leer
suomi-englanti sanakirjaleer englannista suomeksi
luoda merkitseviä katseita, silmäillä, mulkoilla
silmäys
merkitsevä katse
silmäillä sexually, mulkoilla maliciously, mulkaista maliciously
Substantiivi
Verbi
leer englanniksi
To look sideways or obliquely; now especially with sexual desire or malicious intent.
(RQ:Coleridge The Devil's Thoughts)
(RQ:Dickens Great Expectations)
(RQ:James Europeans)
(RQ:Twain Tramp Abroad)
(RQ:Wilde Dorian Gray)
To entice with a leer or leers.
(RQ:Dryden Spanish Fryar)
A significant side glance; a glance expressive of some passion, as malignity, amorousness, etc.; a sly or lecherous look.
(RQ:Hardy Tess)
(RQ:Wilde Dorian Gray)They say he has sold himself to the devil for a pretty face. It’s nigh on eighteen years since I met him. He hasn’t changed much since then. I have, though,” she added, with a sickly leer.
(RQ:Doyle Stark Munro Letters)
(RQ:Stoker Dracula)I have friends—good friends—like you, Dr. Seward”; this was said with a leer of inexpressible cunning.
(RQ:Burroughs Warlord of Mars)
An arch or affected glance or cast of countenance.
The cheek.
(RQ:Holinshed Chronicles )
The face.
One's appearance; countenance.
(RQ:Shakespeare As You Like It)
Complexion; hue; colour.
(RQ:Shakespeare Titus Andronicus)
(senseid) Empty; unoccupied; clear.
(quote-book)|title=Orlando Furioso|passage=The horse runs leere away without the man.
Faint from lack of food; hungry.
(RQ:Jonson New Inne)
(ux)
To teach.
To learn.
(alternative form of)
To learn.
A teaching.
A ladder.
(infl of)
(syn)
a field of learning; set of lessons and theory on a subject within a discipline
(alternative form of).
A camp
A side ''(in a conflict)''
A (protestant) confirmation into the faithful community.
(ant)
(verb form of)
(verb form of)
to read
(RQ:Cervantes Don Quijote I) y llegó a tanto su curiosidad y desatino en esto, que vendió muchas hanegas de tierra de sembradura para comprar libros de caballerías en que leer, y, así, llevó a su casa todos cuantos pudo haber dellos.|translation=(..) to such a pitch did his eagerness and infatuation go that he sold many an acre of tillage land to buy books of chivalry to read, and brought home as many of them as he could get.