nincompoop

suomi-englanti sanakirja

nincompoop englannista suomeksi

  1. tolvana, tyhmyri, tollo

  1. Substantiivi

  2. tohelo, tollo, tolvana

nincompoop englanniksi

  1. A foolish or silly person. (defdate)

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (quote-book)|year=1662?|section=title page|oclc=1030296415|passage=The Ship of Fools Fully Fraught and Richly Laden with Asses, Fools, Jack-daws, Ninnihammers, Coxcombs, Slender-wits, Shallowbrains, Paper-Skuls, Simpletons, Nickumpoops, Wiseakers, Dunces, and Blockheads. Declaring their several Natures, Manners, and Constitutions; the occasion why this Ship was built, with the places of their intended Voyage, and a lift of the Officers that bear Command therein title.

  4. (RQ:Shadwell Epsom-Wells)

  5. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for William Cademan(nb...)|year=1674 (first performance)|year_published=1675|oclc=4878551|newversion=republished in|2ndauthor=Montague Summers|chapter2=The New Tempest or The Enchanted Castle|title2=Shakespeare Adaptations: The Tempest, The Mock Tempest, and King Lear.(nb...)|location2=London|publisher2=(w)(nb...)|year2=1922|section2=Act I, scene i|page2=114|pageurl2=https://archive.org/details/cu31924013144724/page/n225/mode/1up|oclc2=752892026|passage=''Mous''''trappa''. O you huffing Son of a Whore. / ''Drink''''allup''. You rotten Jack in a box. / ''Bean''''tosser''. You foul mouth'd Nickumpoop.

  6. (quote-book)|chapter=(w) Her Answer to (w)|title=The Wits Paraphras’d: Or, Paraphrase upon Paraphrase: In a Burlesque on the Several Late Translations of Ovids Epistles|location=London|publisher=Printed for William Cademan(nb...)|year=1680|page=161|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=IFPOAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA161|oclc=801389919|passage=’Tis ſuch another ''Nincompoop'', / I ſleep, and he begins to droop. / He ſees, yet keeps his Eyes a winking, / Says nought, but pays it off with thinking.

  7. (RQ:d'Urfey Don Quixote)

  8. (quote-book)|chapter=How ''Don Quixote'' Took His Leave of the Duke, and what Happen’d between Him and the Witty Wanton ''Altisidora'', the Duchesses Damsel|translator=Stevens (translator)|John Stevens|title=Quixote|The History of the Most Ingenious Knight Don Quixote de la Mancha.(nb...)|edition=2nd revised and amended|location=London|publisher=Printed for R. Chiswell, S. and J. Sprint, R. Battersby, S. Smith, and B. Walford, M. Wotton and G. Conyers|year=1706|volume=II|page=335|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=S_SXFsqVk_8C&pg=PA335|oclc=84821164|passage=May'ſt thou paſs for a Nincumpoop all the World over, / From ''Paris'' to ''France'', and from ''England'' to ''Dover''.

  9. (RQ:Sterne Tristram Shandy)

  10. (RQ:Grose Vulgar Tongue), or (smallcaps)|noformat=1|passage=(smallcaps), or (smallcaps), a fooliſh fellow; alſo one who never ſaw his wife's ****.|brackets=on

  11. (quote-journal)

  12. (quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=Printed for & Davies|Thomas Cadell, Jun. and William Davies,(nb...)|year=1802|volume=II|section=act I, scene i|pages=4–5|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=VVlVAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA4|oclc=519191005|passage=What, do you give it up so? you poor, ſpiritleſs nincumpoops! I would roar till I burſted firſt, before I would give it up so to such a low-liv'd, beggarly rabble.

  13. (RQ:Orczy Scarlet Pimpernel)

  14. (quote-book)