irradiate

suomi-englanti sanakirja

irradiate englannista suomeksi

  1. valaista

  2. säteillä

  3. säteilyttää

  1. Verbi

  2. sädettää, säteilyttää

  3. säteilevä

irradiate englanniksi

  1. To outVerb|send out (heat, light, or some other form of radiation) in the form of rays; to radiate.

  2. To make (someone or something) bright by shining light on them or it; to brighten, to illuminate.

  3. (synonyms)

  4. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Robinson (bookseller)|George George and John Robinson,(nb...); and Harding Evans|Robert Harding Evans (successor to Mr. Edwards (bookseller)|James Edwards),(nb...)|year=c. 1789|year_published=1799|volume=VI|page=363|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_the-works-of-sir-william_jones-sir-william_1799_6/page/363/mode/1up|oclc=1008207335|passage=Such vvere thy gifts, (smallcaps), ſuch thy povv'r! / For, vvhen thy smile irradiates yon blue fields, / Obſervant (smallcaps) ſends the genial ſhovv'r.

  5. (quote-book)|chapter=Supper at the House of Aristides—Anecdotes|translator=anonymous|title=The Travels of Antenor in Greece and Asia:(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) Norton Longman|Thomas Norton Longman and Owen Rees,(nb...)|year=1799|volume=I|page=150|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/travelsofantenor1thru3lant/page/150/mode/1up|oclc=556427514|passage=Thou cheerful light of day! (..) thou ſplendid luminary of Natur! thou no longer irradiateſt my eyes or exhilarateſt my ſoul! The ſeaſons ſtill follovv each other, and year ſucceeds to year; but to me day no more returns.

  6. (RQ:Southey Madoc)

  7. (RQ:Dickens Dombey and Son)

  8. (quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=George W. Carleton & Co.; London: Low|Sampson Low, Son & Co.|year=1875|page=83|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/manfredguerrazzi00gueriala/page/83/mode/1up|oclc=5718957|passage=Hail, all hail, O sun, that suscitates and circumscribes life; hail, O fountain of life and death! (..) At times, a little cloud, emanation of terrestrial vapor, shadowed those vaults destined to thee alone, and thou irradiatedst it with such splendor, that it seemed the brow of innocence; but it blackened as ingratitude, and waged war against thy rays.

  9. (RQ:Khayyam FitzGerald Rubaiyat) before a mortal shrine / Whose Light is but a Shade of the Divine; (..)

  10. To apply radiation other than light to (someone or something).

  11. To treat (food) with radiation to destroy pathogens.

  12. (quote-book)|series=Serial No. 99-14|location=Washington, D.C.|publisher=States Government Publishing Office|U.S. Government Printing Office|date=18 November 1985|year_published=1986|page=100|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=eG_pAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA3-PA100|oclc=13562361|passage=An inherent protection in labeling of the shipping containers will be the prevention of irradiating the commodity again, insuring that the produce has been treated within the safety limits established by the FDA and Drug Administration.

  13. To treat (a patient, or a cancerous growth or tumour) with radiation.

  14. To animate or enliven (one's mood, or soul or spirit).

  15. (RQ:Hale Advice) I therefore beseech God to give you his grace and blessing, and the influence of his blessed Spirit, that you may subdue and conquer the temperament of your nature, to do all things well-pleasing to him, and that may irradiate and strengthen your souls and direct you in all things, for there is none that teacheth like him.

  16. To cause (one's face) to look beautiful, happy, or lively; to up.

  17. (RQ:Black Green Pastures)

  18. To decorate (a place) splendidly.

  19. (RQ:Pope Works)

  20. To enlighten (someone, their mind, etc.) intellectually or spiritually; to illuminate, to light on.

  21. (ux)

  22. (quote-book)|title=Some Important Points of Primitive Christianity Maintained and Defended; in Several Sermons and Other Discourses|location=Oxford, Oxfordshire|publisher=John Henry Parker|year=a. 1711 (date written)|year_published=1840|page=400|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/someimportantpoi00bull/page/400/mode/1up|oclc=38492985|passage=And indeed we ought, in these happy intervals, when our understandings are thus irradiated and enlightened, to make a judgment of the state and condition of our souls in the sight of God, and not to take our estimate of it when our understandings are eclipsed, and we are overshadowed with a dark cloud of sadness and melancholy.

  23. (RQ:Wordsworth Prelude)

  24. (RQ:Landon Duty)

  25. (RQ:Hallam Literature of Europe)&93; first irradiated the entire annals of antiquity down to the age of (w) with flashes of light that reveal an unity and coherence which had been lost in their magnitude and obscurity.

  26. To send out (something) as if in the form of rays; to diffuse, to radiate, to shed.

  27. (RQ:Burton Melancholy)

  28. (RQ:James American)

  29. To influence (something) as if with rays of heat, light, etc.

  30. (RQ:Bartholin Culpeper Anatomy)

  31. (RQ:Hale Mankind)

  32. To become bright; to brighten, to light up.

  33. ''Often followed by'' on ''or'' upon: to emit rays of light; to shine.

  34. To emit something other than light; to radiate.

  35. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Francis Jefferies(nb...)|year=1733|page=253|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=DD5VAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA253|oclc=644249695|passage=The pleaſures of ſenſe have no reliſh vvhere thou &91;(w)&93; irradiateſt and teſtifieſt vvith our conſcience, that vve are the children of God, and have done thy vvill ſincerely, (..)

  36. To diverge or be sent out in the form of rays.

  37. (RQ:Locke Epistles) ''Moſes'' by approaching to God in the Mount, had a Communication of ''Glory'' or ''Light'' from him, vvhich irradiated from his Face vvhen he deſcended from the Mount.

  38. Made brilliant or bright; irradiated, illuminated.

  39. (RQ:Homer Pope et al Odyssey)

  40. (RQ:Southey Thalaba)

  41. (RQ:Dante Cary Vision)

  42. Made splendid or wonderful.

  43. (inflection of)

  44. (feminine plural of)

  45. (es-verb form of)