya başladı.
- She has started acting strangely.
Bir köpek yabancılara havlar.
- A dog will bark at strangers.
Buralarda bir yabancıyım.
- I'm a stranger in these parts.
Bana tuhaf tuhaf bakıyorsun.
- You are looking at me strangely.
Bugüne kadar yediğin en garip şey ne?
- What's the strangest thing you've ever eaten?
Şu ana kadar yediğin en garip şey nedir?
- What is the strangest thing you've ever eaten?
He thought it strange that his girlfriend wore shorts in the winter.
She's probably sitting there hoping a couple of strange detectives will drop in.
A strange quark is electrically charged, carrying an amount -1/3, as does the down quark.
Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows., The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition, E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil, editors, Houghton Mifflin Company, 2002.
In this land, too, there dwelled a young man who was a fowler, but a bit of a strange bird he was, for he only captured his birds, preferring not to slaughter them.
Mothers cannot conveniently leave home to get about, and fathers, to use their own expression, feel like a cat in a strange garret, when screwed up in one of the seats ot the school house.
... To him this is more of the strange idiosyncrasies ...
... however strange-looking circus which he built around four hundred and fifty ...