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 Translation for 'cul de sac' from English to Hungarian
NOUN   a cul-de-sac | culs-de-sac / cul-de-sacs
SYNO blind alley | cul | cul de sac | ...
közlek.
zsákutca {noun}
cul-de-sac
Partial Matches
biol.
zsákocska {noun}
sac
anat.
magzatburok {noun}
amniotic sac
EUföld.
Németország {noun}
Germany <.de>
színtánc
balettkar {noun}
corps de ballet
színtánc
balettcsoport {noun}
corps de ballet
föld.
Santiago de Chile {noun}
Santiago de Chile
gasztr.
macskanyelv {noun} [édesség]
langue de chat
gasztr.
libamájpástétom {noun}
pâté de foie gras
jog
öngyilkosság {noun}
felo de se [legal Latin] [archaic]
10 translations
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Usage Examples English
  • It is located in the Cul-de-Sac Depression with an area of 170 km2.
  • So he's an artist really in a cul-de-sac." Klimt's work had a strong influence on the paintings of Egon Schiele, with whom he would collaborate to found the "Kunsthalle" (Hall of Art) in 1917, to try to keep local artists from going abroad.
  • His birthplace, Wisbech, has two memorials to him. A cul-de-sac was named in his honour Godwin Close, and a wall plaque adorns a building adjacent to the Angles Theatre in Alexandra Road.
  • In one study, cul-de-sac networks appeared to be much safer than grid networks, by nearly three to one.
  • A seven house cul-de-sac known as Tailwind Cir now exists where the hangars used to stand while the remaining airport property is now conservation land known as Leland Wild.

  • Culdesac was named from its location at the end of a railroad line, i.e., a cul de sac.
  • Almost all of the remaining street network in Bella Vista is laid out using a street hierarchy typical of large residential subdivisions, with hundreds of cul-de-sac streets.
  • The term "cecum" comes from Latin "(intestinum) caecum", literally 'blind intestine', in the sense 'blind gut' or 'cul de sac'.
  • Richard Thompson illustrated numerous feature articles in "The Washington Post" before creating his "Cul de Sac" comic strip.
  • Groups such as Cul de Sac, Tortoise, Labradford, Bowery Electric and Stars of the Lid are cited as founders of a distinctly American post-rock movement.

  • It includes suburban style tract houses with cul-de-sac courts and small yards.
  • Between 1682 and 1684, Downing built the cul-de-sac of two-storey townhouses with coach-houses, stables and views of St James's Park.
  • It was labelled Britain's busiest cul-de-sac. By November 1995, they had been almost eliminated.
  • The word "shit" also appears in the British film "Cul-de-sac" (1966), which might pre-date John Cleese's use.
  • In 2008, he provided a foreword for the first book collection of Richard Thompson's "Cul de Sac" comic strip.

  • "Cul-de-sac" (1966) is a bleak nihilist tragicomedy filmed on location in .
  • The comic strip "Cul de Sac" includes a strip-within-the-strip, "Little Neuro", a parody of Little Nemo. Neuro is a little boy who hardly ever leaves his bed.
  • An international rail line across the Central Pyrenees linking Zaragoza and the French city of Pau through a tunnel existed in the past; however, an accident in the French part destroyed a stretch of the railroad in 1970 and the Canfranc Station has been a cul-de-sac since then.
  • The Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey writes that the name Bag End is a direct translation of the French "cul-de-sac" ("bottom of [...] bag"), something that he calls "a silly phrase...
  • One of the main objectives of the plan was to allow the free flow of automobile traffic, the plan included lanes of traffic in a north–south direction (seven for each direction) for the Monumental Axis and three arterials (the W3, the Eixo and the L2) for the residential Axis; the cul-de-sac access roads of the superblocks were planned to be the end of the main flow of traffic.

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    © dict.cc Hungarian-English dictionary 2024
    Contains translations by TU Chemnitz and Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (German-English only).
    Links to this dictionary or to individual translations are very welcome!