carbonado

suomi-englanti sanakirja

carbonado englannista suomeksi

  1. karbonado

  1. karbonado

  2. Substantiivi

carbonado englanniksi

  1. black diamond

  1. Meat or fish that has been scored and broiled.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (RQ:Marlowe Tamburlaine)

  4. (RQ:Shakespeare Coriolanus)to ſay the Troth on't before ''Corioles'', he ſcotcht him, and notcht him like a Carbinado.

  5. (quote-journal)|year=1861|volume=XLIX|section=book I, chapter XIX (Pulvis Pulveri, Cinis Cineri)|page=390|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=JtoRAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA390|oclc=1071749920|passage=Our giants again found their way to the larder, and broke theirfast with collops, rashers, carbonados, a shield of brawn and mustard, and a noble sirloin of beef, making sad havoc with the latter, and washing down the viands with copious draughts of humming ale.

  6. (quote-book)|year=1867|page=163|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=wlun8FwoxmgC&pg=PA163|oclc=84290335|passage=The carbonadoes consisted of any meat scotched on both sides and sprinkled with seasonings in various combinations, and then either broiled over the fire or before it.

  7. (quote-book)

  8. To make a carbonado of; to score and broil.

  9. (RQ:Markham Countrey Contentments)

  10. (RQ:Beaumont Fletcher Comedies and Tragedies)

  11. (quote-book) Whereunto is Annexed a Second Part of Rare Receipts of Cookery within Certain Useful Traditions. With a Book of Preserving, Conserving and Candying, after the Most Exquisite and Newest Manner: Delectable for Ladies and Gentlewomen.|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=Printed for E. C. and are to be sold by Francis Smith,(nb...)|year=1675|page=94|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=JflmAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA94|oclc=53981559|passage=''To Carbonado Veal.'' Take a breaſt of Veal, lard it very thick with bacon, and when it is boyled, Carbonado it long, and croſs-wayes; (..)

  12. To cut or hack, as in combat.

  13. (RQ:Shakespeare King Lear Q1)|translation=Draw your sword, you rascal. You bring letters against the King, and take the side of his vain daughter against the royalty of her father. Draw your sword, you rogue, or I'll cut your thighs.

  14. (quote-book). In Two Volumes|edition=4th|location=London|publisher=Moxon|Edward Moxon, Son & Co.,(nb...)|date=27 October 1832|year_published=1874|volume=II|page=217|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=dXSxd1QWfLIC&pg=PA217|oclc=894138547|passage=In Moscow, a Count carbonadoes His ignorant serfs with the knout; (..) But Eton has crueller terrors Than these,—in the Windsor Express.

  15. A dark, non-transparent, impure form of polycrystalline diamond (also containing graphite and amorphous carbon) used in drilling.

  16. (quote-journal); Paris: Friedrich Klincksieck; Leipzg: Alfons Dürr|month=October|year=1873|volume=III (New Series; volume X overall)|page=439|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=3XpDAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA439|oclc=173377378|passage=At present, equal attention is paid to irregular fragments of a blackish or greyish colour, occasionally of considerable size, also yielded by the washings of diamandiferous sand, which formerly passed unregarded. These fragments are now carefully colected, and have acquired some considerable value in commerce, where they are known under the name of ''carbonado'' or carbon. (..) An examination of these numerous varieties has made it evident that between ''carbonado'' of a simply micro-crystalline texture, and the diamond regularly crystallised in diaphanous octahedrons, there exists an uninterrupted series of intermediate conditions.

  17. (quote-journal)

  18. (quote-book) Smith and Dawson (1985), consequently, suggested that carbonados could have been formed as a consequence of Precambrian impact events into carbon-bearing crustal rocks. All other traces of these impacts and the related impact structures apparently have been eroded, and only the carbonados had survived erosion and were then incorporated into sedimentary rocks.

  19. (l) (black diamond)

  20. (l)

  21. (past participle of)