and
Kelime Anlamı :
1. ve.
2. bağlaç ve.
3. ile.
4. de.
5. ile And howl.
6. (bağlaç) ve, ile, de.
7. Hem de nasıl and so forth ve saire.
8. bağ. ve; ile: mice and men fareler ve insanlar. knife and fork bıçakla çatal. He looked and ran away. Baktı ve kaçtı.
9. conj. ve.
10. andem.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1.
together with or along with; in addition to; as well as. used to connect words, phrases, or clauses that have the same grammatical function in a construction.
2. added to; plus: two and two makes four.
3. used to indicate result: give the boy a chance, and he might surprise you.
4. informal to. used between finite verbs, such as go, come, try, write, or see: try and find it; come and see. see usage note at try.
5. archaic If: and it pleases you.
6. forth and other unspecified things of the same class: bought groceries, went to the bank, picked up the dry cleaning, and so forth.
7. forth further in the same manner.
8. and then some informal with considerably more in addition: this project will take all our skill and then some.
2. added to; plus: two and two makes four.
3. used to indicate result: give the boy a chance, and he might surprise you.
4. informal to. used between finite verbs, such as go, come, try, write, or see: try and find it; come and see. see usage note at try.
5. archaic If: and it pleases you.
6. forth and other unspecified things of the same class: bought groceries, went to the bank, picked up the dry cleaning, and so forth.
7. forth further in the same manner.
8. and then some informal with considerably more in addition: this project will take all our skill and then some.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
1.
as a coordinating conjunction; expressing two elements to be taken together or in addition to each other.
2. expressing a condition.
3. breath.
4. sea-mist; water-smoke.
5. to breathe; whisper; devise; imagine.
2. expressing a condition.
3. breath.
4. sea-mist; water-smoke.
5. to breathe; whisper; devise; imagine.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
1.
A particle which expresses the relation of connection or addition. it is used to conjoin a word with a word, a clause with a clause, or a sentence with a sentence.
2. in order to; -- used instead of the infinitival to, especially after try, come, go.
3. it is sometimes, in old songs, a mere expletive.
4. If; though. see an, conj.
2. in order to; -- used instead of the infinitival to, especially after try, come, go.
3. it is sometimes, in old songs, a mere expletive.
4. If; though. see an, conj.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
1.
2. connective: A word connecting a word, phrase, clause, or sentence with that which precedes it: a colorless particle without an exact synonym in english, but expressed approximately by ‘with, along with, together with, besides, also, moreover,’ the elements connected being grammatically coördinate.
3. when many words, phrases, clauses, or sentences are connected, the connective is now generally omitted before all except the last, unless retained for rhetorical effect. the connected elements are sometimes identical, expressing continuous repetition, either definitely, as, to walk two and two; or indefinitely, as, for ever and ever, to wait years and years.
4. the repetition often implies a difference of quality under the same name; as, there are deacons and deacons (that is, according to the proverb, “there's odds in deacons”); there are novels and novels (that is, all sorts of novels). to make the connection distinctly inclusive, the term both precedes the first member: as, both in england and in france. for this, by a latinism, and … and has been sometimes used in poetry (latin and french et … el).
5. Introductive: in continuation of a previous sentence expressed, implied, or understood.
6. in this use, especially in continuation of the statement implied by assent to a previous question. the continuation may mark surprise, incredulity, indignation, etc.: as, and shall I see him again? and you dare thus address me?
7. adverbial: also; even.
8. hence, but and, and also: common in the old ballads.
9.
10. If; supposing that: as, and you please
11. disadvantage ys, that now childern of gramer-scole conneth no more Frensch than can here lift [their left] heele, & that is harm for ham [them] & a [if they] scholle passe the se, & trauayle in strange londes.
12. often with added if (whence mod. dial. an if, nif, if). hence, but and if, but if.
13. A prefix in middle english and anglo-saxon, represented in modern english by an- in answer, a- in along, and (mixed with original on-) by on- in onset, etc.
2. connective: A word connecting a word, phrase, clause, or sentence with that which precedes it: a colorless particle without an exact synonym in english, but expressed approximately by ‘with, along with, together with, besides, also, moreover,’ the elements connected being grammatically coördinate.
3. when many words, phrases, clauses, or sentences are connected, the connective is now generally omitted before all except the last, unless retained for rhetorical effect. the connected elements are sometimes identical, expressing continuous repetition, either definitely, as, to walk two and two; or indefinitely, as, for ever and ever, to wait years and years.
4. the repetition often implies a difference of quality under the same name; as, there are deacons and deacons (that is, according to the proverb, “there's odds in deacons”); there are novels and novels (that is, all sorts of novels). to make the connection distinctly inclusive, the term both precedes the first member: as, both in england and in france. for this, by a latinism, and … and has been sometimes used in poetry (latin and french et … el).
5. Introductive: in continuation of a previous sentence expressed, implied, or understood.
6. in this use, especially in continuation of the statement implied by assent to a previous question. the continuation may mark surprise, incredulity, indignation, etc.: as, and shall I see him again? and you dare thus address me?
7. adverbial: also; even.
8. hence, but and, and also: common in the old ballads.
9.
10. If; supposing that: as, and you please
11. disadvantage ys, that now childern of gramer-scole conneth no more Frensch than can here lift [their left] heele, & that is harm for ham [them] & a [if they] scholle passe the se, & trauayle in strange londes.
12. often with added if (whence mod. dial. an if, nif, if). hence, but and if, but if.
13. A prefix in middle english and anglo-saxon, represented in modern english by an- in answer, a- in along, and (mixed with original on-) by on- in onset, etc.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia