brim

suomi-englanti sanakirja

brim englannista suomeksi

  1. huokua, uhkua

  2. reuna

  3. lieri

  4. täyttää piripintaan

  1. laita, reuna

  2. nokka, reuna

  3. täyttää (piripintaan)">täyttää (piripintaan), kaataa täyteen">kaataa täyteen

  4. olla täynnä">olla täynnä, pursua

  5. Substantiivi

brim englanniksi

  1. Originally, a border or edge of a sea, a river, or other of water; now, any border or edge.

  2. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)

  3. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)|footer=This could mean “edge” in the sense of the horizon, or be a use of (noncog).

  4. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene), / And ſavv his carriage paſt that perill vvell, / His heart vvith vengeaunce invvardly did ſvvell, / And forth at laſt did breake in ſpeaches ſharpe and fell.

  5. (RQ:Gerard Herball) and brimmes of the ſea, vvhere there is no earth to be ſeene, but ſande and rovvling pebble ſtones, vvhich thoſe that dvvell neere the ſea do call Bayche.

  6. (RQ:Gerard Herball)

  7. (RQ:Pliny Holland Historie of the World)|page=236|passage=There is another hearbe of the ſame name, and like in effect, but different in forme from it, (..) If the haire of the eye-lids be once pulled forth, and then the edges or brims be annointed therevvith, it vvill keepe them for ever comming up againe.

  8. (RQ:Fletcher Faithfull Shepheardesse), / Th(quote-gloss)ough the pure ſtreames may be ſeene, (..)

  9. (RQ:Fletcher Faithfull Shepheardesse)

  10. (RQ:Dampier New Voyage)

  11. (RQ:Wordsworth Peter Bell)

  12. (RQ:Tennyson Poems 1842)

  13. (senseid) The topmost lip or rim of a container, or a natural feature shaped like a container.

  14. (ux)

  15. (RQ:John Heywood Proverbs)

  16. (RQ:Shakespeare All's Well)

  17. (RQ:Shakespeare Antony and Cleopatra)

  18. (RQ:Shakespeare Pericles)

  19. (RQ:King James Version)

  20. (RQ:Hannah More Sacred Dramas)

  21. (RQ:Coleridge Remorse)

  22. (RQ:Dante Cary Vision)

  23. (RQ:Tennyson Poems 1833)

  24. (RQ:Goethe B. Taylor Faust)

  25. A projecting rim.

  26. (senseid) That of a hat.

  27. (syn)

  28. (RQ:Shakespeare Venus and Adonis)

  29. (RQ:Boyle Occasional Reflections) Kneeling upon the Ground, he took up vvith his Hat, vvhich by Cocking the Brims he turn'd into a kind of Cup, ſuch a proportion of VVater that he quench'd his Thirſt vvith it; (..)

  30. (RQ:Carlyle Sartor Resartus)

  31. The upper edge or surface of water.

  32. (RQ:Scott Marmion)

  33. The surface of the ground.

  34. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) William Iones,(nb...)|section=folio 11, verso|sectionurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_early-english-books-1475-1640_a-briefe-excellent-and_jones-john-m-d_1574/page/n113/mode/1up|oclc=1204434962|passage=The place, of that fyre vnder the earthe, (..) is not nye the centre of the earth, bicauſe then, it would eaſily bée corrupted, for the earth, is ther moſt pure and therfore, the vertue doth more floriſh, ſo that it is moſt colde, neither is the place of the fyre, vnder the brimme of the Earth, for if it were ther conteyned, it would burne vp the plants, and whatſoeuer is in the face of the ſame, and therfore be concludeth, that it is in the middle hollowneſſes, betwene theſe two extremes, that is, béetwene the centre, ⁊ the face of the earthe, (..)

  35. A brink or edge.

  36. (RQ:Erasmus Newe Testamente) to thinke that God is righteous and iuſte.

  37. (RQ:Milton Of Prelatical Episcopacy)

  38. (RQ:Taylor Great Exemplar)

  39. To fill (a container) to the brim ''(noun (senseno))'', top, or upper edge.

  40. (RQ:Tennyson In Memoriam)

  41. (RQ:Eddison Worm)

  42. To fill (something) fully.

  43. To be full until almost overflowing.

  44. (synonyms)

  45. {{quote-text|en|year=2006|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/11/nyregion/nyregionspecial3/11bush.html|title=New York Times

  46. {{quote-journal|en|date=July 3, 2011

  47. (quote-web)

  48. (rfquote-sense) The sea; ocean; water; flood.

  49. (synonym of); specifically , the (vern) ((taxlink)).

  50. (quote-book)

  51. Of a (l): to mate with (a (l)); to rut.

  52. (RQ:Pliny Holland Historie of the World)

  53. (RQ:Erasmus Bailey Colloquies) Gamos, or the Vnequal Marriage|page=452|passage=Nay, a Country Farmer vvon't ſuffer any Bull to leap a young Covv; nor every Horſe his Mare, nor every Boar to brim his Sovv; tho a Bullock is deſign'd for the Plough, a Horſe for the Cart, and a Svvine for the Kitchen. See novv hovv perverſe the Judgments of Mankind are.

  54. Of a so to be heat; to rut; also, to mate with a boar.

  55. The period when a (l) is ready to mate; a heat, an oestrus, a rut; also, an act of a (l) and sow mating.

  56. (RQ:Guillim Heraldrie) III. Chap(quote-gloss) XIIII.|page=176|passage=You ſhall ſay (..) ''Boare'' (..) goeth to his (..) ''Brymme''.

  57. (synonym of).

  58. An irascible, violent woman.

  59. (quote-book). Book IV.|translator=&91;Bridges (dramatist and parodist)|Thomas Bridges&93;|title=A Burlesque Translation of Homer|location=London|publisher=(...) S. Hooper,(nb...)|year_published=1772|page=134|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_a-burlesque-translation-_1772/page/134/mode/1up|oclc=6837422|passage=Can mortal ſcoundrels thee perplex, / And the great brim of brimſtones vex?

  60. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Messrs. & Davies|Cadell and Davies,(nb...)|section=Act II, scene iv, stanza III|page=37|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=IxxEAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA37|oclc=592000|passage=She rav'd, ſhe abus'd me, as ſplenetic mad; / She's a vixen, a brim; zounds! ſhe's all that is bad.

  61. (l): a projecting rim of a hat

  62. (verbal noun of)

  63. (alt form)

  64. sea, ocean, water

  65. surf; the surface of the sea

  66. (rfv-sense) the edge of the sea or a body of water