Anlam (İngilizce)
açmak
- (transitive) to open
- (transitive) to clear, to unclog, to remove an obstacle
- (transitive) to open; to untie something tied up, knit etc.
- (transitive) to turn on
- (intransitive) for the sun to shine on a cloudy or rainy day
- (transitive) to dig, to penetrate
- (transitive) to open, to clear up, to make space
- (transitive) to separate, to make space between two things
- (transitive) to open; to start running (a shop, a business, an event, a game etc.)
- (transitive) to make fade, to wear out a color
- (transitive) to open, to uncover, to reveal, to expose; to make uncovered
- (figuratively, transitive) to reveal, to expose
- (transitive) to reserve, to make
- (informal, transitive) to satisfy
- (transitive) to make someone lose their boredom, shyness, fatigue etc.
- (transitive) to split
- (transitive) to vent
- (transitive) to bloom
- (transitive) to sharpen a pen, nib etc.
- (transitive) to break one's fast
- (transitive) to spread
- (transitive) to wage (war)
- (archaic, transitive) to conquer
Karşısında
tok
Çeviriler
Sıklık
(IPA) olarak telaffuz edilir
[ɑt͡ʃ]
Etimoloji (İngilizce)
In summary
From Ottoman Turkish آج (ac, “hungry”), from Old Anatolian Turkish [script needed] (ac, “hungry”), from Proto-Turkic *āç, *āč (“hunger”). Cognates Cognate with Old Turkic 𐰀𐰲 (ač /aç/, “hungry”), Old Uyghur 𐽰𐽰𐽽 (aç, “hungry”), Karakhanid [script needed] (āç, “hungry”), Azerbaijani ac (“hungry”), Bashkir ас (as, “hungry”), Chuvash выҫӑ (vyś̬ă, “hunger, hungry”), Kazakh аш (aş, “hunger”), Khakas ас (as, “hunger, hungry”), Kipchak [script needed] (aç, “hungry”), Kyrgyz ач (ac, “hungry”), Southern Altai ач (ač, “hunger”), Turkmen āç (“hungry”), Tuvan аш (aş, “hunger, hungry”), Uyghur ئاچ (ach, “hungry”), Uzbek och (“hungry”), Yakut аас (aas, “hunger”).
Notes