mellow

suomi-englanti sanakirja

mellow englannista suomeksi

  1. pehmentää

  2. seestyä

  3. heltyä

  4. rento, hyväntuulinen

  5. pilvessä oleva, pilvessä

  6. seestynyt

  7. seestyneesti

  8. kypsä

  1. Substantiivi

  2. Verbi

mellow englanniksi

  1. Soft or tender by reason of ripeness; having a tender pulp.

  2. (synonyms)

    (ux)

  3. (RQ:Nashe Anatomie of Absurditie)

  4. (RQ:Shakespeare Coriolanus)'' did ſhake downe Mellow Fruite: You haue made faire worke.

  5. (RQ:Dryden Spanish Fryar)

  6. (RQ:Eliot Middlemarch)

  7. (RQ:Tennyson Foresters)

  8. Matured and smooth, and not acidic, harsh, or sharp.

  9. (RQ:Thomson Autumn)

  10. (RQ:Charlotte Bronte Villette)

  11. Soft and easily penetrated or worked; not hard or rigid; loamy.

  12. (RQ:Elyot Governour) will first serche throughout his gardeyne where he can finde the most melowe and fertile erth: and therin wil he put the sede of the herbe to growe and be norisshed: (..)

  13. (RQ:Drayton Poly-Olbion)

  14. (RQ:Evelyn Kalendarium)

  15. (RQ:Dryden Georgics)

  16. Mature; of crops: ready to be harvested; ripe.

  17. (quote-book)|edition=new|location=London|publisher=(...) Johnson (publisher)|Joseph Johnson,(nb...)|year=1792|page=70|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=lMBgAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA70|oclc=723071742|passage=Nor autumn yet had bruſh'd from ev'ry ſpray, / With her chill hand, the mellow leaves away; (..)

  18. Fruitful and warm.

  19. (RQ:Wordsworth Excursion)

  20. (RQ:Keats Lamia)

  21. Not coarse, brash, harsh, or rough; delicate, rich, soft, subdued.

  22. (RQ:More Divine Dialogues)

  23. (RQ:Dryden Fables)

  24. (RQ:Goldsmith Vicar of Wakefield)

  25. (RQ:Wordsworth Poetical Works)

  26. (RQ:Byron Don Juan)

  27. (quote-book) A. H. Maltby and Co.|year=1822|page=18|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=uKNgAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA18|oclc=13191824|passage=It was from gazing on the fairy hues, / That hung around the born and dying day; / The tender flush, whose mellow stain imbues / Heaven with all freaks of light, and where it lay / Deep-bosom'd in a still and waveless bay, / The sea reflected all that glow'd above, (..)

  28. (RQ:Tennyson Poems 1842)

  29. (RQ:Eliot Adam Bede)

  30. (RQ:Twain Connecticut Yankee)

  31. (RQ:Montgomery Anne of Green Gables)

  32. (RQ:Burnett Secret Garden)

  33. (RQ:Allingham China Governess)

  34. (non-gloss definition)

  35. Well-matured from age or experience; not impetuous or impulsive; calm, dignified, gentle.

  36. (RQ:Kyd Spanish Tragedie)

  37. (RQ:Middleton Dekker Roaring Girle)

  38. (RQ:Smollett Regicide)

  39. (RQ:Wordsworth Yarrow Revisited)

  40. Cheerful, genial, jovial, merry; also, easygoing, laid-back, relaxed.

  41. (sense) (synonyms)

  42. (RQ:Spectator)’s ''Epigrams'', book XII, number 47.

  43. (RQ:Irving Tales of a Traveller)

  44. (quote-song)

  45. Drunk, intoxicated; especially slightly or pleasantly so, or to an extent that makes one cheerful and friendly.

  46. (RQ:Melville Omoo) Tanee was accosted by certain good fellows, friends and boon companions, who condoled with him on his misfortunes—railed against the queen, and finally dragged him away to an illicit vender of spirits, in whose house the party got gloriously mellow.

  47. (RQ:Twain Tom Sawyer)

  48. Pleasantly high or stoned, and relaxed after taking drugs; also, of drugs: slightly intoxicating and tending to produce such effects.

  49. (quote-book)

  50. (quote-book)|year=2014|page=132|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=TYtXBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA132|isbn=978-1-4677-3480-6|passage="It better be that mellow shit, Kerry," Wendy said, biting into a cookie. "I have to work tomorrow." / "It's mellow shit. You've smoked this stuff before."

  51. Pleasing in some way; excellent, fantastic, great.

  52. The property of being mellow; mellowness.

  53. A comfortable or relaxed mood.

  54. (quote-book) Hope for flower power had faded, though the journey into the mellow did not represent idealism; rather, it spelled escape— (..)

  55. ''Also'' main mello a close friend or lover.

  56. (quote-song)|title=Do It|album=Ill Communication|date=31 May 1994|passage=I've got attractions like I'm (w) / Adam Yauch grab the mic 'cause you know you're my mellow

  57. To cause (fruit) to become soft or tender, specifically by ripening.

  58. (RQ:Cowper Poems)

  59. (RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Harold)

  60. To cause (food or drink, for example, cheese or wine, or its flavour) to become matured and smooth, and not acidic, harsh, or sharp.

  61. To soften (land or soil) and make it suitable for planting in.

  62. (RQ:Herbert Travaile)

  63. (RQ:Evelyn Sylva) let it be ''Broken up'' the ''Winter'' before you ſow, to mellow it, eſpecially if it be a ''Clay'', and then the ''furrow'' would be made deeper; (..)

  64. To reduce or remove the harshness or roughness from (something); to soften, to subdue, to down.

  65. (RQ:Nashe Christs Teares)

  66. (RQ:Nashe Saffron-Walden)

  67. (RQ:Dryden Miscellaneous Works)

  68. (RQ:Hume History)

  69. (RQ:Scott Lady of the Lake)

  70. (RQ:Maugham Of Human Bondage)

  71. To cause (a person) to become calmer, gentler, and more understanding, particularly from age or experience.

  72. To cause (a person) to become slightly or pleasantly drunk or intoxicated.

  73. (RQ:Irving Astoria)

  74. (RQ:Tennyson Maud)

  75. ''Followed by'' out: to relax (a person); in particular, to cause (a person) to become pleasantly high or stoned by taking drugs.

  76. To mature and lose its harshness or sharpness.

  77. To be rendered soft and suitable for planting in.

  78. To lose harshness; to become gentler, subdued, or downAdjective|toned down.

  79. (RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3)

  80. (RQ:Donne Works)

  81. (RQ:Byron Island)

  82. (RQ:Dickens Barnaby Rudge)

  83. To relax; in particular, to become pleasantly high or stoned by taking drugs.