Tack
Sorunu sor hemen cevaplansın.
tack teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- raptiye {i}
- iri başlı çivi
- kontra
- karula yakası (Askeri)
- tiramolayla yükselmek (Askeri)
- teyelle tutturmak (Tekstil)
- çivilemek
- çivi ile iliştirmek
- faça etmek
- tak
Örnek Cümle:
O takım çantası benimkine çok benziyor.
-That tackle box looks a lot like mine.
Örnek Cümle:
Bu benim takım sandığım.
-This is my tackle box.
- tramola (Askeri)
- tiramola ederek gitmek (Askeri)
- yapışkanlık
- oyulgalamak
- iliştirmek
- yol
Örnek Cümle:
Neden farklı bir yol denemiyorsunuz?
-Why don't you try a different tack?
- çakmak
- çivi ya da raptiye ile tutturmak
- pünez
- ufak çivi
- teyel
- gidiş
- çivi {i}
- rota
- orsa etmek
- kumaşı teyellemek
- çivile {f}
- çatmak
- Hayvanın semerini veya eyerini bağlamak için göğsünden aşırılarak sıkılan yassı kemer, kolan (Araçlar)
- gemiyi çevirmek {f}
- besin {i}
- iri başlı küçük çivi {i}
- raptiyelemek {f}
- rüzgâra karşı volta vurma {i}
- rüzgâra karşı volta vurmak {f}
- yiyecek {i}
- tutturmak {f}
- teyellemek {f}
- birleştirmek {f}
- geçici olarak tutturma {i}
- yöntem {i}
Örnek Cümle:
Farklı bir yöntem uygulamak zorunda olabilirim.
-I may have to change tack.
- geminin rüzgâra göre yaptığı yön değişikliği {i}
- bir geminin yelkenlerinin vaziyetine göre gittiği yol
- eklemek {f}
- (bir yelkenlinin/bir hareketin/bir düşüncenin takip ettiği) yön: The ship was on a port tack. Gemi {i}
- tack teyelle/çevir/tuttur
- teyel/kuntura/yön/raptiye
- katmak {f}
- ilave etmek
- tack about
- volta etmek
- tack hammer
- çekiç
- tack mortgages
- ipotekleri birleştirmek
- tack on
- ilave etmek
- tack on
- ekle
- tack on
- eklemek
- tack rivet
- tutturma perçini
- tack cloth
- tack bez
- tack coat
- Asfalt tabakası (yol yapımı)
- tack head
- Raptiye başı
- tack room
- Ahırlarda binicilik gereçlerinin bulunduğu bölüm
- tack welding
- tack kaynak
- tack coat
- yapıştırma tabakası
- tack coat
- yapıştırma katmanı
- tack down
- çivilemek
- tack down
- çakmak
- tack free time
- (İnşaat) kürleme süresi
- tack rivet
- geçici perçin
- tack s.t. down
- bir şeyi çivileyerek/raptiyeleyerek açılmaz/hareket etmez bir duruma getirmek
- tack s.t. on
- bir şeyi çiviyle/raptiyeyle (bir yere) asmak
- tack s.t. on
- (to) bir şeyi sonradan gelişigüzel bir şekilde (bir şeye) eklemek
- tack securities
- (Ticaret) teminatları birleştirmek
- tack together
- tutturmak
- tack together
- teyellemek
- tack weld
- (İnşaat) kesik dikiş kaynak
- tack welding
- nokta kaynağı
- tack welding
- geçici kaynak
- tack welding
- tutturma kaynağı
- tack welding
- (Nükleer Bilimler) punta kaynağı
- tailor's tack
- bol teyel
- tailors tack
- bol teyel
- brass tack
- Raptiye
- tin tack
- kalaylı döşeme çivisi
- go on a wrong tack
- Yanlış bir yol devam
- go upon another tack
- Başka bir çakmak üzerine gitmek
- hold tack
- çakmak tutmak
- sharp as a tack
- (deyim) 1. Temiz giyimli, tiril tiril giyinmiş.2. Akıllı, kıvrak zekâlı
1. That new boy always looks sharp as a tack in class. 2. Tom is sharp as a tack; he got 100 on every test.
- sharp as a tack
- Keskin zekâlı: "He may be 85, but he's sharp as a tack - plays chess every day."
- starboard tack
- (Denizcilik) Sancak kontra
- tacking
- Tromola yapma: Yelkencilikte rüzgar üstüne seyirde rüzgarı bir kontradan alıp diğerine değiştirme
- tick tack
- kene tack
- tick tack toe
- Oyuncuların sırayla O ve X işaretleriyle diziler oluşturmaya çalıştıkları oyun
- tin tack
- nalın çivisi
- french tack
- (Tekstil) fransız teyeli
- hard tack
- galeta
- hard tack
- peksimet
- hard tack
- gemi yemeği
- tacker
- (Argo) genç çocuk
- tacking
- faça
- tacking
- (isim) teyel
- tacking
- teyel
- tick tack
- işaretle bahisleri bildirme (at yarışı)
- tick tack
- saat sesi
- tick tack man
- işaretle bahisleri bildiren adam (at yarışı)
- tin tack
- (isim)lın çivisi
İlgili Terimler
tack teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- The distance a sailing vessel runs between these maneuvers when working to windward; a board
- The lower corner on the leading edge of a sail relative to the direction of the wind
- A direction or course of action, especially one that differs from the previous one
Örnek Cümle:
to try a different tack.
- Often with "up"", to place the tack on a horse
- To sew/stich with a tack (loose seam used to temporarily fasten pieces of cloth)
- Any of the various equipment and accessories worn by horses in the course of their use as domesticated animals. Saddles, stirrups, bridles, halters, reins, bits, harnesses, martingales, and breastplates are all forms of horse tack
- The stickiness of a compound, related to its cohesive and adhesive properties
- A course or heading that enables a sailing vessel to head upwind. See also reach, gybe
- To maneuver a sailing vessel so that its bow turns through the wind, i.e. the wind changes from one side of the vessel to the other
- To add something as an extra item
Örnek Cümle:
to tack (something) onto (something).
- A small nail with a flat head
- The maneuver by which a sailing vessel turns its bow through the wind so that the wind changes from one side to the other
- A loose seam used to temporarily fasten pieces of cloth
- To nail with a tack (small nail with a flat head)
- A small, sharp, nail-like object used especially to affix thin items to thicker ones, but not heavily used in carpentry
- a small sharp-pointed nail
- to fasten, join, unite, few, turn about {v}
- a small nail, rope, turn of a ship, lease {n}
- A tack is a short nail with a broad, flat head, especially one that is used for fastening carpets to the floor. to get down to brass tacks: see brass see also thumbtack
- This is the equipment worn by the horse including saddle, bridle, etc It is short for "tackle "
- a) The process of turning the bow of the yacht through the wind and changing the sides of the sails b) The lower corner of a sail that is attached to the yacht
- In the paper adhesives area, the ability of a substance (glue) to be very sticky and hold 2 plys of paper together quickly [Top]
- A rope used to hold in place the foremost lower corners of the courses when the vessel is closehauled see Illust
- 1 On a triangular sail, the bottom forward corner 2 A course with the wind coming from the right or left side of the boat, such as starboard tack or port tack
- sailing a zigzag course (nautical) the act of changing tack a short nail with a sharp point and a large head the heading or position of a vessel relative to the trim of its sails fasten with tacks; "tack the notice on the board"
- turn into the wind; "The sailors decided to tack the boat"; "The boat tacked"
- That which is attached; a supplement; an appendix
- short pointed nail with a broad flat head; zigzag course of a ship sailing against the wind; sewing stitch used to temporarily fasten cloth together; riding gear (Equestrian); course of action {i}
- In printing inks, the property of cohesion between particles; the pulling power or separation force of ink in its transfer from a press blanket to its intended printing surface A tacky ink has high separation forces and can cause surface picking or splitting of weak papers A lack of tack has very little ability to transfer properly from blanket to paper because it has a low adhesion tendency, this effects trap
- In parliamentary usage, to add (a supplement) to a bill; to append; often with on or to
- To change the direction of a vessel by shifting the position of the helm and sails; also (as said of a vessel), to have her direction changed through the shifting of the helm and sails
- 1 (Part of a sail) Lower forward corner of a sail TACK-- 2 (relating to course) The heading a boat is on or changing course to
- sew together loosely, with large stitches; "baste a hem"
- If you tack something to a surface, you pin it there with tacks or drawing pins. He had tacked this note to her door She had recently taken a canvas from the theater and tacked it up on the wall
- The adhesive quality of inks
- expression, "tack (something) onto (something)", something added as an extra item"
- reverse (a direction, attitude, or course of action)
- The property of cohesion of particles in printing inks that can cause splitting on weaker papers
- In adhesives, commonly regarded as the stickiness The amount of tack is estimated as the pull-resistance when attempting to separate the adherends while the adhesive still exhibits viscous or plastic flow, the separation being effected without failure or deformation occurring in the adherend surroundings
- make by putting pieces together; "She pieced a quilt"; "He tacked together some verses"
- The ability to adhere to itself; a sticky or adhesive quality Team Feasibility Commitment - A commitment by the Product Quality Planning Team that the design can be manufactured, assembled, tested, packaged, and shipped in sufficient quantity at an acceptable cost, and on schedule
- Pulling power of ink or glue against another surface to top
- If you change tack or try a different tack, you try a different method for dealing with a situation. In desperation I changed tack This report takes a different tack from the 20 that have come before. = approach
- That property, governed by viscosity and adhesion, which renders a film of printing ink sticky to the touch
- affix with a tack; append, add as an attachment; change course, alter one's direction (especially in a sailing vessel); sew together temporarily {f}
- 1 The lower forward corner of a sail where the luff and foot meet 2 A sailing boat is on a tack when she is not in the process of gybing or tacking When she has the wind to starboard and the boom to port, she is on starboard tack When she has the wind to port and the boom to starboard, she is on port tack 3 To turn the boat so as to change from one tack to another with the bow passing through the eye of the wind
- fix to; attach; "append a charm to the necklace"
- Having a property of temporary adhesion
- Part of a sail specifically the lower corner on the leading edge of the sail relative to the direction of the wind
- 1) A line connected to the clew of the course sail that pulls it forward 2) The action of turning a vessel so that her bow crosses the exact direction the wind is blowing from 3) The direction of travel of a vessel 4) The lower corner of a fore-and-aft sail closest to the joining of the mast and boom In the case of a sail that runs on a stay, the lower corner that is secured both to the stay and the stay's connection point
- A small, short, sharp-pointed nail, usually having a broad, flat head
- Confidence; reliance
- The direction of a vessel in regard to the trim of her sails; as, the starboard tack, or port tack; the former when she is closehauled with the wind on her starboard side; hence, the run of a vessel on one tack; also, a change of direction
- gear for a horse
- To fasten or attach
- The amount of stickiness in printing inks that makes them adhere to the substrate while minimizing dot gain Too much tack can cause surface picking
- The part of a sail to which the tack is usually fastened; the foremost lower corner of fore-and-aft sails, as of schooners see Illust
- turn into the wind; "The sailors decided to tack the boat"; "The boat tacked
- to place riding tack on a horse
- A stain; a tache
- If a sailing boat is tacking or if the people in it tack it, it is sailing towards a particular point in a series of sideways movements rather than in a straight line. We were tacking fairly close inshore The helmsman could tack the boat singlehanded
- Gilding - Refers to the state of the adhesive size Proper tack for gilding is the point when the size is not longer wet, but not fully dry, hence it is 'tacky' or just slightly sticky The proper time to apply your gold or silver leaf is when the 'size' is not wet but 'tacky', just before it dries completely 3 hour 'quick drying' size comes to 'tack' in approximately 1 5 to 2 hours, reaching full dryness at around 3 hours (hence it's name '3 hour quick drying size')
- See Tack, v
- of Ship; also, a rope employed to pull the lower corner of a studding sail to the boom
- (nautical) the act of changing tack
- the heading or position of a vessel relative to the trim of its sails
- A point of sailing with the wind on one side of the boat (noun); to change the side of the boat from which the winds blows by turning the bow through the wind (verb)
- loose seam used to temporarily fasten pieces of cloth
- Part of the harnessing for a draft animal or riding animal, e.g. a horse pulling a wagon, or a riding horse. Includes bit, bridle and reins
- To change the direction of (a vessel) when sailing closehauled, by putting the helm alee and shifting the tacks and sails so that she will proceed to windward nearly at right angles to her former course
- tack up
- To prepare a horse for riding by equipping it with tack (harness, reins, saddle etc.)
- tack bolt
- In steel structures composed of double angles back- to- back have spacer bar between the connecting legs, which is welded at intervals. Alternately stitch bolts, washers and ring fills are placed between the angles to keep them at the proper distance apart. Such connections are called tack connections and the term tack welding or tack bolting are used
- tack cloth
- A piece of cheese cloth or other lint-free cloth treated with turpentine and a small amount of varnish to produce a tacky surface that picks up and holds dust and lint
- tack hammer
- a light hammer that is used to drive tacks
- tack hammer
- A light hammer used to drive tacks
- tack on
- fix to; attach; "append a charm to the necklace"
- tack on
- If you say that something is tacked on to something else, you think that it is added in a hurry and in an unsatisfactory way. The child-care bill is to be tacked on to the budget plan now being worked out in the Senate
- tack weld
- Usually refers to a temporary weld used to hold parts in place while more extensive final welds are made In some sheet metal applications, tack gelds may provide sufficient strength to eliminate the need for an "all around" fillet weld
- tack weld
- A small weld used to hold pieces of an assembly in place prior to the final (continuous) welding
- tack weld
- Usually refers to a temporary weld used to hold parts in place while more extensive, final welds are made In some sheet metal applications, tack welds may provide sufficient strength to eliminate the need for an "all-around" fillet weld
- tack-o-rama
- {s} totally tacky
- tailor's tack
- from a pattern to material
- tailor's tack
- loose looped stitch used to transfer marking for darts, etc
- Blu-Tack
- A solid putty-like adhesive, originally blue in colour, used to secure items to walls and other surfaces
- Blu-Tack
- To fix with Blu-Tack
The power switch wasn't seated properly, and so I blu-tacked it into place.
- down tack
- The IPA diacritic of primary articulation: , used to denote a lowered phone; for vowels, the diacritic denotes a slightly more open utterance; for consonants, it moves the point of articulation one step forward in this chain: nasal → plosive → fricative → approximant → trill → tap, flap → lateral fricative → lateral approximant → lateral flap
- sharp as a tack
- very intelligent
When Mum died at nintey she was still as sharp as a tack. Everything else wore out.
- tacking
- the act of changing tack
- tie tack
- An ornamented pin used to secure a necktie's end flat against the shirt, a stickpin
- sharp as a tack
- (deyim) 1. Very neatly and stylishly dressed.2. Very intelligent; smart; quick-witted
1. That new boy always looks sharp as a tack in class. 2. Tom is sharp as a tack; he got 100 on every test.
- sharp as a tack
- Quick to understand, able to think quickly: "He may be 85, but he's sharp as a tack - plays chess every day."
- tick tack toe
- A game played by two people, each trying to make a line of three X's or three O's in a boxlike figure with nine spaces
- Blu-Tack
- a blue sticky material used to fix paper to a wall. a flexible adhesive substance used in the home or office. It is often used to attach posters or decorations to a wall without damaging paint or wallpaper
- carpet tack
- used to nail down carpets
- tacked
- Simple past and past participle of to tack
- tacker
- One who tacks
- tacker
- {i} one who tacks; (British Slang) young child
- tacker
- A person who, or device that tacks
- tacker
- a sewer who fastens a garment with long loose stitches
- tacker
- a worker who fastens things by tacking them (as with tacks or by spotwelding)
- tacker
- a hand-held machine for driving staples home
- tackers
- plural of tacker
- tacking
- Adding an extra period of time to the term of a contract
- tacking
- loose temporary stitches
- tacking
- Present participle of to tack
- tacking
- 1) To change a boat's direction, bringing the bow through the eye of the wind 2) To tack repeatedly, as when trying to sail to a point upwind of the boat
- tacking
- Changing direction by turning into the wind
- tacking
- adding on to a time period
- tacking
- The binding of Mulch fibers by mixing them with an adhesive chemical compound during land Restoration projects
- tacking
- A zigzagging manoeuvre that reverses the windward & leeward sides of the boat Tacking is necessary as yachts cannot sail straight into the wind and must 'zigzag' towards a windward destination The wind crosses 'infront' of the boat when tacking
- tacking
- (nautical) the act of changing tack
- tacking
- To sail to windward by making alternate tacks as close to the wind as is possible or reasonable
- tacking
- Adding on to a certain period of time
- tacking
- loose temporary stitches in dressmaking etc
- tacking
- Turning from one tack to the other as the bow passes through head to wind (Also called coming about)
- tacking
- A union of securities given at different times, all of which must be redeemed before an intermediate purchaser can interpose his claim
- tacking
- Adding or combining successive periods of continuous occupation of real property by adverse possessors This concept enables someone who has not been in possession for the entire statutory period to establish a claim of adverse possession
- tacking
- First accomlished on terrestrial oceans Tacking was the method by which a wind powered vessel could travel into the wind which propells it This is accomplished by performing sharp turns across the oncomming wind The distance gains are small but cumulative Similar techniques are used by Solar and Dickerson Sailors
- tacking
- Somewhat similair to kickturning, but the board is turned only slightly to adjust direction on a flat surface
- tacks
- Third-person singular simple present of to tack
- tacks
- Plural of tack
- tick-tack-toe
- game played on paper in which players try to get three X's or O's in a row
- tie tack
- a pin used to hold the tie in place
- tie tack
- A short pin with a decorative head, used to attach a tie to a shirt front by means of a snap or chain
İlgili Terimler
tack teriminin Türkçe İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- fast tack
- fast tack
İlgili Terimler
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