harass

suomi-englanti sanakirja

harass englannista suomeksi

  1. häiritä, vainota, ahdistella

  2. hätyyttää, väsyttää, uuvuttaa, hätyytellä

  1. Verbi

  2. hätyyttää, kiusata

  3. ahdistella, häiritä

  4. vainota

  5. ahdistella, häiritä, vainota

  6. Substantiivi

harass englanniksi

  1. To annoy (someone) frequently or systematically; to pester.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (quote-book), Literally Translated for the Use of Students|location=London|publisher=(...) &91;Gilbert (printer)|Richard Gilbert&93; for Whittaker, Treacher, & Co.(nb...)|year=1829|page=125|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=jbl1_wBRUMAC&pg=PA125|oclc=1003956603|passage=For it is a stout calf, ripe for the temples and altar be sacrificed, and to be sprinkled with wine; who is now ashamed to draw the dugs of his mother, ''and'' who harasseth the oaks with his budding horn.

  4. (RQ:Sewell Black Beauty)

  5. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=For the (w), by Paul|Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co.,(nb...)|year=1895|volume_plain=part I (Poems I–VIII)|lines=81–88|section=part I|page=109|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=I_QKAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA109|oclc=368667|passage=Some who dwell in wildernesses, / who seek and occupy, by their own wills, homes in dark caverns, these await / the heavenly dwelling-place; he who grudgeth them life, / oft bringeth hateful terror upon them; / sometimes he showeth them horror, sometimes vain glory; / the wily murderer hath power of both, / and harasseth these lonely-dwellers; (..)|footer=(small)

  6. To persistently bother (someone, or a group of people) physically or psychologically when such behaviour is illegal and/or unwanted, especially over an extended period.

  7. (quote-web) One person slowly (< 5 mph) drove a pick-up truck through the airport terminal at dusk while the second person sat on a bench in the truck bed and directed the compressed air from the pipe into the canopy to harass starlings attempting to enter the roost site.

  8. To put excessive burdens upon (someone); to subject (someone) to anxieties.

  9. (ux)

  10. (quote-book)|location=Edinburgh|publisher=(...) David Gray(nb...)|year=1761|edition=12th|page=80|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=zA1hAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA80|oclc=1227576333|passage=The ſoul that dies this death, is like a loving wife matched with a ''rigorous'' huſband: ſhe does what ſhe can to ''pleaſe'' him, yet he is ''never'' pleaſed; but toſſeth, haraſſeth, and beats her, till ſhe break her heart, and ''death'' ſets her free: (..)

  11. (quote-book) from the Original Hebrew(nb...)|location=Cambridge, Cambridgeshire|publisher=(...) J. Smith printer to the of Cambridge|University; London: Murray (publisher)|John Murray(nb...)|year=1831|section=of Proverbs|Proverbs XI:29|page=37|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=krM_AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA37|oclc=557695510|passage=He, who harasseth his household, shall inherit the wind; / And the fool shall be the servant of the wise in heart.

  12. (quote-book)|year=1839|pages=147–148|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=USwCAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA148|oclc=1106736458|passage=Zeal without judgment is an evil, though it be zeal unto good; / (..) / By a shoulder to the wheel downhill harasseth the labouring beast, / And where an obstruction were needed, will harm by an ill judged thrusting-on.

  13. (RQ:Tennyson Maud)

  14. To trouble (someone, or a group of people) through repeated military-style attacks.

  15. (RQ:Bacon Henry 7)

  16. (RQ:Swift English Tongue)

  17. (RQ:Irving Conquest of Spain)

  18. (quote-book) with the Commentary of Sri Shankara|Sankaracharya(nb...)|edition=7th|location=Madras, Tamil Nadu|publisher=Samata Books|year=1897|year_published=1977|page=119|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/BhagavadGita.with.the.Commentary.of.Sri.Shankaracharya/page/n134/mode/1up|oclc=929852041|passage=The tradition of this Yoga has now for a long time been broken here, O (w), who harassest thy foes, like the sun, by the heat of thy prowess.

  19. ''Often followed by'' out: to fatigue or tire (someone) with exhausting and repeated efforts.

  20. (RQ:Bacon War with Spain)

  21. (RQ:Dryden Georgics)

  22. (RQ:Addison Cato)

  23. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) For Black, Parry, and Co.(nb...), by R. Watts, Broxbourn Press|year=1812|section=of Job|Job XIV:19–20|oclc=1190975254|passage=As the waters wear to pieces the stones, / As their overflowings sweep the soil from the land,— / So consumest thou the hope of man; / Thou harassest him continually till he perish; / Thou weariest out his frame, and despatchest him.

  24. (quote-book) pseudonym|chapter=Substance of Some Traditions Respecting Grimmfer the Wizard|title=New Landlord’s Tales; or, Jedediah in the South.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) Gosnell for Hookham|Thomas Hookham,(nb...)|year=1825|volume=II|section=chapter I|pages=126–127|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/newlandlordstale02clei/page/126/mode/1up|oclc=230654412|passage='Tis true, that he neither harasseth his vassals from morn to eve by hard labour and exaction, nor committeth them to the dungeon, when they can no longer work nor pay. But to knights of our calling, Monsieur Robichon, he is as ill disposed as the worst of them:— (..)|footer=(small)’s ''(w)'' (1816–1832).

  25. Harassment; pestering.

  26. (RQ:Milton Paradise Regained)

  27. (RQ:Richardson Clarissa)

  28. (RQ:Byron Lara)