analphabet

suomi-englanti sanakirja

analphabet englannista suomeksi

  1. analfabeetti, lukutaidoton

  1. Substantiivi

  2. analfabeetti

analphabet englanniksi

  1. A person who does not know the letters of the alphabet; a partly or wholly illiterate person. (defdate)

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (quote-book) In Three Volumes|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Hunt & Eaton; Cincinnati, Oh.: Cranston & Curts|year=1896|volume=III|section=section 7 (Annual Conferences, 1886–1887)|page=327|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/missionsmissiona33reid/page/327/mode/1up|oclc=|passage=In 1861, out of a total population of 21,777,331, there were no less than 16,999,701 "analphabetes," or persons absolutely unable to read.

  4. (quote-journal)

  5. (quote-book)’s (novel)|Murphy: A Critical Excursion|series=University of Georgia Monographs|seriesvolume=no. 15|location=Athens, Ga.|publisher=University of Georgia Press|year=1968|page=57|oclc=449329|passage=The Beckettian progression appears occasionally: while Miss Counihan (static) is an omnivorous reader and Murphy (transitional) a strict non-reader, Cooper is an analphabete.

  6. (quote-book)

  7. (quote-book)|year2=2012|page2=704|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=PDeT8F1twfkC&lpg=PA704|isbn2=978-0-674-06568-0|passage=The porter was an analphabete, but together / we found your name, down among the Os, / and there you were, my brave love, / in a loose hospital gown that covered nothing; (..)

  8. Ignorant of the letters of the alphabet; partly or wholly illiterate. (defdate)

  9. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for R. C. J. R. and A. C. and are to be sold by Charles Shortgrave(nb...)|year=1686|section=part I|page=81|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/voyageofitalyorc00lass/page/n126/mode/1up|oclc=801387674|passage=(..) ''Vincentius Pinelli''’s Books, which after his death, being ſhipped by his Heirs for ''Naples'', and taken by the ''Turks'', were many of them thrown overboard by thoſe ''Analphabet Rogues'', who looked for other merchandiſe than Books. Yet many of them were recovered again for Money, (..)

  10. (quote-book) The two encyclopedias Édith and Gilles have at home do not make any distinction between illiterate and analphabet.