muddy

suomi-englanti sanakirja

muddy englannista suomeksi

  1. samea

  2. liejuinen

  3. tehdä sekavaksi

  4. kurata, liata

  5. samentaa

  6. kura-

  7. kurainen

  1. kurainen, kurassa">kurassa, mutainen, mudassa">mudassa, rapainen, ravassa">ravassa

  2. kurainen, mutainen, samea

  3. kuramainen, mutamainen

  4. kurainen, rapainen

  5. kurassa elävä">kurassa elävä, mudassa elävä">mudassa elävä

  6. liata kuralla">liata kuralla, liata mudalla">liata mudalla, liata ravalla">liata ravalla

  7. samentaa

  8. himmentää, samentaa

  9. sekoittaa

  10. kuraantua

  11. samentua, sameta

  12. saastua

muddy englanniksi

  1. Covered or splashed with, or full of, (l).

  2. (synonyms)

    (ux)

  3. (RQ:Estienne Liebault Maison Rustique)

  4. (RQ:Estienne Liebault Maison Rustique) is a ſharpe inſtrument of yron made thinne vvith many ſharpe teeth, and ſo ſtriken into holes or muddie banks, vvhere they vvill many times catch a verie great aboundance of Eeles: (..)

  5. (RQ:Dryden Georgics)

  6. (RQ:Addison Italy)|footer=Translating a passage by (w).

  7. (quote-book)

  8. (quote-book)|year=2021|page=25|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=keQMEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA25|isbn=978-1-4729-7484-6|passage=When faced with a rockier or muddier section, look ahead for the easiest way across. This might involve hopping from one rock to another, or looking for flat sections or patches of vegetation that might be grippier.

  9. Of water or some other liquid: containing mud or other sediment in suspension; cloudy, turbid.

  10. (RQ:Markham Maister-peece) ſo much the more unhealthfull.

  11. (RQ:Fuller Worthies of England)

  12. (RQ:Addison Italy)

  13. Of or relating to mud; also, having the characteristics of mud, especially in colour or taste.

  14. (RQ:Shakespeare Hamlet), / To muddy death.|footer=In the play, (w) falls into a brook. Not in her right mind, she sings as she floats in the water, unaware of the danger she is in. Eventually she sinks and drowns, weighed down by her wet garments.

  15. Soiled with feces.

  16. Of an animal or plant: growing or living in mud.

  17. (RQ:Shelley Posthumous Poems)

  18. Dirty, filthy.

  19. (RQ:Shakespeare Merchant of Venice Q1)

  20. (RQ:Marston Scourge of Villanie)

  21. Not clear.

  22. (RQ:Shakespeare Midsummer Q1)

  23. (RQ:Emerson Essays) When a man speaks the truth in the spirit of truth, his eye is as clear as the heavens. When he has base ends, and speaks falsely, the eye is muddy and sometimes asquint.

  24. (quote-book)|month=December|year=2008|year_published=March 2009|page=99|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=yv06sVgU5mEC&pg=PA99|oclc=664736802|passage=At the end of a class or a lecture, ask students to write for one or two minutes about the "muddiest point" of the lesson (the part of the lesson that is still not understood clearly).

  25. (quote-book) Thomson thinks the question of whether we are permitted to unplug ourselves from an unconscious violinist to whom we have been unwittingly attached admits of a fairly clear answer, and wants to bring that clarity to the muddier issue of abortion.

  26. Of a colour: not bright: dirty, dull.

  27. Of an image: blurry or dim.

  28. Of light: cloudy, opaque.

  29. Of sound (especially during performance, recording, or playback): indistinct, muffled.

  30. Of speech, thinking, or writing: ambiguous or vague; or confused, incoherent, or mixed-up; also, poorly expressed.

  31. (RQ:Shakespeare Winter's Tale)

  32. (RQ:King James Version)

  33. (RQ:Bunyan Works)

  34. (RQ:Burke Revolution in France) lavvs are to be ſupported only by their ovvn terrors, and by the concern, vvhich each individual may find in them, from his ovvn private ſpeculations, or can ſpare to them from his ovvn private intereſts.

  35. (RQ:Wollstonecraft Vindication Women)

  36. (RQ:Thackeray Paris Sketch Book)'s sneers and puns are, I think there is something more manly and earnest even in them, than in the present muddy French transcendentalism.

  37. Of the air: not fresh; impure, polluted.

  38. (RQ:Goldsmith History of the Earth)

  39. Originally, morally or religiously wrong; corrupt, sinful; now, morally or legally dubious; shady, sketchy.

  40. (RQ:More Philosophical Writings)

  41. (RQ:Stevenson New Arabian Nights)

  42. (RQ:Lawrence Lady Chatterley's Lover)

  43. Of a person or their facial expression: angry, sad, or sulky.

  44. Slightly drunk; tipsy.

  45. (RQ:Boswell Johnson)

  46. To cover or splash (someone or something) with mud.

  47. (RQ:Forster Room with a View)

  48. To make (water or some other liquid) cloudy or turbid by up|stirring up mud or other sediment.

  49. (RQ:Trollope Warden) It was so hard that the pleasant waters of his little stream should be disturbed and muddied by rough hands; (..)

  50. To confuse (a person or their thinking); to muddle.

  51. (RQ:Shakespeare Hamlet) they come not ſingle ſpies, / But in Battalianes. Firſt, her Father ſlaine, / Next your Sonne gone, and he moſt violent Author / Of his ovvne iuſt remoue: the people muddied, / Thicke and vnvvholſome in their thoughts, (..)

  52. (RQ:Scott Rob Roy)

  53. To damage (a person or their reputation); to sully, to tarnish.

  54. To make (a colour) dirty, dull, or muted.

  55. To make (a matter, etc.) more complicated or unclear; to make a mess of (something).

  56. (quote-journal): a primate scream – first look review|editor=Alan Rusbridger|newspaper=The Guardian|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20221127035947/http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/jul/01/dawn-of-the-planet-of-the-apes-review|archivedate=27 November 2022|location=London|publisher=Media Group|Guardian News & Media|date=1 July 2014|issn=0261-3077|oclc=229952407|passage=As the humans establish tentative bonds with their evolutionary cousins, the inter-species waters start to muddy.

  57. (quote-web)

  58. To make (something) impure; to contaminate.

  59. To cause or permit (someone or something) to become stuck in mud; to mire.

  60. (RQ:Shakespeare All's Well) I am novv ſir muddied in fortunes mood, and ſmell ſomevvhat ſtrong of her ſtrong diſpleaſure.

  61. ''Sometimes followed by'' up: to become covered or splashed with mud; to become dirty or soiled.

  62. Of water or some other liquid: to become cloudy or turbid.

  63. (RQ:Landor Works)

  64. To become contaminated or impure.

  65. The edible crab or (vern) ((taxfmt)).