bosom
suomi-englanti sanakirjabosom englannista suomeksi
rinnus
rinta, povi
sydän
halailla
hoiva
kätkeä
Substantiivi
Verbi
bosom englanniksi
The breast or chest of a human (or sometimes of another animal). (defdate)
(RQ:Hough Purchase Price)She put back a truant curl from her forehead where it had sought egress to the world, and looked him full in the face now, drawing a deep breath which caused the round of her bosom to lift the lace at her throat.
The seat of one's inner thoughts, feelings, etc.; one's secret feelings; desire. (defdate)
(RQ:Thackeray Barry Lyndon), in consequence of the excitement created in his august bosom by her frantic violence and grief, had a fit in which I very nigh lost him.
{{quote-book|en|year=1932|author=Maurice Baring
The protected interior or inner part of something; the area enclosed as by an embrace. (defdate)
(RQ:Dickens Dombey and Son)
(RQ:Eliot Silas Marner)
(RQ:KJV)
(quote-text)
A breast, one of a woman's breasts
(quote-book)
{{quote-journal|en|date=7 April 2003|author=Martin Kelner|journal=The Guardian
{{quote-book
Any thing or place resembling the breast; a supporting surface; an inner recess; the interior.
{{quote-text|en|year=1864|author=George MacDonald|title=The Old Nurse's Story
A depression round the eye of a millstone.
In a very close relationship.
''bosom buddies''
(quote-journal), first airplane fatality in history
To enclose or carry in the bosom; to keep with care; to take to heart; to cherish.
{{quote-text|en|year=c. 1612|author=William Shakespeare|title=VIII (play)|Henry VIII|section=Act I, Scene 1|url=http://www.opensourceshakespeare.org/views/plays/play_view.php?WorkID=henry8&Scope=entire&pleasewait=1&msg=pl
To conceal; to hide from view; to embosom.
{{quote-text|en|year=1741|author=Alexander Pope|title=The New Dunciad: As it was Found in the Year 1741|location=Dublin|publisher=George Faulkner|year_published=1742|section=Book IV, p 29, lines 291-292|url=https://archive.org/details/newdunciadasitwa00pope
{{quote-book|en|year=1818|author=Lucy Aikin|title=Memoirs of the Court of Queen Elizabeth|chapter=|edition=|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/21500
{{quote-book|en|year=1901|author=Stewart Edward White|title=The Claim Jumpers|chapter=|edition=|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/10942
{{quote-journal|en|year=1869|author=Allan Hume|title=My first Nests of Bonelli’s Eagle|journal=(journal)|The Ibis|section=Series 2, Volume 5, p. 145|url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000674770
1905, Alex Macdonald, ''In Search of El Dorado'', London: T. Fisher Unwin, Part II, “The Five-Mile Rush,” p. 92,https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/007701211
- What Stewart called a “langtailie coat” spread out behind him like streamers in a breeze, a “biled” collar had, in the same gentleman’s terse language, “burst its moorings” and projected in two miniature wings at the back of his ears, and a shirt that had once been white, bosomed out expansively through an open vest.
1822, (w), ''The Three Perils of Man'', London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, Volume 3, Chapter 12, pp. 440-441,https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/009182538
- I looked again, and though I was sensible it must be a delusion brought on by the stroke of his powerful rod, yet I did see the appearance of a glorious fleet of ships coming bounding along the surface of the firmament of air, while every mainsail was bosomed out like the side of a Highland mountain.
1855, The Scald of George Smellie, “Sketches of a Voyage to Hudson’s Bay” in ''The Sea: Sketches of a Voyage to Hudson’s Bay, and Other Poems'', London: Hope & Co., p. 45,https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/100142413
- Thus one by one they mount, and spreading wide,
- The transverse wings extend on either side,
- And, lightly bosomed by the gentle gale,
- She seems a moving pyramid of ail.