extinct

suomi-englanti sanakirja

extinct englannista suomeksi

  1. sammunut

  2. lakkautettu, sukupuuttoon kuollut

  1. sammunut

  2. hiipua / hiipunut

  3. kadonnut, poistunut

  4. sukupuuttoon kuollut">sukupuuttoon kuollut of a species

  5. tappaa sukupuuttoon">tappaa sukupuuttoon, kalastaa sukupuuttoon">kalastaa sukupuuttoon n, metsästää sukupuuttoon">metsästää sukupuuttoon hunt to extinction

extinct englanniksi

  1. Of fire, etc.: longer alight; of a light, etc.: no longer shining; extinguished, quenched.

  2. (antonyms)

    (ux)

  3. (RQ:Cowper Task)

  4. (RQ:Landon Francesca Carrara)

  5. Of feelings, a person's spirit, a of affairs, etc.: out, as if like a fire; quenched, suppressed.

  6. (RQ:King James Version)

  7. (RQ:King James Version), your holy one, the Creatour of Iſrael, your King. (..) Which bringeth foorth the charet and horſe, the armie and the power: they ſhall lie downe together, they ſhall not rise: they are extinct, they are quenched as towe.

  8. (RQ:Disraeli Vivian Grey)

  9. (RQ:Scott Canongate 2) He was cut down, and given to his friends before life was extinct, and I had the good fortune to recover him.

  10. Of customs, ideas, laws and legal rights, offices, organizations, etc.: no longer existing or use; defunct, discontinued, obsolete; specifically, of a title of nobility: no longer having any person qualified to hold it.

  11. (synonyms)

  12. (RQ:Speed Historie of Great Britaine)|page=652|column=2|para=23|passage=Edward as being deſcended of the eldeſt Daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon|''Dauid'', Earle of ''Huntingdon'', a yonger ſonne of of Scotland|Henry of ''Scotland''; vvhoſe iſſue (the line of the elder brother being extinct) vvas to inherite, vvithout queſtion.

  13. (RQ:Coke Institutes)

  14. (RQ:Hobbes Leviathan)

  15. (RQ:Ayliffe Juris Canonici) Some ſay, That a Cenſure ''ab Homine'', ceaſes on the Death of the Perſon, that pronounced the ſame; but a Cenſure inflicted ''à Jure'' continues, tho' ſuch Lavv be extinct, or the Lavv-giver removed from his Office.

  16. (RQ:Macaulay History of England)&93; was regarded by the people of Somersetshire has no parallel in our history. (..) When he had been many years dead, when his name and title were extinct, his granddaughter, the Countess of Pomfret &91;(w)&93;, travelling along the western road, was insulted by the populace, and found that she could not safely venture herself among the descendants of those who had witnessed the bloody assizes.

  17. (quote-journal)

  18. (quote-book)

  19. (senseid) Of an animal or plant species, a class of people, a family, etc.: having out|died out completely; no longer in existence.

  20. (RQ:Defoe Crusoe)

  21. (RQ:Macaulay History of England)

  22. (RQ:Darwin Origin of Species)

  23. (quote-video game)

  24. Of a geological feature: no longer active; specifically, of a volcano: no longer erupting.

  25. Of a radioisotope: no longer occurring primordially due to having decayed away completely, due to too short of a half-life; for example, neptunium-237 (half-life about 2 million years). (See (w).)

  26. Of a person: dead; also, permanently separated from others.

  27. (RQ:John Heywood Four PP)

  28. (synonym of)

  29. To stop (fire, etc.) from burning; also, to stop (light, etc.) from shining; to out, to quench.

  30. (RQ:Foxe Actes and Monuments) of Rome|Eugenia (..) was put in the hot baths, which were extincted, and ſhe preſerued: (..) At laſt the ſtorie ſaith, ſhée was with the ſword beheaded.

  31. To kill (someone).

  32. To an end to (something) completely; to annihilate, to destroy.

  33. (RQ:Book of Common Prayer)

  34. (RQ:Foxe Actes and Monuments) Almes doe deliuer from all ſinne and from death;(nb..). Not from that (ſaith (w)) which the blood of Chriſt hath once extincted, and from which the wholeſome grace of our baptiſme, and of our redeemer hath deliuered vs, but from that death which afterwards creepeth in by ſinne, &c.

  35. (senseid) To cause (an animal or plant species) to out completely or become extinct ''(adjective (senseno))''.

  36. (quote-book) The first settlers were living along the coast of this very large island off Africa Madagascar, but in about seven hundred years they had spread across the entire island and in the process extincted almost all large game, including hippos, tortoises, giant lemurs—some two dozen species in all.

  37. To suppress (something, as feelings, a person's spirit, a of affairs, etc.); to quench.

  38. (RQ:John Heywood Spider)

  39. (RQ:Shakespeare Othello)

  40. To abolish or make void (a law, a legal right, etc.); also, to cancel (a creditor's claim, a licence, etc.).

  41. (RQ:Bacon Works)

  42. (quote-book)|chapter=The Fifth Question of the Student|title=Doctor and Student|Doctor and Student: Or Dialogues between a Doctor of Divinity, and a Student in the Laws of England,(nb...)|location=In the Savoy London|publisher=(...) Henry Lintot, (assignee of Edward Sayer, Esq)|year=1746|page=74|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=yBVW9V2wskIC&pg=PA74|oclc=976609319|passage=And foraſmuch as the ſaid Statute vvas ordained to give a Certainty of Title in the Lands and Tenements compriſed in the Fine, it ſeemeth that the Fine extincteth the Title of all other, as vvell in Conſcience, as it doth in the Lavv.

  43. (synonym of)

  44. (RQ:John Ford Honor Triumphant) as vvould not euen in the glas of ''Lucreſias'' perſeuerãce (euẽ to the vttermoſt extinct of life) ſe the vvõder of ''bevvty'', matched vvith the indiuiduat adiũt vnſoyled ''conſtancy''.|translation=Who is he (..) as would not even in the glass of Lucretia’s perseverance (even to the uttermost extinction of life) see the wonder of beauty, matched with the individuate adjunct unsoiled constancy.

  45. (RQ:Speed Historie of Great Britaine)|page=360|column=1|para=30|passage=Wee have cauſe to feare the loſſe of our Kingdome, and you the extinct of the ''Engliſh'' nations renovvne; (..)