English to Turkish Dictionary borrow

borrow

ödünç almak
definition
verb
he had borrowed a car from one of his colleagues
take and use (something that belongs to someone else) with the intention of returning it.
noun
I played the round in the company of an ancient caddie, unusually talkative for a Scot, who shaped the sightlines of the present to the borrow of the past.
a slope or other irregularity on a golf course that must be compensated for when playing a shot.
translation of 'borrow'
verb
borç almak,
alıntı yapmak,
almak,
ödünç almak
example
I played the round in the company of an ancient caddie, unusually talkative for a Scot, who shaped the sightlines of the present to the 'borrow' of the past.
By joining your local lending library, you can 'borrow' several books at a time without charge, unless you return them late and get fined.
When Woods was 6 feet left of the pin on 13 I believe this morning, it was "a little too much 'borrow' ".
After breakfast I had a long shower then we walked over the hill so that i could 'borrow' books.
Bizarrely, it is possible, in some instances, to 'borrow' money from your bank to buy shares and finance the loan with the dividends generated from that investment.
Librarian Maureen Cusack can obtain books for anyone wishing to 'borrow' books which are not available in the library.
My family will visit the library often to 'borrow' new books to read together.
designers consistently 'borrow' from the styles of preceding generations
The best he could do was 'borrow' concepts and words from other disciplines.
This will be an opportunity for people of all ages to 'borrow' books and spend time in the Library during opening hours.
When her studies took her into one of my fields, heraldry, she came to 'borrow' books from my library.
Sixty-eight, seventy-eight, eighty-eight then 'borrow' the three.
Whereas some artists cop out and simply 'borrow' a hook from an old jazz or blues record then slap a techno/trip-hop beat on it, Tobin's approach is more subtle and complex.
Can't they just 'borrow' from the bank?
Space is all very well, in the right place, but people come to libraries mainly to 'borrow' books.
To encourage even more children to 'borrow' books, I organized a class library in a loft above the housekeeping area, near the book display.
If we continue the investigation we have: From this point on, we have to 'borrow' a ten in order to make the ‘units’ have the 2 digits needed for the next Fibonacci number.
Of these states 26 are borrowers, and 21 do not 'borrow' from the Bank.
lower interest rates will make it cheaper for individuals to 'borrow'
Meanwhile, retired dairy farmer Ted Dibble has vowed to 'borrow' a horse and return to the sport if the Government's anti-hunting proposal becomes law.
I'll just 'borrow' some clothes and return them later.
Companies need to 'borrow' enormous sums of money to buy back their shares in the market.
But at Storr his great achievement has been to 'borrow' the landscape and return it to us in an entirely new light.
to meet this deficit the government has to 'borrow' money
She said one man called in complaining that he is jobless, cannot 'borrow' money from banks, relatives and friends, and has no method to clear his debts.
He said the private sector was failing to buy maize from farmers because of the floor price which they could not meet and high interest rates the banks charged to 'borrow' money.
Some farmers will 'borrow' with the intention of never paying back while others will simply use the money for luxurious life.
This hole provides a challenge: the right is nothing but trouble and the huge green has both slope and 'borrow' to conclude a fine golf hole.
The customer can 'borrow' and repay as often as necessary as long as the balance outstanding doesn't exceed the credit limit.
No, but most shops will give you a healthy discount and a lot of designers are happy to let me 'borrow' because I return them in the condition I received them.
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