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nautical

İngilizce - Türkçe

sıklık sırası: 20029

NAUTICAL = ['no: tikıl] adjective
gemicilik/deniz/denizcilikle ilgili * eşanlamlı : marine, maritime, naval
* nautical mile = deniz mili

NAUTICAL
Nautical miles: A unit of measurement used primarily in air and marine navigation, equivalent to one minute of latitude, approximately 1.15 statute miles.
Nautical chart: A specialized map or graphic representation used by sailors, navigators, and mariners for marine navigation, depicting water depths, coastlines, hazards, and other essential information.
Nautical navigation: The art and science of determining and controlling the movement of ships or vessels on water, involving the use of charts, instruments, and navigational techniques.
Nautical equipment: Specialized tools, devices, and instruments used aboard ships or vessels for navigation, safety, communication, and operation.
Nautical terms: Vocabulary, terminology, or jargon specific to maritime or naval activities, used by sailors, navigators, and maritime professionals.
Nautical adventure: A voyage or journey undertaken by sea, often involving exploration, discovery, or travel across oceans, seas, or waterways.
Nautical history: The study or exploration of past events, developments, and activities related to maritime exploration, trade, warfare, and culture.
Nautical school: An educational institution or academy specializing in training individuals for careers in the maritime industry, including navigation, seamanship, and marine engineering.
Nautical charts: Specialized maps or graphical representations used by mariners and navigators for planning routes, avoiding hazards, and safely navigating waters.
Nautical compass: A navigational instrument used by sailors and navigators to determine direction relative to the Earth's magnetic poles, essential for maritime navigation.
Nautical traditions: Customs, practices, or rituals observed by sailors, mariners, or maritime communities, often passed down through generations and associated with seafaring culture.
Nautical vessel: A ship, boat, or craft designed for navigation on water, including commercial vessels, naval ships, fishing boats, and pleasure craft.
Nautical expedition: A planned journey or voyage undertaken for exploration, research, discovery, or specific maritime objectives, often involving specialized equipment and expertise.
Nautical instrument: A device or tool used by sailors, navigators, or mariners for navigation, measurement, observation, or communication aboard ships or vessels.
Nautical engineering: The branch of engineering focused on the design, construction, operation, and maintenance of ships, vessels, and maritime structures.
Nautical safety: Practices, protocols, and measures implemented aboard ships or vessels to ensure the well-being, security, and protection of passengers, crew, and cargo.
Nautical charts: Maps specifically designed for maritime navigation, providing detailed information on water depths, currents, hazards, and navigational aids.
Nautical compass: A magnetic or gyroscopic instrument used for determining direction at sea, vital for navigation and orientation aboard ships or vessels.
Nautical traditions: Customs, rituals, or practices observed within maritime communities, reflecting seafaring culture, history, and values.
Nautical vessel: Any watercraft designed for maritime navigation, including ships, boats, yachts, submarines, or other floating structures used for transportation, exploration, or recreation.
Nautical exploration: The act or process of investigating, discovering, or mapping new maritime routes, territories, or resources, often associated with historical or scientific expeditions.
Nautical technology: Advanced equipment, tools, and systems used in maritime operations, navigation, communication, and safety aboard ships or vessels.
Nautical academy: An educational institution or training center specializing in maritime studies, navigation, seamanship, marine engineering, and related disciplines.
Nautical regulations: Rules, guidelines, or laws governing maritime activities, operations, and safety measures enforced by maritime authorities or governing bodies.
Nautical challenges: Difficulties, obstacles, or risks encountered during maritime operations, voyages, expeditions, or activities at sea.
Nautical expertise: Specialized knowledge, skills, and experience related to maritime operations, navigation, seamanship, and marine technologies.
Nautical heritage: The historical, cultural, and traditional aspects of seafaring communities, including customs, practices, artifacts, and landmarks associated with maritime history.
Nautical adventure: A voyage or journey undertaken for exploration, discovery, recreation, or specific maritime objectives, often involving challenges, risks, or exploration of uncharted waters.
Nautical craftsmanship: The skill, artistry, and expertise involved in designing, building, or repairing ships, boats, and maritime structures using traditional or modern techniques.
Nautical exploration: The systematic investigation, mapping, or discovery of new maritime routes, territories, resources, or scientific phenomena, often associated with historical voyages of discovery.
Nautical expertise: Specialized knowledge, skills, and competencies required for maritime professions, including navigation, seamanship, marine engineering, and maritime law.
Nautical regulations: Legal frameworks, rules, or standards governing maritime activities, operations, safety, and environmental protection enforced by maritime authorities or international agreements.
Nautical challenges: Difficulties, obstacles, or risks encountered during maritime operations, expeditions, voyages, or activities at sea, requiring skill, experience, and resourcefulness to overcome.
Nautical heritage: The cultural, historical, and traditional aspects of seafaring communities, including customs, practices, artifacts, literature, and landmarks associated with maritime history and culture.
Nautical exploration: The systematic investigation, discovery, or mapping of new maritime routes, territories, resources, scientific phenomena, or historical sites, often associated with exploratory voyages.
Nautical craftsmanship: The art, skill, and expertise involved in designing, constructing, repairing, or restoring ships, boats, and maritime structures using traditional or modern techniques and materials.
Nautical navigation: The science, art, and practice of determining and controlling the movement of ships or vessels on water, involving the use of charts, instruments, celestial navigation, and electronic systems.
Nautical traditions: Customs, rituals, or practices observed by sailors, mariners, or maritime communities, reflecting seafaring culture, values, beliefs, and historical practices.
Nautical vessel: A watercraft designed for navigation on water, including ships, boats, yachts, submarines, or other floating structures used for transportation, exploration, recreation, or research.
Nautical history: The study, exploration, or documentation of past events, developments, activities, and cultures related to maritime exploration, trade, warfare, navigation, and seafaring communities.
Nautical safety: The practices, protocols, measures, and equipment implemented aboard ships or vessels to ensure the well-being, security, and protection of passengers, crew, cargo, and the marine environment.
Nautical exploration: The systematic investigation, mapping, or discovery of new maritime routes, territories, resources, or scientific phenomena, often associated with historical voyages of exploration, discovery, or colonization.
Nautical expertise: Specialized knowledge, skills, and competencies required for maritime professions, including navigation, seamanship, marine engineering, maritime law, safety, and environmental stewardship.
Nautical regulations: Legal frameworks, rules, standards, or guidelines governing maritime activities, operations, safety, environmental protection, and international cooperation enforced by maritime authorities, organizations, or treaties.
Nautical challenges: Difficulties, obstacles, or risks encountered during maritime operations, expeditions, voyages, or activities at sea, requiring skill, experience, resourcefulness, and teamwork to navigate, mitigate, or overcome.
Nautical heritage: The cultural, historical, and traditional aspects of seafaring communities, including customs, practices, rituals, artifacts, literature, architecture, and landmarks associated with maritime history, exploration, and culture.
Nautical craftsmanship: The art, skill, and expertise involved in designing, constructing, repairing, or restoring ships, boats, maritime structures, navigational instruments, and other seafaring equipment using traditional or modern techniques, materials, and technologies.
Nautical navigation: The science, art, and practice of determining and controlling the movement of ships or vessels on water, involving the use of charts, instruments, celestial navigation, electronic systems, and navigational aids.
Nautical traditions: Customs, rituals, practices, or ceremonies observed by sailors, mariners, or maritime communities, reflecting seafaring culture, values, beliefs, superstitions, and historical practices passed down through generations.
Nautical vessel: Any watercraft designed, built, or operated for maritime navigation, transportation, exploration, research, recreation, or commercial activities, including ships, boats, yachts, submarines, and other specialized vessels.
Nautical history: The academic discipline, field of study, or research area focused on exploring, documenting, analyzing, and interpreting past events, developments, activities, and cultures related to maritime exploration, trade, warfare, navigation, shipbuilding, and seafaring communities.
Nautical safety: The comprehensive approach, practices, protocols, measures, training, equipment, and regulations implemented aboard ships, vessels, or maritime operations to ensure the well-being, security, protection, and environmental stewardship of passengers, crew, cargo, infrastructure, and marine ecosystems.
Nautical exploration: The deliberate, systematic, or scientific investigation, mapping, discovery, surveying, or exploration of new maritime routes, territories, resources, ecosystems, habitats, phenomena, historical sites, or archaeological sites, often involving interdisciplinary research, collaboration, technology, and international cooperation.
Nautical expertise: The specialized, multidisciplinary, or interdisciplinary knowledge, skills, competencies, experience, and expertise required for various maritime professions, roles, or responsibilities, encompassing navigation, seamanship, marine engineering, maritime law, safety management, environmental stewardship, research, education, training, and leadership within the maritime industry, sector, or community.

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