distil

suomi-englanti sanakirja

distil englannista suomeksi

  1. uuttaa

  2. tiputtaa

  3. tislautua

  4. tislata

  1. Verbi

  2. tihkuttaa

  3. tislata

  4. tihkua, valua

  5. tislautua

  6. Substantiivi

distil englanniksi

  1. To exude (a liquid) in small drops; also, to off (a vapour) which condenses in small drops.

  2. (ux)

  3. (RQ:Pliny Holland Historie of the World)

  4. (RQ:Milton Paradise Lost) ſtood / One ſhap'd & wing'd like one of thoſe from Heav'n / By us oft ſeen; his dewie locks diſtill'd / Ambroſia; (..)

  5. (RQ:Ray World) Trees do deſtil VVater a pace when Clouds or Miſts hang about them; (..) &91;page 251&93; Beſides that in hot Regions Trees may in the nigh time deſtil VVater, though the Air be clear, and there be no Miſt about them, (..)

  6. (quote-book)

  7. To impart (information, etc.) in small quantities; to infuse.

  8. (RQ:Sanderson Sermons)'' could leaſt be ignorant of this truth. Not only for that reaſon, becauſe God had filled his heart vvith a large meaſure of ''vviſdom'' beyond other men: but even for this reaſon alſo: that being born of ''vviſe'' and ''godly Parents'', and born ''to a Kingdom'' too, (..) he had this truth (conſidering the great ''uſefulneſs'' of it to him in the vvhole time of his future ''Government'') early diſtilled into him by ''both his Parents'', and vvas ſeaſoned thereinto from his childhood in his ''education''.

  9. (RQ:Rossetti Ballads)

  10. To heat (a substance, usually a liquid) so that a vapour is produced, and then to cool the vapour so that it condenses back into a liquid, either to purify the original substance or to obtain one of its components; to subject to distillation.

  11. (RQ:Shakespeare Cymbeline)

  12. (quote-journal)|editors=Alexander Tilloch; Taylor (editor)|Richard Taylor|journal=Magazine|The Philosophical Magazine and Journal: Comprehending the Various Branches of Science, the Liberal and Fine Arts, Agriculture, Manufactures, and Commerce|location=London|publisher=(...) & Francis|Richard Taylor,(nb...); and sold by Cadell (publisher)|Cadell; Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown;(nb...)|date=30 November 1823|volume=LXII|issue=307|page=414|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=PTJDAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA2-PA414|oclc=1236055946|passage=By putting the hydrate into a bent tube, afterwards hermetically sealed, I found it easy, after decomposing it by a heat of 100°, to distil the yellow fluid to one end of the tube, and so separate it from the remaining portion.

  13. (quote-journal)|location=Salt Lake City, Ut.|publisher=S. Godbe|William Samuel Godbe and L. T. Harrison|Elias Lacy Thomas Harrison|date=21 August 1869|volume=III|issue=16|page=251|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Jr8UAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA251|column=2|oclc=310857667|passage=In fact, it kelp is used in a variety of medicines; we boil, burn, and distil it to produce salts, corrodents, sublimates, and other medicinal substances.

  14. ''Followed by'' off ''or'' out: to expel (a volatile substance) from something by distillation.

  15. To extract the essence of (something) by, or as if by, distillation; to concentrate, to purify.

  16. (RQ:Shakespeare Midsummer Q1)

  17. (RQ:Shakespeare Sonnets)

  18. (RQ:Herbert Temple)

  19. (RQ:Johnson Rambler) begged me to excuſe ſome large ſieves of leaves and flowers that covered two thirds of the floor; for they intended to diſtil them when they were dry, and they had no other room that ſo conveniently received the riſing ſun.

  20. (RQ:Vance Nobody) distilling therefrom an acid envy that robbed her napoleon of all its savour.

  21. To transform a thing (into something else) by distillation.

  22. (RQ:Jonson Works)

  23. To make (something, especially spirits such as gin and whisky) by distillation.

  24. (RQ:Shakespeare Henry 5)

  25. (RQ:Shakespeare Troilus and Cressida Q1)'', yſſues from our choice, / And choice (being mutuall act of all our ſoules) / Makes merit her election, and doth boyle, / (As tvvere from forth vs all) a man diſtill'd / Out of our vertues, (..)

  26. (RQ:Herbert Travaile)

  27. (RQ:Tennyson Complete Poetical Works)

  28. To dissolve or melt (something).

  29. (RQ:Addison Italy)

  30. To fall or trickle down in small drops; to exude, to ooze out; also, to come out as a vapour which condenses in small drops.

  31. (RQ:Raleigh Historie of the World) diſtilleth out of the mountains of ''Armenia''.

  32. (RQ:Dryden Virgil)

  33. (RQ:Dryden Miscellaneous Works)

  34. (RQ:Pope Windsor Forest)

  35. (RQ:Fielding Joseph Andrews)

  36. (quote-book)|tlr=(w)|title=Tales translated from the Persian of Inatulla of Delhi|volume=I|publisher=P. and W. Wilson et al.|location=Dublin|page=iv|text=The leaves of the foreſt were loaded with manna, pure amber dropped from every bough, honey diſtilled from the rifted rock, and the humming bee, drunk with joy, ſtrayed from flower to flower, forgetful of his burſting cells.

  37. (RQ:Southey Curse of Kehama)

  38. To flow or pass gently or slowly; hence to be manifested gently or gradually.

  39. (RQ:Douay Bible)

  40. (RQ:King James Version)

  41. (RQ:Swift Tale of a Tub)

  42. (RQ:Homer Pope Iliad)

  43. (quote-book)&93;|title=Sacred Poems.(nb...)|edition=new|location=London|publisher=Longmans, Green, and Co.|month=(date written)|year=a. 1837|year_published=1868|section=stanza 4|page=34|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sacredpoemsbyla00grangoog/page/n46/mode/1up|oclc=18697636|passage=Thy bountiful care / What tongue can recite? / It breathes in the air, / It shines in the light: / It streams from the hills, / It descends to the plain, / And sweetly distils / In the dew and the rain.

  44. To drip or be wet with some liquid.

  45. (RQ:John Gay Trivia) / In the black Flood they vvallovv o’er and o’er, / ’Till their arm’d Javvs diſtill vvith Foam and Gore.

  46. (RQ:Peacock Headlong Hall)

  47. To into a vapour and then condense back into a liquid; to undergo or be produced by distillation.

  48. (RQ:Bacon Essayes)

  49. (quote-journal)|editors=Alexander Tilloch; Taylor (editor)|Richard Taylor|journal=Magazine|The Philosophical Magazine and Journal: Comprehending the Various Branches of Science, the Liberal and Fine Arts, Agriculture, Manufactures, and Commerce|location=London|publisher=(...) & Francis|Richard Taylor,(nb...); and sold by Cadell (publisher)|Cadell; Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown;(nb...)|date=30 November 1823|volume=LXII|issue=307|page=419|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=PTJDAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA2-PA419|oclc=1236055946|passage=Carbonic acid is a limpid colourless body, extremely fluid, and floating upon the other contents of the tube. It distills readily and rapidly at the difference of temperature between 32° and 0°.

  50. thistle