werewolf

listen to the pronunciation of werewolf
Englisch - Türkisch
{ç} kurt şekline girmiş insan
kurt şekline girebilen kimse
kurtadam
kurt adam

Ben bir kurt adam olmasam beni hala sever misin? - Would you still love me if I wasn't a werewolf?

Mary Tom'un cadılar bayramı partisinde olmadığını düşündü ama aslında o onu kurt adam maskesinin arkasından gizlice izliyordu. - Mary thought that Tom wasn't at the Halloween party, but in fact he was secretly observing her from behind his werewolf mask.

(isim) kurt adam
{ç} were.wolves (wir'wûlvz) i., mit
werewolves
kurtadam

Bu gece ateşböcekleri ve yarasalar ve kurtadamlara aittir. - This night belongs to the fireflies and the bats—and the werewolves.

werewolves
werewolfs
werwolf
(isim) kurt adam
werwolf
{i} kurt adam
Englisch - Englisch
A person who is transformed or can transform into a wolf or a wolflike human; often said to transform during a full moon
Gaur
A person transformed into a wolf in form and appetite, either temporarily or permanently, whether by supernatural influences, by witchcraft, or voluntarily; a lycanthrope
{i} wolf-man, man who turns into a wolf when the moon is full (Folklore)
From germanic wer = man, human and wulf = wolf The original therianthrope of Middle Europe
a monster able to change appearance from human to wolf
Belief in werewolves, formerly general, is not now extinct
In stories and films, a werewolf is a person who changes into a wolf. werewolves a person who, in stories, changes into a wolf every month when the moon is full. In European folklore, a man who changes into a wolf at night and devours animals, people, or corpses, returning to human form by day. Some werewolves are thought to change shape at will; others, who inherited the condition or acquired it by being bitten by a werewolf, are transformed involuntarily under the influence of a full moon. Belief in werewolves is found throughout the world and was especially common in 16th-century France. Humans who believe they are wolves suffer from a mental disorder called lycanthropy
A person who is transformed into a wolf or a wolflike human when there is a full moon
(Old English werewulf,"man-wolf") According to an ancient a man who is transformed, or who transforms himself, into a wolf in nature and appearance The werewolf, sometimes transformed under the influence of a full moon, roams about at night, devouring infants or corpses Stories of such transformations are given in the works of several classical writers and the superstition was common throughout Europe in late medieval times, when many men were accused and convicted of being werewolves The term lycanthropy refers to the delusion that one has become a wolf
A person transformed into a wolf or capable of assuming the form of a wolf
Anglican hymn writer and brother of John Wesley, founder of Methodism
werewolves
plural of werewolf
werwolf
{i} wolf-man, man who turns into a wolf when the moon is full (Folklore)
werewolf

    Silbentrennung

    were·wolf

    Türkische aussprache

    werwûlf

    Aussprache

    /ˈwerˌwo͝olf/ /ˈwɛrˌwʊlf/

    Etymologie

    [ 'wir-"wulf, 'wer-, 'w&r- ] (noun.) before 12th century. Late Old English werewulf, from wer (“man”) + wulf (“wolf”). Other theories have been suggested; see Werewolf: Etymology. Cognate to garou in French loup-garou (“werewolf”), from Old French warous, from Frankish wari wulf.
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