darkly

suomi-englanti sanakirja

darkly englannista suomeksi

  1. tummana

  2. synkästi

  1. pimeästi

darkly englanniksi

  1. With insufficient light for easy discernment or comprehension

  2. (ux)

  3. (RQ:King James Version)

  4. (quote-book)

  5. With a dark appearance

  6. (synonyms)

  7. (quote-book)|year=1846|section=stanza X|page=76|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=KbFG_INx-DIC&pg=PA76|oclc=3365560|passage=And still when loudliest howls the storm, / And darkliest lowers his native sky, / The king's fierce soul is in that form, / The warrior's spirit threatens nigh!

  8. (quote-journal)|date=4 October 1906|volume=LXXVIII|page=877|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=ldkcAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA877|column=1|oclc=397407268|passage=Darkly painted machinery takes a great deal of light out of a shop; the rays seem to be absorbed into the somber pigments.

  9. (quote-book) A minor weathering feature of the desert is a thin, shiny, reddish-brown to blackish coating called desert varnish that occurs on some desert rocks.

  10. In a manner which is not readily visible or noticeable; inconspicuously

  11. (syn)

  12. (Q)|Paper Tiger: An Old Sportswriter's Reminiscences of People, Newspapers, War and Work|, chapter 3, page 33 of the 2007 University of Nebraska Press paperback edition|year=1964|quote=Set defenses permitted a coach to plan an attack with scant worry as to where he would find the offensive men. So our Tom Reilly ''schemed darkly'' and came up with the attack which pried apart the Brown Bowlers. His scheme was to double team every man in the defensive line by employing one back as an eighth lineman and spreading the enemy further by posting a wingback outside the strong end of an unbalanced line which had five men on this side of center.

  13. In a manner which retards or prevents discernment; clandestinely

  14. (Q)|The Serf|'', chapter 5''|year=1907|quote=His ''secret'' wooing of the Norman lady who was so proud and stately was very dear to him, and the romance of it pleased him even more than the mere material joys he hoped some day to gain from it. Proud as she was, womanlike she at least deigned to listen to him, and his crafty brain schemed ''darkly'' to take opportunity as it came, and make her his own by treachery.

  15. In a manner which is difficult to understand, or which retards or prevents understanding; incomprehensibly

  16. (quote-book)|chapter=The Second Difference, that the One was More Dark, the Other Gives Clearer Light|title=The Gospel-covenant; or, The Covenant of Grace Opened.(nb...)|edition=2nd enlarged and corrected|location=London|publisher=Printed by Matthew Simmons,(nb...)|year=1651|page=168|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=v3FmAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA168|oclc=896193833|passage=Secondly, The Covenant was then revealed more darkly and obſcurely, but now the diſpenſation of it, is more cleare and evident: the light is now marvellous, it is as the Sunne ſhining at noone-day. (..) Though it was revealed before, yet it was but darkly, but now it is revealed more clearly ſince the coming of our Saviour Chriſt; (..)

  17. (RQ:Tennyson In Memoriam)

  18. In a manner which tends to produce uncertainty or confusion; bewilderingly

  19. (Q)|The Albigenses|'', chapter 16''|year=1824|quote=Here, as Genevieve sat musing, in apparent slumber, on her situation of peril, and her hope of liberty, her sentinels, who had hitherto walked at a surly distance from her, now chanced to pass nearer; and she heard one of them say, “She sleeps, thou need'st not whisper; -I tell thee it must be done to-night.” “What must be done?” said his companion, “''for hitherto thou hast spoken thy purpose darkly''.”—“The queen must be removed this night,” said the other. “Here have been missives from the bishop, who, amid the thunders of the siege, found leisure to receive and answer the letters of King Philip, touching the matter of the queen's thraldom, and to send the order thou wottest of, and which must be suddenly obeyed.”

  20. In a manner which produces an inward conviction of future misfortune; ominously

  21. (quote-book) I had cried to answer me / When my destiny darkliest frowned, / And He showed me a reef of rocks in the sea, / Whereunto I clung, and there I found / On a coral jag the goblet of gold, / Which else to the lowermost crypt had rolled.

  22. (RQ:Collins Woman in White)

  23. (quote-book), as the television actor was in ''and Board (1970 film)|Domicile conjugal''.

  24. In a morbid manner; morbidly, sinisterly

  25. (RQ:Byron Corsair)

  26. (quote-journal)

  27. Relating to darkness or obscurity.

  28. ''A Scanner Darkly ''

  29. (quote-text)