dame

suomi-englanti sanakirja

dame englannista suomeksi

  1. daami, hieno nainen

  2. neitonen

  1. Substantiivi

  2. daami

  3. Verbi

dame englanniksi

  1. ''Usually capitalized as'' (l): a title equivalent to Sir for a female knight.

  2. (ux)

  3. (quote-book) by (w)|year=2009|section=part 1 (Stories Touching Stones)|page=144|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=fs9GAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA144|isbn=978-0-300-14278-5|passage=The cover of the modern (smallcaps), issued by EMI Classics with Dame (w) and Sir (w) in 1965, carries a portrait of Dame Janet wearing a long coral necklace in reference to the song 'Where the Corals lie' to words by Garnett (writer)|Richard Garnett (1835–1906).

  4. A matron at a school, especially (w).

  5. (quote-book)

  6. (quote-book)’s Client Topham Beauclerk|location=Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear|publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing|year=2016|page=14|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=ApX6DAAAQBAJ&pg=PA14|isbn=978-1-4438-9037-3|passage=As he Guyaz worked for Beauclerk|Topham Beauclerk while he was at Eton, it is likely that Topham was a day-boarder there, living at home in Windsor. His Eton "dame" was Mrs. Bland; day-boarders were allocated to a dame at whose house they took their meals.|footer=(small)

  7. In traditional pantomime: a melodramatic female often played by a man in drag.

  8. (quote-journal) &91;page 74, column 1&93; Bugle condemns her to the ducking-stool, a sentence opposed by Colin, who espouses the cause of the Old Dame, who, escaping from her persecutors, puts an end to the wedding festivities by raising the ghost of the Squire's first wife.

  9. (quote-book) Every successful actor who plays the part of Dame in Panto knows that the secret of his success is that it should be obvious that it is a man playing a part, for this is not a Drag act; the intention is not to be as womanly as possible, but always to be 'a feller in a frock'. (..) Oh how everyone loves the Panto Dame for she ''is'' Panto.

  10. A woman.

  11. (quote-book) (lyrics); (w) (music)|chapter=There Is Nothing Like a Dame|title=Pacific (musical)|South Pacific|year=1949|newversion=published in|2ndauthor=Oscar Hammerstein II (lyrics); Oscar Hammerstein II; (w) (book); Albert Sirmay ''i.e.'', (w) (vocal score editor)|title2=South Pacific. A Musical Play. ... Adapted from (w)’s ... (w) ...|location2=New York, N.Y.|publisher2=Williamson Music; Milwaukee, Wis.: Leonard Corporation|Hal Leonard|year2=1949|page2=30|oclc2=497235024|passage=There is nothin' like a dame / Nothin' in the world. / There is nothin' you can name / That is anythin' like a dame.

  12. A lady, a woman.

  13. (RQ:Whetstone Rocke of Regard)

  14. (quote-book) and Ben Jonson: Being the Life of Inigo Jones.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=Printed for the Shakespeare Society,(nb...)|year=a. 1638|year_published=1853|page=101|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=20w4AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA101|oclc=462046256|passage=Though they were first-form'd dames of Earth, / And in whose sparcklinge and refulgent eyes / The glorious sonne did still delight to rise; (..)

  15. (quote-book)|year=1684|section=act I, scene xi|page=25|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=UgNEAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA23|oclc=808808278|passage=And do you think my Dame ''Dobſon'' don't know a little better than you? She tells you, you need ſay no more, and 'tis an affront to her Art not to believe her; and I'le not ſee my Dame affronted.

  16. (quote-journal)|month=April|year=1835|volume=VIII|page=252|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=vyXZAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA252|oclc=1065920053|passage=He pointed his staff at a female figure on the path, in whom goodman Brown recognized a very pious and exemplary dame, who had taught him his catechism, in youth, and was still his moral and spiritual adviser, jointly with the minister and deacon Gookin.

  17. (quote-book)|year=1849|volume=I|section=part I (Origin and Manners of the Ancient Germans), section XX (Wolen and Walkyren)|page=45|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=PNo7AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA45|oclc=913051751|passage=The poetical relation between the pagan warrior and his celestial bride changed, in course of time, to that between the Christian knight and his ladye-bright, who also was not always an earthly dame, but the holy Virgin or some saint.

  18. The hereditary feudal ruler (seigneur) of Sark, when the title is held by a woman in her own right.

  19. A queen.

  20. To make a dame.

  21. (quote-book)|year=1805|page=162|passage=The French call simply ''Pawn'', “''la Dame qui n’est point Damée, et l’on n’appelle Dame proprement dite, que le Pion qui est Damé, et couvert d’un autre Pion,''” which means “the Draught or Pawn which is not ''damed'', and which is only termed ''Dame'' or ''Queen'', when the Pawn which is ''damed'', is covered with another Pawn.”

  22. (quote-journal)(w), both pros in their respective fields, and both Brits in their respective hearts, are now both newly knighted (damed, in Lumley’s case) by England’s Queen Lizzy.

  23. (quote-book).

  24. (quote-book)&93; had been ‘Damed with faint praise’ and further observed that every pantomime needs a Dame.

  25. lady

  26. queen

  27. (l), (l) (q)

  28. (l) (q)

  29. (l)

  30. (l)

  31. (n-g)

  32. (syn)

  33. draughts (i), checkers (i)

  34. why, indeed

  35. (monikko) it|dama

  36. (ja-romanization of)

  37. (l) (gloss):

  38. abbess (gloss)

  39. A female anchorite (gloss)

  40. A housewife (gloss)

  41. A mother (gloss)

  42. (alt form)

  43. (alt form)

  44. a (l), (l)

  45. (q) a girlfriend

  46. (q) a (l)

  47. (l); (l)

  48. (noun form of)

  49. (es-verb form of)