loch

suomi-englanti sanakirja

loch englannista suomeksi

  1. järvi

  1. järvi

  2. Substantiivi

loch englanniksi

  1. A lake.

  2. (quote-journal) A very ordinary fall of rain raiſes it river far beyond its natural bounds; and the immediate conſequence of ſuch floods, was, the ſpeat-water flowing into thoſe lochs, by the canal, and covering the adjacent meadows.

  3. (quote-book)|location=Edinburgh|publisher=(publishing house)|William Blackwood & Sons; London: Cadell (publisher)|Thomas Cadell|year=1840|page=56|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=zeUDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA56|oclc=558389688|passage=But, enchanting as are the woodland banks of the quiet stream, there is to me a higher and yet more powerful charm in the solitary wildness or savage grandeur of the Highland loch.

  4. (quote-book)|year=1855|page=91|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=-1UCAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA91|oclc=4008043|passage=This book may possibly fall into the hands of tourists in the Highlands; and if it should induce any one to visit ''the Isles of Loch Awe'', a few words on my part may save him a good deal of trouble. The inns are so badly situated that no visitors but sportsmen and painters ever think of staying long at Loch Awe. The hotel at Dalmally is an old inconvenient house, three miles from the loch, and wants rebuilding. The inn at Cladich is a mile from the loch, and the footpath in wet weather is almost impassable.

  5. (quote-journal)

  6. (quote-book)|month=January|year=2010|page=28|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=YCOVub-GiegC&pg=PA28|isbn=978-0-7910-9779-3|passage=(..) Marmaduke Wetherell was hired by the ''Daily Mail'' newspaper to lead a search for the lair of the Loch Ness Monster. (..) To everyone's surprise, within a few days of the start of his search, Wetherell came across a huge, four-toed footprint along the shoreline of the loch. This was just the sort of sensational story the newspaper was hoping for.

  7. A bay or arm of the sea.

  8. (quote-book)|year=1865|page=28|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=w-Rq168WkWgC&pg=PA28|oclc=8304871|passage=It is well known, for instance, that the superiority of the herrings caught in the inland sea-lochs of Scotland is owing to the fish finding there a better feeding-ground than in the large and exposed open bays. Look, for instance, at Lochfyne: the land runs down to the water's edge, and the surface water or drainage carries with it rich food to fatten the loch, and put flesh on the herring; and what fish is finer, I would ask, than a Lochfyne herring?

  9. (quote-book). The flanks of the loch are characterized by rugged headlands backed by mountains such as An Teallach to the south and Beinn Ghobhlach to the north.

  10. (alternative form of)

  11. (quote-book)|location=Boston, Mass.|publisher=Phillips, Sampson and Company|year=1859|page=67|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ho0aL9B5W5kC&pg=PA67|oclc=4303262|passage=We may obtain, then, a just idea of the constitution of this liquid milk, if we look upon it as a soft, liquid substance, a kind of ''loch'',(sup) in which caseine, sugar, &c., are dissolved, and in which the fatty or oily substance is distributed in small, rounded atoms. ''Footnote *'': Loch, or lohoch, is an Arabian name for a medicine of a consistence between an electuary and a sirup, and usually taken by licking.(nb..)

  12. (RQ:George du Maurier Martian)

  13. (quote-book)

  14. hole

  15. nick, slammer (prison)

  16. (syn)

  17. log, log

  18. {{quote-book|fr|year=1698|title=Traité complet de la navigation|author=Jean Bouguer|page=136|url=https://www.google.com.au/books/edition/Trait%C3%A9_complet_de_la_navigation/wfP3cuYnj4oC?hl=en&gbpv=1&printsec=frontcover

  19. (l)

  20. lake

  21. inlet of the sea

  22. black, dark

  23. dungeon (gl)

  24. cellar (gl)

  25. (infl of)

  26. lake, (l), firth

  27. lake, (l)

  28. arm of the sea

  29. fjord