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单词 Anatolian
释义

Definition of Anatolian in English:

Anatolian

adjectiveanəˈtəʊlɪənˌænəˈtoʊliən
  • Relating to Anatolia, its inhabitants, or their ancient languages.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Turkey's Anatolian heartland consists of a lot of mountains, and river valleys all traveling in unhelpful directions.
    • More than one million children aged six to 17 work to contribute to the family income in Turkey, the state-controlled Anatolian news agency said yesterday.
    • If I had started the narrative with the Anatolian upsurge in Greece… the book would have been 5,800 pages long - if I was concise.
    • However, the Ulukisla Basin is exceptionally well exposed and can be taken as representative of the Early Tertiary central Anatolian basins.
    • Snowy vistas of Istanbul alternate with stunning Anatolian landscapes as attention shifts from one man to the other.
    • The harsh environment of the Anatolian mountains above Turkey's southern coast traditionally takes a high toll on competitors.
    • Employing a fluent Anatolian dialect and using minimum force Barossa extracts a vital nugget of information from the somewhat stubborn barber.
    • In response, a local organization called the Cheetah Conservation Fund began breeding Anatolian shepherds as livestock guard dogs and giving them to farmers.
    • The dogs, Anatolian shepherds, live with the livestock on the range and protect them from cheetahs and leopards.
    • In one piece, she uses a traditional Anatolian design; in another, a pattern revealing shoes, gloves and handbags.
    • One million Turkish Armenians were slaughtered, while the other million survivors were cast from their Anatolian homeland into a global diaspora that remains to this day.
    • The emergence of an alternative economy, especially of Anatolian origin, and new political centers and cultural spheres in the last two decades has brought the country to an irrevocable point.
    • His gentle irony acts on her like Kinglake's spurs on jaded Eastern hirelings, and like the accounts of travelers past on our self-styled Anatolian riders.
    • Since 1994 the Livestock Guarding Dog Program has trained more than 200 Anatolian shepherds to protect farmed sheep and goats in Namibia.
    • This latter angle lies at a critical juncture where the extruding Anatolian collage is impinging into the extensional tectonic regime of western Turkey produced by the southward migration of the Hellenic arc trench system.
    • In ‘Head On’ it's the rebellion of a German Turkish woman who no longer fits either the European or the Anatolian norm.
    • When the snows melted and he had recovered his strength they crossed the Anatolian plateau and reached Ankara, the Turkish capital.
    • Cold sheep's head has become so popular that you will find it being sold on street corners and at railway stations in every Anatolian town.
    • Some animal carpets in fifteenth-century Italian paintings are related to surviving Anatolian examples.
    • The Anatolian news agency reported Cay as saying that Bulgarian-Turkish relations, which have been developing very well lately, are an important factor for security on the Balkans and in Eastern Europe.
nounanəˈtəʊlɪənˌænəˈtoʊliən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Anatolia.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They were Christians, Buddhists, Jews, Manicheans, pagans, nomads, shamanists, and animists as well, and, ethnically speaking, Seljuks, Khazars, Bulgars, Timurids, Mongols, Anatolians and Chinese.
    • To the Phoenicians He was Adoni, to the Anatolians He was Attis, to the Sumerians Damuzi.
    • After heavy losses in the Balkans, Abdul Hamid was not averse to encouraging a kind of Ottomanism defined by Islam rather than constitutional rights, with Turkish Anatolians and the Arabs as its main proponents.
    • Indeed he argues that the Republic is a gocmen regime in which the elite are cut off from their own roots and tradition, and have become more Turkish than the Anatolians (Turks or otherwise).
  • 2mass noun An extinct group of ancient languages constituting a branch of the Indo-European language family and including Hittite, Luwian, Lydian, and Lycian.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Modern Turkish is descended from Old Anatolian, the language brought to Asia Minor by the Seljuk Turks in the 11th century.
    • Some unexplained differences and another parallel branch, Anatolian, also allow many to discuss the (hypothetical) ancestors of this language.
    • There will also be classes with a specific language or language-family orientation, including African American English, Anatolian, Irish, Japanese, and Salish.

Rhymes

Aeolian, Eolian, Jolyon, Mongolian, napoleon, simoleon
 
 

Definition of Anatolian in US English:

Anatolian

adjectiveˌanəˈtōlēənˌænəˈtoʊliən
  • Relating to Anatolia, its inhabitants, or their ancient languages.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Employing a fluent Anatolian dialect and using minimum force Barossa extracts a vital nugget of information from the somewhat stubborn barber.
    • Cold sheep's head has become so popular that you will find it being sold on street corners and at railway stations in every Anatolian town.
    • One million Turkish Armenians were slaughtered, while the other million survivors were cast from their Anatolian homeland into a global diaspora that remains to this day.
    • In response, a local organization called the Cheetah Conservation Fund began breeding Anatolian shepherds as livestock guard dogs and giving them to farmers.
    • Since 1994 the Livestock Guarding Dog Program has trained more than 200 Anatolian shepherds to protect farmed sheep and goats in Namibia.
    • The harsh environment of the Anatolian mountains above Turkey's southern coast traditionally takes a high toll on competitors.
    • When the snows melted and he had recovered his strength they crossed the Anatolian plateau and reached Ankara, the Turkish capital.
    • Some animal carpets in fifteenth-century Italian paintings are related to surviving Anatolian examples.
    • However, the Ulukisla Basin is exceptionally well exposed and can be taken as representative of the Early Tertiary central Anatolian basins.
    • Turkey's Anatolian heartland consists of a lot of mountains, and river valleys all traveling in unhelpful directions.
    • The emergence of an alternative economy, especially of Anatolian origin, and new political centers and cultural spheres in the last two decades has brought the country to an irrevocable point.
    • If I had started the narrative with the Anatolian upsurge in Greece… the book would have been 5,800 pages long - if I was concise.
    • In ‘Head On’ it's the rebellion of a German Turkish woman who no longer fits either the European or the Anatolian norm.
    • The dogs, Anatolian shepherds, live with the livestock on the range and protect them from cheetahs and leopards.
    • Snowy vistas of Istanbul alternate with stunning Anatolian landscapes as attention shifts from one man to the other.
    • This latter angle lies at a critical juncture where the extruding Anatolian collage is impinging into the extensional tectonic regime of western Turkey produced by the southward migration of the Hellenic arc trench system.
    • In one piece, she uses a traditional Anatolian design; in another, a pattern revealing shoes, gloves and handbags.
    • His gentle irony acts on her like Kinglake's spurs on jaded Eastern hirelings, and like the accounts of travelers past on our self-styled Anatolian riders.
    • The Anatolian news agency reported Cay as saying that Bulgarian-Turkish relations, which have been developing very well lately, are an important factor for security on the Balkans and in Eastern Europe.
    • More than one million children aged six to 17 work to contribute to the family income in Turkey, the state-controlled Anatolian news agency said yesterday.
nounˌanəˈtōlēənˌænəˈtoʊliən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Anatolia.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • To the Phoenicians He was Adoni, to the Anatolians He was Attis, to the Sumerians Damuzi.
    • Indeed he argues that the Republic is a gocmen regime in which the elite are cut off from their own roots and tradition, and have become more Turkish than the Anatolians (Turks or otherwise).
    • They were Christians, Buddhists, Jews, Manicheans, pagans, nomads, shamanists, and animists as well, and, ethnically speaking, Seljuks, Khazars, Bulgars, Timurids, Mongols, Anatolians and Chinese.
    • After heavy losses in the Balkans, Abdul Hamid was not averse to encouraging a kind of Ottomanism defined by Islam rather than constitutional rights, with Turkish Anatolians and the Arabs as its main proponents.
  • 2An extinct group of ancient languages constituting a branch of the Indo-European language family and including Hittite, Luwian, Lydian, and Lycian.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Some unexplained differences and another parallel branch, Anatolian, also allow many to discuss the (hypothetical) ancestors of this language.
    • There will also be classes with a specific language or language-family orientation, including African American English, Anatolian, Irish, Japanese, and Salish.
    • Modern Turkish is descended from Old Anatolian, the language brought to Asia Minor by the Seljuk Turks in the 11th century.
 
 
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更新时间:2025/2/5 3:23:34