cowl
suomi-englanti sanakirjacowl englannista suomeksi
peittää kaavulla
moottorin suojus
munkinkaapu, huppu
savuhattu, tuulihattu; mekaaninen hormi-imuri">mekaaninen hormi-imuri revolving; piipunhattu chimney cap
cowl englanniksi
(senseid) A monk's hood that can be pulled forward to cover the face; a robe with such a hood attached to it.
(circa), (w), ''An Exposycyon vpon the v. vi. vii. Chapters of Mathewe'', An Exposycyon of the syxte Capiter,http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A14133.0001.001
- And therfore al our monkes whose professyon was neuer to eate fleshe, set vp the Pope and toke dispensacyons bothe for that faste and also for theyr strayte rules, and made theyr strayte rules as wyde as the hodes of theyr cowles.
(RQ:Pope Essay on Man)
(RQ:Scott Ivanhoe)
{{quote-text|en|year=1893|author=Kate Chopin|title=Désirée’s Baby|url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Bayou_Folk/D%C3%A9sir%C3%A9e%27s_Baby
(RQ:Steinbeck Grapes of Wrath)
A mask that covers the majority of the head.
A thin protective covering over all or part of an engine; also cowling.
{{quote-book|en|year=1944|author=Nevil Shute|chapter=8|title=(1944 novel)|Pastoral|location=London|publisher=Pan Books|url=https://www.fadedpage.com/books/20180532/html.php
(senseid) A usually hood-shaped covering used to increase the draft of a chimney and prevent backflow.
(RQ:Woolf Orlando)
{{quote-book|en|year=1933|author=Dorothy L. Sayers|chapter=Sleuths on the Scent|title=Hangman's Holiday|Hangman’s Holiday|location=New York|publisher=Harper & Row|year_published=1987|page=96|url=https://archive.org/stream/hangmansholiday00saye_0
A ship's ventilator with a bell-shaped top which can be swivelled to catch the wind and force it below.
(RQ:Conrad Typhoon)
A vertical projection of a ship's funnel that directs the smoke away from the bridge.
A monk.
To cover with, or as if with, a cowl (hood).
{{quote-book|en|year=1817|author=Samuel Taylor Coleridge|chapter=Human Life, On the Denial of Immortality|title=Sibylline Leaves: A Collection of Poems|location=London|publisher=Rest Fenner|page=269|url=https://archive.org/stream/sibyllineleaves00colegoog
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Strahan|pages=120–121|url=https://archive.org/details/holygrailotherpo00tennuoft
{{quote-book|en|year=1945|author=Robert W. Service|title=Ploughman of the Moon|location=New York|publisher=Dodd, Mead|chapter=8|page=249|url=https://www.fadedpage.com/books/20121017/html.php
{{quote-book|en|year=1964|author=Hortense Calisher|chapter=Extreme Magic|title=Extreme Magic: A Novella and Other Stories|location=Boston|publisher=Little, Brown|page=208|url=https://archive.org/details/extrememagicnove00cali
(quote-book)|title=Night|location=New York|publisher=Farrar Straus Giroux|year_published=1987|page=70|pageurl=https://openlibrary.org/books/OL2737351M/Night
To make a monk of (a person).
To scrape together
{{quote-text|en|year=1865|author=William Stott Banks|title=Wakefield Words|page=17
A vessel carried on a pole, a soe.
A caul (gloss).
{{quote-book|en|year=1896|author=I. K. Friedman|title=The Lucky Number|location=Chicago|publisher=Way and Williams|chapter=A Coat of One Color|page=55|url=https://archive.org/stream/luckynumber00frieiala
1982, (w), ''(w)'', New York: William Morrow, Part 3, “Campher,” p.(nbs)331,https://archive.org/stream/chainofvoices00brin
- (..) I’d been born with a cowl, which from my earliest age prompted a wide variety of predictions about my future, alternately dire and enthusiastic.
(quote-text)