fillip

suomi-englanti sanakirja

fillip englannista suomeksi

  1. piristysruiske

  1. Substantiivi

  2. napsutus

  3. Verbi

fillip englanniksi

  1. The action of holding the tip of a finger against the thumb and then releasing it with a snap; a flick.

  2. (quote-book) In Two Volumes. (...) Translated from the Low-Dutch.(nb...)|edition=3rd|location=London|publisher=Printed for J. Senex,(nb...); E. Taylor,(nb...); W. and J. Innys,(nb...); and J. Osborne,(nb...)|year=1724|section=section XV (The First Motion Proves a God;(nb...))|page=484|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=o0PpwDtmJeoC&pg=PA484|oclc=642366866|passage=And let him ſuppoſe, that if a Man in the beginning of the World, or four or five hundred Years ago, had laid a little round Marble upon a Table, and to put the ſame in Motion, had given it a Fillip with his Finger; the ſaid Marble, according to the abovemention'd Law of Nature, would (if no other Force had oppos'd its Motion) have moved to this very Minute with the ſame Velocity in a Right-Line, and without ceaſing, would have continued to run in the ſame Line ſuch a Length, as no Man could determine the end of.

  3. A sharp strike or tap made using this action, or by other means.

  4. (quote-book)|chapter=An Invective against the Most Wicked and Detestable Vice of Swearing|title=Writings of the Rev. Thomas Becon,(nb...)|series=British Reformers|seriesvolume=10|location=London|publisher=Printed William Clowes (printer)|William Clowes for the (w), and sold at the depository,(nb...); also by J. Nisbet,(nb...)|year=1543|year_published=1831|page=129|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=3r5jAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA129|oclc=868875730|passage=The blasphemy done to a mortal man is punished with the sword, and shall the blasphemy done to God escape think you with a fillip in the forehead, or with the knock of a little wooden betel, as it is begun to be punished in certain men's houses now of late? Nay, verily. It is no fillip matter except we will admit such a fillip as shall fillip them down into the bottom of hell-fire. God is no puppet, nor a babe. It is not a fillip that can wipe away the blasphemy of his most blessed name, before his high throne and glorious majesty.

  5. (quote-book) Jean-Baptiste Poquelin|chapter=The Imaginary Invalid|translator=Henri van Laun|title=The Dramatic Works of Molière: Rendered into English(nb...)|location=Edinburgh|publisher=William Paterson|year=1876|volume=VI|section=act II, scene viii|page=263|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=W4tFAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA263|oclc=745054|passage=''Arch''''ers''. In default of six pistoles, / Choose then without ado / To receive thirty fillips, / Or twelve blows with the stick. / ''Punch.'' If it must be, and that I must pass through that, I choose the fillips.

  6. Something unimportant, a trifle; also, the brief time it takes to flick one's finger ''(see noun sense 1)''; a jiffy.

  7. (RQ:Byron Sardanapalus)

  8. (quote-book)

  9. Something that excites or stimulates.

  10. (ux)

  11. (RQ:Irving Tales of a Traveller)

  12. (quote-journal)|date=4 May 1867|issue=175 (4th series)|page=274|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=n8zEHerFE2YC&pg=PA274|column=1|oclc=793924257|passage=Changes, however, such as we all require, must by no means be confused with fillips—artificial stimulants, which are bad for everybody. These last may be easily recognised and known for what they are, by their suddenness and violence, as well as by the temporary character of their effects.

  13. (quote-journal)

  14. (quote-journal), and it certainly describes "(w)," an agreeably meandering exercise that brings some clever French New Wave fillips and structural repetitions to Hong's characteristically boozy party.

  15. (quote-journal), boosting its primary vote in Longman and harvesting the lion’s share of preferences in Braddon.

  16. To strike, project, or propel with a fillip (that is, a finger released quickly after being pressed against the thumb); to flick.

  17. (RQ:Shakespeare Troilus and Cressida Q1)

  18. (RQ:Bacon Sylva Sylvarum)

  19. (quote-book)|edition=4th|location=London|publisher=Printed by T. Wright,(nb...); for C. Bathurst, Wilson and Nicholl, ''et al.''; and sold by G. Kearsley,(nb...)|year=1778|volume=IX|column=65|columnurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=c4hEAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA65|oclc=502636646|passage=... If one Man upon angry Words ſhall make an Aſſault upon another, either by pulling him by the Noſe, or filliping upon the Forehead, and that he is ſo aſſaulted ſhall draw his Sword, and immediately run the other through, that is but Manſlaughter; for the Peace is broken by the Perſon killed, and with an Indignity to him that received the Aſſault.

  20. (quote-journal), for C. Taylor,(nb...)|month=July|year=1808|year_published=September 1808|volume=IV|column=676|columnurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=ROARAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA675|oclc=176276973|passage=Quail combats were well known among the ancients, especially at Athens. ... Another practice was to produce one of these birds, which being first smitten or filliped with the middle finger, a feather was then plucked from its head: if the quail bore this operation without flinching, his master gained the stake, but lost it if he ran away.

  21. (quote-book) In Four Volumes|volume=IV (Arthur Gordon Pym, &c.)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Redfield(nb...)|month=October|year=1844|year_published=1856|page=282|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=sEBHAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA282|oclc=|passage=He talked on, therefore, at great length, while I merely leaned back in my chair with my eyes shut, and amused myself with munching raisins and filliping the stems about the room.

  22. To project quickly; to snap.

  23. (quote-book), to the Abdication of K. II of England|James the Second.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=s.n.|year=1697|page=38|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=tVVfAAAAcAAJ&pg=PP60|oclc=228732037|passage=Yet he obſerv'd how ſtill his Iron Balls / Recoyl'd in vain againſt our Oaken Walls. / How the hard Pellets fell away as dead, / By our inchanted Timber fillipped.

  24. (quote-book)|year=1871|volume=I|page=61|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=aYTVR0zmS6YC&pg=PA61|oclc=433257741|passage=The use of the elastic switch to fillip small missiles with, and the remarkable elastic darts of the Pelew Islands, bent and made to fly by their own spring, indicate inventions which may have led to that of the bow, while the arrow is a miniature form of the javelin.

  25. To strike or tap smartly.

  26. (quote-book)|year=1839|page=69|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=1tw-AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA69|oclc=17153680|passage=It was almost, if not quite as fine in (w), hitting the Frenchmen between wind and water, filliping their ''chivalry'' on the one hand, by absolutely disbelieving that ''so many'' would go about to kill ''one man'', and catching their admiration of courage on the other, by affecting to consider them as too few to intimidate him: ...

  27. (quote-book)|year=1852|section=part I (Method and General Results of Physical Examination), paragraph 49|pages=41–42|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=6XWk-13dlZwC&pg=PA42|oclc=827725057|passage=The most convenient pleximeter is the middle finger of the left hand, smoothly applied by its palmar surface on the part to be percussed. ... The stroke is made, in most cases, with the tips of the two or three first fingers brought to a level, or with only a single finger. ... Percussion may be strong or gentle; in the latter case, the stroke may be made by filliping gently upon the back of a single finger, or upon the nail. By gentle percussion, a sound is elicited whose character will depend on the condition of the wall, and of the parts immediately beneath it; whereas, when it is forcible, the deeper tissues will modify the result.

  28. (RQ:Hardy Ethelberta)

  29. (quote-book)&93; combed and brushed his hair daily. He washed it frequently, drying it by filliping it and beating it with a small stick as it hung in the sunlight.

  30. To drive as if by a fillip ''(noun sense 1)''; to excite, stimulate, whet.

  31. (RQ:Melville Moby-Dick)

  32. To make a fillip ''(noun sense 1)'' (with the fingers).

  33. (quote-journal)|month=June|year=1844|volume=I|issue=VI|page=600|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=gF89AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA600|oclc=839861840|passage="Oh! we have done very, very wrong in giving our daughter in marriage to you, for if I but fillip my finger, and the fillip should fall on her baby's eye, it will be blind, and there will be our poor little grandchild with only one eye." "But where is the child?" said the Sultan. "It may come, you know;" answered Gertrude. "You are all foolish," cried the Sultan, angrily; "I have not yet married your daughter, and yet you are weeping for the fate of her child; Isabella is very beautiful, but far too foolish for my wife; good bye, I will have nothing to say to any of you."