carol

suomi-englanti sanakirja

carol englannista suomeksi

  1. joululaulu

  2. laulu

  3. laulaa

  1. joululaulu

  2. Substantiivi

carol englanniksi

  1. A dance accompanied by singing.

  2. (quote-book) and (w)|year=2010|page=87|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=BS4rDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA87|isbn=978-1-906540-37-1|passage=The carol, a combination of dance, music and song performed by a group, has a parallel history the mystery plays. Although it existed earlier as a secular form – the round dance of which St Hugh's biographer was reminded by the shafts at Lincoln – it seems to have been turned to pious uses from about 1350.

  3. A ballad or song of joy.

  4. (RQ:Shakespeare Midsummer Q1)

  5. (RQ:Dryden Fables)

  6. (RQ:Grahame Wind in the Willows)

  7. A (usually traditional) religious or secular song sung at Christmastime.

  8. (ux)

  9. (quote-book)

  10. (RQ:Keble Christian Year)

  11. (RQ:Dickens Christmas Carol)

  12. (quote-journal); Lucy Larcom|title=Heard the Bells on Christmas Day|Christmas Bells|magazine=Nicholas Magazine|Our Young Folks. An Illustrated Magazine for Boys and Girls|location=Boston, Mass.|publisher=Ticknow and Fields, 124 (w)|date=25 December 1863|year_published=February 1865|volume=I|issue=II|page=123|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=u-hEAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA123|oclc=41110873|passage=I heard the bells on Christmas DayTheir old, familiar carols play,And wild and sweetThe words repeatOf peace on earth, good-will to men!

  13. (quote-song)

  14. (quote-journal)'s "(w)" continues to hit new heights. The 1994 carol rises 22–18 on the (w) (dated Jan. 2, 2016), scoring its best rank ever on the chart.

  15. To participate in a carol (a dance accompanied by singing).

  16. To sing in a joyful manner.

  17. (RQ:Spenser Shepheardes Calender)

  18. (quote-journal)

  19. (RQ:Beattie Minstrel)

  20. To sing carols; ''especially'' to sing Christmas carols in a group.

  21. To praise or celebrate in song.

  22. (RQ:Milton Comus)

  23. To sing (a song) cheerfully.

  24. (quote-book), printers to the of Glasgow|University|year=1774|page=64|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=DdA_AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA64|oclc=642399396|passage=... Ye villagers rejoice;And ye who cultivate the fertile glebeCarrol the gladſome ſong. For you the plainShall wave with wheaten harveſts; and the galeFrom blooming bean-fields ſhall diffuſe perfume.

  25. (alternative form of).

  26. (quote-book), comp.|chapter=Carol, or Carrel|title=A Glossary of Technical Terms, Descriptive of Gothic Architecture: Collected from Official Records, Passages in the Works of Poets, Historians, &c. of a Date Contemporay with that Style: And Collated with the Elucidations and Notes of Various Commentators, Glossarists, and Modern Editors. To Accompany the Specimens of Gothic Architecture, by Pugin|Agustus Pugin, – Architect|edition=3rd|location=London|publisher=Printed for Taylor (English publisher)|John Taylor, Architectural Library, 59, (w); J. Britton, Burton Street; and A. Pugin, 34, Street, London|Store Street|year=1822|pages=2–3|pageurl=https://books.google.com./books?id=oFVDAQAAMAAJ&pg=PT42|oclc=939430684|passage=Carol, or Carrel. A little pew, or closet, in a cloister, to sit and read in. They were common in greater monasteries, as Duram, Gloucester, Kirkham in Yorkshire, &c.; and had their name from the ''carols'', or sentences inscribed on the walls about them, which often were couplets in rhyme. ''Carola'', Low Latin.|brackets=on

  27. (quote-book)|year=1860|page=257|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=QQwHAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA257|oclc=931097473|passage=An exquisite south-east door is preserved; it is round-headed, of four orders, with a foliated label. A canopied carol or monk's seat, a Pointed crocketed arch within a square case, is seen beside it, succeeded on the south wall by an arcade of trefoiled arches with toothed mouldings.

  28. woodworm

  29. caries