gouge

suomi-englanti sanakirja

gouge englannista suomeksi

  1. uurtaa, kaivertaa

  2. kovertaa, kaivaa ulos

  3. kourutaltta, koverrin

  4. painuma

  5. uurtaminen, kaivertaminen, kovertaminen

  6. huijata, kiskoa

  1. Substantiivi

  2. koverrin

  3. uurros, uurre, ura

  4. Verbi

  5. kaivaa ulos">kaivaa ulos, kovertaa

  6. kiskoa

  7. kovertaa

gouge englanniksi

  1. (non-gloss definition)

  2. A chisel with a curved blade for cutting or scooping channels, grooves, or holes in wood, stone, etc.

  3. (RQ:Cooper Pioneers)

  4. (quote-journal)

  5. (quote-journal)|month=August|year=1922|volume=XLV, part 10|page=697|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=IsPnAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA697|column=1|oclc=870086995|passage=Now hollow out the inside of the boat with a gouge or gouges. ("Firmer" gouges, ground on the outside of the curve, are used. "Paring" gouges are useless.)

  6. A bookbinder's tool with a curved face, used for tooling or gilding.

  7. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Richard Groombridge; Edinburgh: Jamieson Boyd|Oliver and Boyd; Dublin: W. F. Wakeman; New York, N.Y.: W. Jackson|year=1835|section=part II (Of Finishing)|page=128|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=1u3HzEz-X7gC&pg=PA128|oclc=11177125|passage=In plate II. are design for two backs of books. The first figure, which presents an appearance of exceeding richness, is executed with one sole tool, viz. No. 10, and a small gouge for the sides of the lettering-piece.

  8. An incising tool that cuts blanks or forms for envelopes, gloves, etc., from leather, paper, or other materials.

  9. (quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=J. B. Ford and Company|year=1875|volume=II (Ena–Pan)|page=997|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=6lkpAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA997|column=1|oclc=29084852|passage=Gouge. (..) A shaped incising-tool used for cutting out forms or blanks for gloves, envelopes, or other objects cut to a shape from fabric, leather, or paper.|brackets=on

  10. A cut or groove, as left by a gouge or something sharp.

  11. (ux)

  12. (quote-journal)|month=April|year=1878|volume=XV|issue=6|page=808|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=UVEFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA808|oclc=614212182|passage=The planing-machine, on the contrary, uses revolving knives, which make a succession of little gouges in the wood; these gouges, which would otherwise leave the surface very irregular, are made to leave it tolerably smooth by following one another so closely that the gouges become one long gouge or cut; ...

  13. (quote-book)|year=2015|page=250|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=yQXIBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA250|isbn=978-0-552-77915-9|passage=He makes himself look at his daughter's changing body the way he might look at a gouge on his own leg, forcing himself to examine every detail until he's not looking at a horror but a fact; something that needs fixing.

  14. (quote-book)

  15. An act of gouging.

  16. A cheat, a fraud; an imposition.

  17. (synonyms)

  18. An impostor.

  19. Soft material lying between the wall of a vein and the solid vein of ore.

  20. (quote-book)|year=1869|page=34|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=3fZYAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA34|oclc=27473929|passage=At some of the mines on the great Mother Lode, where hundreds of tons are not unfrequently thrown down at a blast, and where a wide, soft "gouge" along one wall enables the minder to keep two or three sides of the rock free, and give the powder the greatest opportunity to "lift" without waste of power, the cost of drilling and blasting per ton is so low that a reduction of one-third, even if it could be made, would not greatly affect the general count; (..)

  21. (quote-book) A "bull" quartz vein occurs in places along the contact of the gouge and the ore zone. It does not constitute ore.

  22. Information.

  23. {{quote-text|en|year=2005|author=Jay A. Stout|title=To Be a U.S. Naval Aviator|page=63

  24. {{quote-text|en|year=2013|author=Douglas Waller|title=Air Warriors: The Inside Story of the Making of a Navy Pilot|page=89

  25. To make a groove, hole, or mark in by scooping with or as if with a gouge.

  26. To cheat or impose upon; in particular, to charge an unfairly or unreasonably high price.

  27. To dig or scoop (something) out with or as if with a gouge; in particular, to use a thumb to push or try to push the eye (of a person) out of its socket.

  28. (quote-journal)|date=7 February 1863|volume=I|issue=VI (number 2058)|page=143|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=iBpAAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA143|column=1|issn=0140-6736|oclc=1755507|passage=The recorded cases in which the constituents of the joint were removed at different times, and those also in which the bones or portions of the bones were gouged away, do not by any means afford satisfactory results.

  29. (quote-book)’s Vision: Education and Reform in China, 1880–1910|series=Studies in Chinese Christianity|location=Eugene, Or.|publisher=Pickwick Publications, and Stock|Wipf and Stock Publishers|year=2014|section=footnote 28|page=63|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=rushBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA63|isbn=978-1-62564-653-8|passage=For some time, Christian missionaries had been falsely accused of kidnaping Chinese children, gouging out their eyes, and killing them.

  30. To use a gouge.

  31. (quote-book)|entryurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=itzoOVCMDf4C&pg=PT621|editor=Abraham Rees|title=Rees's Cyclopædia|The Cyclopædia; or, Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature. ... In Thirty-nine Volumes|location=London|publisher=Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown,(nb...)|year=1819|volume=IV|oclc=7390852718|passage=(smallcaps) are alſo pieces of wood belonging to ſhips, in which the ſhivers, or ſheaves, of pullies are placed, and wherein the running ropes go. ... The blocks are then jambed up edgeways with wedges in a clave, and the ſheave-holes are made in this manner: the length and breadth are firſt gouged out, and holes are bored half way through the block, along the part gouged out, with an augre of the ſize of the ſheave-hole; then the ſheave-hole is gouged and bored on the oppoſite ſide in the ſame manner, ſo as to meet the oppoſite holes.

  32. (l) (gloss)

  33. female servant

  34. prostitute

  35. {{quote-text|fr|year=1857|author=Charles Baudelaire|title=Bribes - Damnation

  36. (inflection of)

  37. woman