matrak şey

listen to the pronunciation of matrak şey
Turkish - English
gas
To talk, chat
A hob on a gas cooker

She turned the gas on, put the potatoes on, then lit the oven.

Gasoline; a derivative of petroleum used as fuel
A fastball

The closer threw him nothing but gas.

It gives a brilliant light when burned, and is the common gas used for illuminating purposes
in distinction from vapors, as steam, which become liquid on a reduction of temperature
a fluid having neither independent shape nor volume, but tending to expand indefinitely The word is often used to denote anesthetics, combustibles (gasoline), poisonous materials, etc , whether liquid or solids at ordinary temperatures
An aëriform fluid; a term used at first by chemists as synonymous with air, but since restricted to fluids supposed to be permanently elastic, as oxygen, hydrogen, etc
Laughing gas
Methane or other waste gases trapped in ones belly as a result of the digestive process. My tummy hurts so bad, I have gas
A state of matter in which the particles are widely spaced
To emit gas
Gas is a gas used for medical purposes, for example to make patients feel less pain or go to sleep during an operation. an anaesthetic gas used by many dentists
Gas is a substance like air that is neither liquid nor solid and burns easily. It is used as a fuel for cooking and heating. Coal is actually cheaper than gas Shell signed a contract to develop oil and gas reserves near Archangel
To singe, as in a gas flame, so as to remove loose fibers; as, to gas thread
a volatile flammable mixture of hydrocarbons (hexane and heptane and octane etc ) derived from petroleum; used mainly as a fuel in internal-combustion engines
{f} fill with gas, supply with gas; poison with gas or fumes; talk idly or falsely (Slang)
1% that of liquids. Gas is very compressible but tends to expand indefinitely, and it fills any container. A small change in temperature or pressure produces a substantial change in its volume; these relationships are expressed as equations in the gas laws. The kinetic theory of gases, developed in the 19th century, describes gases as assemblages of tiny particles (atoms or molecules) in constant motion and contributed much to an understanding of their behaviour. The term gas can also mean gasoline, natural gas, or the anesthetic nitrous oxide. See also solid. marsh gas gas chromatography gas laws gas reservoir intestinal gas natural gas nerve gas laughing gas noble gas inert gas perfect gas ideal gas tear gas kinetic theory of gases
The state of matter which has neither independent shape or volume A gas expands to entirely fill its container
A humorous event or person
matrak şey
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