Examples of using Mapped in English and their translations into Turkish
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
Mapped Colors.
Mine tunnels mapped.
Unmapped space… mapped.
Their ancestors mapped the stars.
Look- there's a new one, not mapped.
People also translate
Mapped out the location in sketches.
I got three-quarters of this camp mapped.
Mapped and ready. Erlik wants the bloodlines.
Okay, I have got Coco's death memory mapped.
Me and Ben mapped the dome on day one.
Erlik wants the bloodlines mapped and ready.
So we mapped a logical trajectory off the coast.
The gene that encodes GLUT4 was cloned and mapped in 1989.
Everyone on the project mapped their DNA into the database.
Making a shorthand between thinking and doing. Your movements become mapped in the brain.
The website mapped a three-meter by three-meter square inside the main house.
We were to travel by way of secured route, mapped by Captain Rifai.
He and I mapped out the tunnel, the passageway between both worlds.
Look… we separated her DNA and mapped it using gel electrophoresis.
First mapped from U.S. Navy Operation Highjump aerial photographs taken in February 1947.
I'm having the face-up side of the pill mapped through an atomic force microscope.
After Kosok left in 1948, after his second study period in Peru,Reiche continued the work and mapped the area.
With over 300 miles of mapped passages, they're the longest cave system in the world.
You can see Bridget in Africa who just mapped a road in Senegal.
Your movements become mapped in the brain, making a shorthand between thinking and doing.
For thousands of years, Jerusalem had been shaped and mapped by the religions of its rulers.
But a doctor and a clergyman mapped out the victims, and this was the very first epidemiological study.
But now… mapped out in the finest print on watermarked paper were his innermost secrets so perverse… so shocking I never could have dreamt them up.
A later satellite, the Solar Mesosphere Explorer, mapped the distribution of the clouds between 1981 and 1986 with its ultraviolet spectrometer.
Ptolemy of Alexandria mapped the stars in Books VII and VIII of his Almagest, in which he used Sirius as the location for the globe's central meridian.