repose

suomi-englanti sanakirja

repose englannista suomeksi

  1. levätä

  2. levollisuus

  3. olla

  4. panna

  5. laittaa

  6. asettaa

  7. maata

  8. lepo

  1. lepuuttaa

  2. käydä levolle">käydä levolle

  3. pitää tauko">pitää tauko

  4. levätä

  5. olla jonkin päällä">olla jonkin päällä

  6. lepo

  7. rauha

  8. lepo, lepotila

  9. lepotila

  10. luottaa, uskoa

  11. uskoa

  12. siirtää takaisin paikalleen">siirtää takaisin paikalleen

  13. johtaa

  14. Verbi

repose englanniksi

  1. To lay (someone, or part of their body) down to rest.

  2. (RQ:Lodge Scillaes Metamorphosis)'' (..) Repoſd his head vpon my faintfull knée: (..)

  3. (RQ:John Gay Beggar's Opera)

  4. (RQ:Burns Poems)

  5. (quote-book).(nb...)|location=London|publisher=Murray (publishing house)|John Murray,(nb...)|year=1850|page=516|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=sto5AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA516|oclc=3107845|passage=A hundred times hast thou said, when, wearied with thy labours and oppressed by thy troubles, thou reposedst thy head familiarly on my breast, 'Would that I could die in this bosom!'

  6. (RQ:Arnold Empedocles)

  7. (RQ:Henry Voice)

  8. To rest (oneself), especially by going to sleep.

  9. (RQ:Udall Ralph Roister Doister)

  10. (RQ:Shakespeare Titus Andronicus Q1)

  11. (RQ:Derham Physico-Theology)

  12. ''Followed by'' from ''or'' (''obsolete'') of: to cause (oneself) to take a rest from some activity; also, to allow (oneself) to recover from some activity.

  13. (RQ:Erasmus Newe Testamente)

  14. (RQ:Smollett Ferdinand)

  15. To give (someone) rest; to refresh (someone) by giving rest.

  16. (RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)

  17. (RQ:Pope Riches)

  18. (RQ:Bancroft United States)&93; entered North Carolina, and halted at Hillsborough to repose his wayworn soldiers.

  19. (RQ:R. F. Burton Gorilla)

  20. To cause (oneself) to have faith in or rely on someone or something.

  21. (RQ:Shakespeare Henry 6-3)

  22. (RQ:Thackeray Henry Esmond)

  23. To give (someone) accommodation for the night.

  24. (senseid) To lean or recline, down, or down to rest; to rest.

  25. (RQ:Sylvester Du Bartas)

  26. (RQ:Shakespeare Tempest)

  27. (RQ:Shakespeare Cymbeline)

  28. (RQ:Homer Chapman Odysseys)

  29. (RQ:Gray Six Poems)

  30. (RQ:Shelley Revolt of Islam)

  31. (quote-journal)|month=May–August|year=1831|volume=V (New Series)|issue=17|page=231|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=8yYYAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA231|oclc=499637279|passage=Their materialism, which is the end of all their philosophy, induces them to say, "that the spirit of heaven reposeth in the sun, as the spirit of man reposeth in the eye"(nb..).

  32. (RQ:Tennyson Complete Poetical Works)

  33. (RQ:Hawthorne Grimshawe)

  34. (RQ:Dunsany Pegana)

  35. Especially of a saint: to die, to in peace.

  36. (ux)

  37. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Burns (publisher)|Burns & Lambert (civil servant)|Lambert,(nb...)|year=1850|section=part VI (On the Life and Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ)|page=460|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=ObXQ9cqkDsEC&pg=PA460|column=2|oclc=69160482|passage=Lord (w), who at the hour of ''Compline'' reposedst in the tomb, and wast bewailed by thy most sorrowful Mother, and by other women; make us, we beseech thee, with true tears, to bewail thy most holy Passion, and never to give place to the things by which thou wouldst be crucified again.

  38. ''Followed by'' on ''or'' upon: of a thing: to lie or be physically positioned on something, especially horizontally; to rest on or be supported by something.

  39. (RQ:Montgomery Anne of Avonlea)

  40. ''Followed by'' on ''or'' upon: of light, a look, etc.: to fall or rest (and often remain for a while) on something; to alight, to dwell.

  41. (RQ:Byron Don Juan)

  42. (RQ:Collins Woman in White)

  43. ''Followed by'' on ''or'' upon: to be based on; to depend or rely on.

  44. (RQ:Cowper Poems)

  45. (RQ:Gibbon Miscellaneous Works)&93; may have publiſhed in French a ſketch of his Reflections on Exile: but his reputation novv repoſes on the addreſs of (w), "Docte ſermones utriuſque linguæ;" and by his Engliſh dedication to Queen Caroline, and his Eſſay on Epic Poetry, it ſhould ſeem that Voltaire himſelf vviſhed to deſerve a return of the ſame compliment.

  46. To cease activity to rest or recover; also, to have a period free from activity or disturbance.

  47. (quote-journal) &91;Taylor (editor)|Richard and Arthur Taylor&93; for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown,(nb...); and Murray (publishing house)|John Murray,(nb...)|date=30 September 1817|year_published=1820|volume=II|page=92|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=FWwoAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA92|oclc=1514455|passage=''From the Leila and Majnun of Ganjavi|Nizami.'' (..) Thou wert agitated like the sand of the desert; but now thou reposest as the water of the lake.

  48. (RQ:Shelley Prometheus Unbound)

  49. To have faith in; to confide, to trust.

  50. (RQ:Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona)

  51. (RQ:Johnson Rambler)

  52. (RQ:Isaac Taylor Saturday Evening)

  53. To lie still and unmoving.

  54. (RQ:Woodward Natural History)

  55. (RQ:Tennyson Poems 1842)

  56. Temporary cessation from activity to rest and recover, especially in the form of sleep; rest; an instance of this; a break, a rest; a sleep.

  57. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)

  58. (RQ:Marlowe Nashe Dido) in thy care, / Since thy ''Æneas'' vvandring fate is firme, / VVhoſe vvearie lims ſhall ſhortly make repoſe, / In thoſe faire vvalles I promiſt him of yore: (..)

  59. (RQ:Marston Antonio and Mellida)

  60. (RQ:Douay Bible)

  61. (RQ:Dryden Georgics)

  62. (RQ:Smollett Humphry Clinker). of Jesus College, Oxon.|page=29|passage=During the heats of ſummer, he commonly took his repoſe upon a bulk, or indulged himſelf, in freſco, vvith one of the kennel-nymphs, under the portico of St. Martin's church.

  63. (RQ:Goldsmith History of the Earth)

  64. (RQ:Dickens Christmas Carol)&93; had undergone, or the fatigues of the day, or his glimpse of the Invisible World, or the dull conversation of the Ghost, or the lateness of the hour, much in need of repose; went straight to bed, without undressing, and fell asleep upon the instant.

  65. (RQ:Grahame Wind in the Willows)

  66. (RQ:Orwell Animal Farm)

  67. Of the Mary: death; also assumption into heaven.

  68. The festival honouring the assumption of the Virgin Mary into heaven, celebrated on August 15.

  69. The state of being peacefully inactive or relaxed, or being free from disturbances or worries; calmness, ease, peace, quietness.

  70. (synonyms)

  71. (RQ:Hobbes Leviathan)

  72. (RQ:Tatler) I am diverted from that subject by letters which I have received from several ladies, complaining of a certain ''sect'' of professed enemies to the repose of the fair sex, called Oglers.

  73. (RQ:Dante Cary Vision)

  74. (RQ:Joyce Portrait)

  75. Calmness of the mind or temperament; composure.

  76. (RQ:Hunt Feast of the Poets)

  77. (RQ:Emerson Conduct of Life)

  78. (RQ:Dickens Our Mutual Friend)

  79. Of the face, a muscle, etc.: the state of being relaxed and not in tension.

  80. The state of lying still and unmoving; calmness, tranquillity; an instance of this.

  81. (RQ:Pope Works)

  82. (RQ:Keats Lamia)

  83. (RQ:Asbjornsen Braekstad Tales)

  84. Relief or respite from something exhausting or unpleasant; an instance of this.

  85. (RQ:Cowper Task)

  86. (RQ:Byron Sardanapalus)

  87. Confidence, faith, or trust in something.

  88. The arrangement of elements of an artwork, a building, etc., that is restful and soothing to a viewer; harmony.

  89. (RQ:Du Fresnoy Dryden Painting) to find the repoſe of vvhich vve ſpeak, by the Light and by the Shadovv, vvhich naturally accompany ſolid Bodies.

  90. The state of leaving something alone or untouched; an instance of this.

  91. ''Chiefly in the form'' point of repose'','' position of repose'', etc.'': absence of motion; equilibrium; a position where an object is not moving and at rest.

  92. Of a natural phenomenon, especially the eruption of a volcano: the state of temporary cessation of activity; dormancy, quiescence.

  93. (RQ:Gray Poems)

  94. (RQ:Ruskin Praeterita) Vesuvius was virtually in repose, and the slow changes in the heaped white cloud above the crater were only like those of a thunder cloud.

  95. A piece of furniture on which one can rest, especially a couch or sofa.

  96. (RQ:Behn Love-letters)

  97. A place of rest.

  98. (RQ:Milton Paradise Regained)

  99. (senseid) The technique of including in a painting an area or areas which are dark, indistinct, or soft in tone so that other areas are more prominent, or so that a viewer can rest they eyes when looking at them; such an area of a painting.

  100. (RQ:Du Fresnoy Dryden Painting) Theſe repoſes are made tvvo ſeveral vvays, one of vvhich is ''Natural'', the other ''Artificial''. The ''Natural'' is made by an extent of Lights or of Shadovvs; vvhich naturally and neceſſarily follovv ſolid Bodies, or the Maſſes of ſolid Bodies aggroupp'd vvhen the Light ſtrikes upon them. And the ''Artificial'' conſiſts in the Bodies of Colours, vvhich the Painter gives to certain things, ſuch as pleaſes him; and compoſes them in ſuch a manner, that they do no injury to the objects vvhich are near them. A Drapery, ''for example'', vvhich is made yellovv or red on ſome certain place, in another place may be brovvn, and vvill be more ſuitable to it, to produce the effect requir'd.

  101. (term-label) (non-gloss definition)

  102. To place (confidence, faith, or trust) in someone or something.

  103. (RQ:Marlowe Tamburlaine)

  104. (RQ:Spenser Daphnaida)

  105. (RQ:Shakespeare Richard 2 Q1)

  106. (RQ:Thucydides Hobbes Peloponnesian Warre)

  107. (RQ:Disraeli Coningsby)

  108. ''Followed by'' in: to entrust (duty, power, etc.) in someone; to confide.

  109. (RQ:Prescott Ferdinand and Isabella)

  110. To place (something), especially for safekeeping or storage; to deposit, to keep safe, to store.

  111. (quote-book)|year=1589|year_published=1847|page=171|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/admonitiontopeop00coop/page/171/mode/1up|oclc=63976672|passage=When Christ affirmeth, that "where a mans treasure is, there is his heart:" by treasure, he meaneth not the possession of riches simply, but hee meaneth that, wherein a man reposeth his chiefe treasure and felicitie to consist. (..) He that reposeth his felicitie in building, giueth ouer his cogitations vnto that.

  112. (RQ:Bacon Learning) Libraries, (..) are as the Shrynes, vvhere all the Reliques of the ancient Saints, full of true vertue, and that vvithout deluſion or impoſture, are preſerued, and repoſed; (..)

  113. (RQ:Scott Napoleon)

  114. To regard (something) as being embodied in another thing; to ascribe, to attribute.

  115. (RQ:Calvin Norton Institution) the Apostle|Paule ſayth that the widowes which hauing ben ones receiued into the Publike miniſterie did marrye, denyed their firſt fayth. But I doe not denie to them, that the widowes, whiche bounde themſelues and their ſeruices to the Chirch, did therewithall take vpon them the bonde of cõtinuall vnmaried life: not becauſe they repoſed any religion therin as it afterward began to be vſed: but becauſe they could not beare that office but beeing at their own libertie and looſe from yoke of mariage.

  116. (RQ:Purchas Pilgrimage) did giue them a certaine booke to kiſſe, and laid it on their heads, vvherein they repoſed much holiness, and vvorſhipped it as a god: (..)

  117. To establish or institute (something); to found.

  118. (RQ:Virgil Stanyhurst Aeneid)

  119. To throw (something); to cast.

  120. (non-gloss definition)

  121. To put (a part) back in its usual location; to reposition.

  122. To forcefully restrain (something); to repress, to suppress.

  123. (RQ:Giraffi Howell Naples)

  124. To return (something) to a particular place; to back, to replace.

  125. To restore (someone) to a position or rank formerly held; to reinstate.

  126. Of a thing: to be in the management or power of a person or an organization.

  127. To pose (oneself or someone, or something) again.

  128. (inflection of)

  129. (es-verb form of)