e.g.
suomi-englanti sanakirjae.g. englannista suomeksi
esim.
Substantiivi
e.g. englanniksi
(non-gloss definition) used to introduce an illustrative example or short list of examples: the sake of an example; example.
(ux)
(RQ:Baxter Dodwell)
(quote-journal) ''et al.''|chapter2=Dr. Leidy|Joseph Leidy’s Anatomy|title2=The University Medical Magazine|location2=Philadelphia, Pa.|publisher2=A. L. Hummel|year2=October 1889|volume2=II|issue2=1|page2=45|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=lB0gAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA45|oclc2=10988818|passage=Stated in technical linguistic terms, in this treatise pœcilonymy is avoided; ''e. g.'', instead of ''tænia hippocampi'' in one place, ''corpus fimbriatum'' in another, and ''fimbria'' in a third, the last is consistently employed and the others given as synonyms.
(RQ:Joyce Ulysses)
(quote-book)
(quote-book)|series=Harvard–Yenching Institute Monograph Series|seriesvolume=52|edition=revised|location=Cambridge, Mass.; London|publisher=(w) for the (w)|year=2000|page=135|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/chinesehistoryma0000wilk/page/135/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-674-00247-0|passage=Cities were not infrequently named after the era name in which they were founded (e.g., Shaoxing (lang) in Zhejiang, after the Shaoxing era, 1131–62).
An example.
1732 (MDCCXXXII), Antonius Mayr, ''Theologia Scholastica'', Ingolstadium, page 55, by justification:
- (quote) non tamen id semper fieri necesse est. e.g. aliquis corruptus pecuniâ (..) & tamen obligationem e. g. restituendi damnum
1821, Julius Müller, ''Ratio et historia odii quo foenus habitum est'', pages 3 and 10, by justification:
- (quote)