quicken

suomi-englanti sanakirja

quicken englannista suomeksi

  1. elvyttää

  2. elävöityä

  3. kiihdyttää, kiihtyä, nopeuttaa

  4. herättää eloon

  1. elvyttää, herättää henkiin">herättää henkiin

  2. nopeuttaa, pikaistaa, vauhdittaa

  3. Verbi

quicken englanniksi

  1. (non-gloss definition)

  2. To put (someone or something) in a state of activity or vigour comparable to life; to excite, to rouse.

  3. (synonyms)

  4. (RQ:Forster Room with a View) Italy had quickened Cecil, not to tolerance, but to irritation. He saw that the local society was narrow, but, instead of saying, "Does this very much matter?" he rebelled, and tried to substitute for it the society he called broad.

  5. To inspire or stimulate (an action, a feeling, etc.).

  6. (RQ:South Twelve Sermons)

  7. (RQ:Defoe Jack)

  8. (RQ:Cowper Poems)

  9. To stimulate or assist the fermentation of (an alcoholic beverage, dough, etc.).

  10. To give life to (someone or something never alive or once dead); to animate, to resurrect, to revive. (defdate)

  11. (RQ:Tyndale NT)

  12. (RQ:Shakespeare All's Well)

  13. (RQ:Shakespeare Tempest)

  14. (RQ:Bunyan Works)

  15. (RQ:Thomson Autumn)

  16. (RQ:Shelley Cenci)

  17. To make or help (something) to burn.

  18. (RQ:Morris Earthly Paradise) sheQuickened the fire and laid the board, (..)

  19. (RQ:Robert Browning Parleyings)

  20. To make (a drug, liquor, etc.) more effective or stimulating.

  21. (RQ:Spenser Complaints)

  22. (RQ:Bacon Sylva Sylvarum)

  23. Of a pregnant woman: to be in the state of reaching the stage of pregnancy at which the movements of the foetus are first felt.

  24. (RQ:Nashe Lenten Stuffe)

  25. To on a state of activity or vigour comparable to life; to be excited or roused. (defdate)

  26. (RQ:Rossetti Poems)

  27. (RQ:Saki Reginald in Russia)

  28. (RQ:Waugh Scoop)

  29. To grow bright; to brighten.

  30. (RQ:Pope Rape of the Lock)

  31. (RQ:Tennyson Idylls)

  32. (RQ:Harte Maruja)

  33. Of an alcoholic beverage, dough, etc.: to ferment.

  34. Of a pregnant woman: to first feel the movements of the foetus, or reach the stage of pregnancy at which this place|takes place; of a foetus: to begin to move. (defdate)

  35. (RQ:Pepys Diary) about a month ago she Castlemaine quickened at my Gerard, 1st Earl of Macclesfield|Lord Gerard's at dinner, and cried out that she was undone; and all the lords and men were fain to quit the room, and women called to help her.

  36. (RQ:Richard Blackmore Arthur)

  37. (quote-journal)

  38. To give life; to make alive.

  39. To back to life, to receive life. (defdate)

  40. (RQ:Shakespeare Othello Q1)

  41. (RQ:Poems and Translations)

  42. (RQ:John Gay Polly)

  43. (RQ:Tennyson Poems 1842)

  44. To inspire or stimulate.

  45. (senseid) To make (something) quicker or faster; to hasten, up. (defdate)

  46. (RQ:Adam Smith Wealth of Nations)

  47. (RQ:Chambers Younger Set)

  48. (quote-book)

  49. To shorten the radius of (a curve); to make (a curve) sharper, or (an incline) steeper.

  50. (ux)

  51. To become quicker or faster. (defdate)

  52. (RQ:Hardy Tess)

  53. (RQ:Mitchell Gone with the Wind)

  54. To apply quicksilver (mercury) to (something); to combine (something) with quicksilver; to quicksilver.

  55. ''In full'' quicken tree: the rowan, rowan, or ash ((taxfmt)). (defdate)

  56. (RQ:Ford Some Do Not) Miss Wannop moved off down the path: it was only suited for Indian file, and had on the left hand a ten-foot, untrimmed quicken hedge, the hawthorn blossoms just beginning to blacken at the edges and small green haws to show.

  57. (synonym of) (“a species of grass, (taxfmt)”); also , the underground rhizomes of this, and sometimes other grasses.

  58. (synonyms)|quitch|(vern)|scutch grass|twitch|witchgrass

  59. (RQ:Scott Antiquary)

  60. (de-adj form of)

  61. to to life