rug$71334$ - traduzione in olandese
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Traduzione e analisi delle parole tramite l'intelligenza artificiale ChatGPT

In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

rug$71334$ - traduzione in olandese

TRIBAL RUG WOVEN IN ANATOLIA
Yuruk Rug; Yueruek rug; Yuruk rug

rug      
n. kleed, tapijt; reisdeken
Persian rug         
  • One of the "Salting" group. Wool, silk and metal thread. Safavid period, about 1600.
  • Central medallion of a Qashqai rug, 19th century, with fragmented Herati pattern
  • An Iranian/Persian carpet exhibition in city of [[Hamadan]] in 2015.
  • V&A]]. Inscription at the top of the field close to the border.
  • Naturally dyed wool in a Turkish carpet manufacture
  • Some traditional tools of the craft.
  • [[Persian carpet#Knots]]}}.
  • A Mongol prince studying the Koran. Illustration of Rashid-ad-Din's Gami' at-tawarih. Tabriz (?), 1st quarter of 14th century
  • Shah 'Abbas I. embassy to Venice, by [[Carlo Caliari]], 1595. Doge's palace, Venice
  • Bidjar rug
  • Weaving a carpet from a cartoon, Esfahan, Iran
  • Qashqai rug
  • Hunting Carpet made by Ghiyâth-ud-Din Jâmi, wool, cotton and silk, 1542–1543, [[Museo Poldi Pezzoli]], Milan
  • Detail of the above carpet
  • haf}}. It separates the warps.
  • Safavid [[Kerman]] ‘vase’ carpet fragment, southeast Persia, early 17th century
  • upright
  • Pazyryk Carpet]]. Circa 400 BC. [[Hermitage Museum]]
  • [[Kermanshah]] 'Tree of Life' carpet, 3rd quarter 19th century
  • Persian Safavid period Animal carpet 16th century, [[Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg]]
  • Qashqai]] nomad sisters, weaving a carpet on a floor loom. Near Firuzabad, Iran
  • Qashqai bag front
  • Tiled arch with hunting scenes. Late 17th century, Isfahan/Iran. [[Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe]], Hamburg
  • "Sanguszko carpet", Kirmān, 16/17th century. [[Miho Museum]]
  • Senneh rug
  • Modern Iranian Carpet "Tabriz Lilac", 2010, by Hossein Rezvani
  • A modern gabbeh carpet
  • The Clark 'Sickle-Leaf', vine scroll and palmette carpet, probably Kirman, 17th century
  • Toranj (medallion) – special circular design of Iranian carpets
  • 16th century, the "Schwarzenberg Carpet"
  • The Rothschild Small Silk Medallion Carpet, mid-16th century, [[Museum of Islamic Art, Doha]]
  • S-twist and Z-twist yarns
HANDMADE CARPET FROM IRAN
Hamadan Rugs; Persian rugs; Persian Rug; Middle East rug; Middle Eastern rug; Bidjar rug; Bijar rug; Bidjar carpet; Kashan rug; Persian Carpet; Bijar Carpet; Persian rug; Persian Carpets; Kashan carpet; Kashan Carpet; Persian Rugs; Iranian carpet; Antique Rugs; Persian carpets; Farsh; Qāli; Iranian carpets; Mashhad rug; Mashhad carpet; Carpet trade in Iran
Perzisch tapijt
oriental rug         
  • kilim motif]], for protection (3 examples)
  • Azerbaijani woman makes a carpet. Early 20th century
  • Naturally dyed wool in a Turkish carpet manufacture
  • Colophon portrait from the Khamsa of Nizami - BL Or. MS 12208 f. 325v
  • Schematic depiction of corner articulations in Oriental rugs
  • Advertisement by [[Eugène Grasset]], c. 1891
  • Two Turkmen men standing on a ''Halı'' main carpet with Tekke göl, in front of a [[yurt]]. (1905-1915)
  • Handwoven Bokhara rug made in South Africa
  • Hans Holbein the Younger - The Ambassadors, 1533 ([[National Gallery, London]]), with a "large pattern Holbein" carpet
  • Back side of a [[Qom rug]] with very high knot density
  • rugs made in Anatolia]].
  • Persian miniature by Mir Sayyid Ali, circa 1540. [[British Museum]], London
  • Noraduz]], [[Armenia]]
  • Qashqai]] nomad sisters, weaving a carpet on a floor loom. Near Firuzabad, Iran
  • Pazyryk Carpet]], circa 400 BC.
  • Shirvan Prayer rug with a rectangular niche, depicting inwoven hands and an ornament representing the mosque lamp
  • Loulan]], Xinjiang province, China, dated to 3rd-4th century AD. [[British Museum]], London
  • The Baillet-Latour Mamluk Carpet
  • Cultural interactions in traditional carpet production
  • Unknown, India - Fragment of a Saf Carpet
  • [[Lotto carpet]] with "kufic" border, 16th century
  • Qashqaï]] women washing wool in the spring of Sarab Bahram (Cheshm-e Sarab Bahram), region of Noorabad, [[Fārs]] province, [[Iran]]
  • S-twist and Z-twist yarns
  • Illustration from the [[Baburnama]]: Babur receives a courtier. Farrukh Baig, Mughal dynasty, 1589
TYPE OF TEXTILE
Oriental rugs; Oriental Carpet; Oriental carpets; Chinese rug; Chinese carpet; Oriental carpet; Islamic carpet; South African oriental rugs
oosters tapijt

Definizione

rug
n.
1) to weave a rug
2) to clean; shampoo; vacuum a rug
3) a scatter, throw; shag rug

Wikipedia

Yürük rug

A Yürük rug is a traditional tribal rug woven in Anatolia by the Yörüks, a Turkish ethnic subgroup.

Yürük rugs have a long shaggy pile, tied with Ghiordes knots. The warp and the filler (the weft between the knots) is generally composed of sheep's wool or goat hair. The rugs have large geometric motifs in bright colors on a dark brown background; the colors are often described as brilliant. The sides of the rugs are either selvaged, frequently with goat hair, or overcast with colored yarn, and the ends have a braided fringe.

The design of Yürük rugs resembles rugs of the Kazak region more than Anatolia. The use of a latch hook is also shared with Kazak rugs. Yürük rugs tend to be more loosely woven than other rugs from Anatolia in that there are more rows of filler between the knots.

According to Encyclopedia Britannica, there is a distinction between Yürük rugs from eastern and western Anatolia. The rugs from western Anatolia traditionally have diagonal patterns in brick red and dark blue, and highlights in ivory. These rugs are sometimes confused with Baluchi rugs, a type of Afghan rug. Eastern Anatolian Yürük rugs have hexagonal and lozenge patterns with offset knots that produce diagonal, rather than vertical, rows.