mess

suomi-englanti sanakirja

mess englannista suomeksi

  1. sekamelska

  2. paljon

  3. sotku

  4. ateria

  5. aterioida

  6. sotkea

  7. ruoka

  8. messi

  1. sotku

  2. Verbi

  3. Substantiivi

mess englanniksi

  1. (senseid) a thing or group of things in a disagreeable, disorganised, or dirty state; hence a bad situation

  2. 2006 Feb. 3, Graham Linehan, (w), Season 1, Episode 4:

  3. No, look, I know that the place looks like a bit of a mess but it's actually a very delicate ecosystem. Everything is connected. It's like the rainforest. You change one thing, even the tiniest bit, and the whooole rainforest dies. You don't want the rainforest to ''die'', do ya?

    (syn)

    (ux)

  4. a large quantity or number

  5. (quote-av)

  6. a sufficient quantity of food for a meal

  7. excrement.

  8. a person in a state of (especially emotional) turmoil or disarray; an emotional wreck

  9. (quote-song)|title=According to You|author=Andrew Frampton; Steve Diamond|text=I'm a mess in a dress, can't show up on time even if it would save my life. According to you.

  10. To make untidy or dirty.

  11. To make soiled by defecating.

  12. (quote-book)

  13. To make soiled by ejaculating.

  14. To throw into disorder or to ruin.

  15. Charles Dickens, quoted in: 1875, John Forster, ''The Life of Charles Dickens''

  16. Yet I was not sorry that the creature found the loophole for escape. The officers had taken him illegally without any warrant; and really they messed it all through, quite facetiously.
  17. To interfere.

  18. (senseid) Mass; a church service.

  19. (senseid) A quantity of food set on a table at one time; provision of food for a person or party for one meal; also, the food given to an animal at one time.

  20. c. 1555, (w), ''letter to one in prison for the profession of the Gospel''

  21. a mess of pottage
  22. (RQ:Milton Poems)

  23. {{quote-text|en|year=1903|author=Henry Yule; Arthur Burnell|title=Hobson-Jobson

  24. (senseid) A number of persons who eat together, and for whom food is prepared in common, especially military personnel who eat at the same table.

  25. (RQ:Shakespeare Winter's Tale)

  26. (senseid) A building or room in which mess is eaten.

  27. a type of restaurant characterized by homely-style cooking and food.

  28. A set of four (qualifier).

  29. The milk given by a cow at one milking.

  30. A group of iguanas.

  31. A dessert of fruit and cream, similar to a fool.

  32. {{quote-journal|en|year=1913|journal=Pearson's Magazine|section=volume 36, part 2, page 373

  33. {{quote-text|en|year=1916|author=Edward Frederic Benson|title=David Blaize|page=284

  34. {{quote-text|en|year=2014|author=Lindsey Bareham|title=Just One Pot

  35. {{quote-book|en|year=2015|author=Darra Goldstein; Sidney Mintz; Michael Krondl; Laura Mason|title=The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets|publisher=Oxford University Press, USA|isbn=9780199313396|page=243

  36. {{quote-text|en|year=2020|author=Nigel Napier-Andrews|title=Gentleman's Portion: The Cookbook

  37. To take meals with a mess.

  38. To belong to a mess.

  39. To eat (with others).

  40. 1836, Simpson (HBC administrator)|George Simpson & al., :Hudson's Bay Company|HBC Standing Rules and Regulations, §18:

  41. Resolved 18. That no Guide or Interpreter whether at the Factory Depot or Inland be permitted to mess with Commissioned Gentlemen or Clerks in charge of Posts; but while at the Depot they will be allowed per Week 4 days ordinary rations...
  42. To supply with a mess.

  43. (inflection of)

  44. to touch

  45. {{quote-book|mt

  46. to touch, to affect

  47. (ng): ought; should

  48. (uxa)

  49. (ng)

  50. (verbal noun of):

  51. touch

  52. fruit

  53. (infl of)

  54. (verbal noun of)

  55. judgment

  56. nuts, mast

  57. message

  58. brass