zee

listen to the pronunciation of zee
İngilizce - Türkçe
Z harfi
zed
{i} z harfi [amer.]
Z şekli
"z" harfi
deniz
(isim) z harfi [amer.]
`z' harfi
Türkçe - Türkçe

zee teriminin Türkçe Türkçe sözlükte anlamı

ZE'ZEE
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Cem'etmek, toplamak
İngilizce - İngilizce
Something Z-shaped. Found in compounds such as zee-bar
The name of the Latin script letter Z/z
The letter Z; the twenty-sixth and last letter of the English alphabet
{i} Z, letter Z (American)
the 26th letter of the Roman alphabet; "the British call Z zed and the Scots call it ezed but Americans call it zee"; "he doesn't know A from izzard"
The letter z
James Augustus Joseph Van Der Zee
v. born June 29, 1886, Lenox, Mass., U.S. died May 15, 1983, Washington, D.C. U.S. photographer. In 1906 he moved with his family to Harlem in New York City. After a brief stint at a portrait studio in Newark, N.J., he returned to Harlem to set up his own studio. The portraits he took from 1918 to 1945 chronicled the Harlem Renaissance; among his many renowned subjects were Countee Cullen, Bill Robinson, and Marcus Garvey. After World War II his fortunes declined until the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibited his photographs in 1969
James Van Der Zee
v. born June 29, 1886, Lenox, Mass., U.S. died May 15, 1983, Washington, D.C. U.S. photographer. In 1906 he moved with his family to Harlem in New York City. After a brief stint at a portrait studio in Newark, N.J., he returned to Harlem to set up his own studio. The portraits he took from 1918 to 1945 chronicled the Harlem Renaissance; among his many renowned subjects were Countee Cullen, Bill Robinson, and Marcus Garvey. After World War II his fortunes declined until the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibited his photographs in 1969
tappan zee bridge
a cantilever bridge across the Hudson River
zuider zee
a former inlet of the North Sea in the northern coast of the Netherlands; sealed off from the sea in 1932 by a dam that created the IJsselmeer
zee

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    zi

    Eş anlamlılar

    zed, izzard

    Telaffuz

    /ˈzē/ /ˈziː/

    Etimoloji

    [ 'zE ] (noun.) 1677. From Ancient Greek ζῆτα (zēta)