spangle

suomi-englanti sanakirja

spangle englannista suomeksi

  1. koristella paljetein

  2. paljetti, hely

  3. kimallella

  1. Substantiivi

  2. paljetti

  3. Verbi

spangle englanniksi

  1. A small, flat piece of sparkling metallic or metal-like material with a hole which is sewn on to a garment, etc., for decoration; a sequin.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (RQ:Sidney Arcadia)

  4. (RQ:Swift Gulliver's Travels) I had coſt his Majeſty above a million and a half of ''Sprugs'', (their greateſt Gold Coin, about the bigneſs of a Spangle;) and upon the whole, that it would be adviſeable in the Emperor to take the firſt fair Occaſion of diſmiſſing me.

  5. (RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 2)

  6. (RQ:Dickens Pickwick Papers)|page=151|passage=His wardrobe was extensive—very extensive—not strictly classical perhaps, nor quite new, nor did it contain any one garment made precisely after the fashion of any age or time, but every thing was more or less spangled; and what ''can'' be prettier than spangles?

  7. (RQ:Wharton House of Mirth)

  8. (quote-book) A spangle is a small plate or bar of shiny metal or other material used as an ornament or trimming on wearing apparel.

  9. (quote-book): Charles might only have been second footman at Darracott Place for a couple of months when that disaster occurred, but no one could gammon him into thinking that my lord cared a spangle for his heir.

  10. (quote-book) For later blackwork purposes, spangles were held in place with black silk retaining stitches, or they could be held with silver-gilt thread worked in knots such as a conical 'French knot'.

  11. (quote-book)

  12. Any small sparkling object.

  13. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)

  14. (RQ:Herrick Hesperides)

  15. A shiny particle of a mineral.

  16. (RQ:Smith Generall Historie)

  17. A star.

  18. (quote-book)|chapter=Of the Queen|title=Poems, &c. Written upon Several Occasions, and to Several Persons:(nb...)|edition=6th|location=London|publisher=(...) Herringman|Henry Herringman, and sold by (w),(nb...)|year=1645|year_published=1694|lines=35–38|page=118|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Cu57djWfl7EC&pg=PA118|oclc=83266737|passage=Thus in a Starry night fond children cry / For the rich ſpangles that adorn the Sky; / Which though they ſhine for ever fixed there, / With light and influence relieve us here.

  19. (RQ:Pope Dunciad)

  20. (RQ:Scott Tales of the Crusaders)

  21. A point of light; also , a glitter, a sparkle.

  22. (RQ:Tennyson Complete Poetical Works)

  23. A speckle or spot, especially on the body of an animal.

  24. (quote-book) The wing bows are also red, tipped with white spangles.

  25. (quote-book) The spangles of the wing coverts should form two distinct, parallel bars across the wings.

  26. (quote-book) Spangle galls often occur in vast numbers, and cause spotting of the foliage, visible from above. However, infested trees are seldom if ever harmed.

  27. Any of a number of swallowtail butterflies (genus (taxfmt)); specifically (taxlink).

  28. (quote-journal)

  29. (quote-book)|year=2004|pages=25 and 26|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=qFwQAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA25|isbn=978-984-8574-04-1|passage=&91;page 25&93; ''Papilio protenor euprotenor'' Fruhstorfer, 1908 / The ''Spangle'' was mentioned from Bangladesh by Collins & Morris (1985); it is quite likely in the Srimangal forests since it occurs in the Khasi Hills at low levels. (..) &91;page 26&93; ''Papilio elephenor'' Doubleday, 1845 / The ''Yellow-Crested Spangle'' was collected once at Cachar. It is a very rare butterfly.

  30. (quote-book)|year=2008|section=photo 5 caption|page=128|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z3a1LfzYQ-8C&pg=PA128-IA3|isbn=978-1-85424-841-1|passage=Spangle butterfly (''Papilio protenor'') photographed in Tokyo, Japan.

  31. To fix spangles or sparkling objects to (something); to bespangle.

  32. (RQ:Shakespeare Taming of the Shrew)

  33. (quote-book)|entry=Chapadór|title=A Dictionarie in Spanish and English,(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) Edmund Bollifant|year=1599|page=65|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=SE-hNcCYICkC&pg=PA65|column=2|oclc=55194084|passage=Chapadór, ''m. one that plateth ouer, or ſpangleth.''

  34. (RQ:Shakespeare Timon of Athens)

  35. (RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)

  36. (RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)'', all thir ſhape / Spangl'd with eyes more numerous then thoſe / Of ''Panoptes|Argus'', (..)

  37. (RQ:Richardson Pamela) are beautiful, both by Buildings and Situation, beyond what I had imagined; and ſeveral of them ſeem larger than many of our Country Towns of Note.

  38. (RQ:Scott Lord of the Isles)

  39. (quote-journal) Clay for (publishers)|Charles & John Rivington,(nb...); and sold by J. Parker,(nb...)|month=November|year=1827|volume=IX|issue=XI|section=stanza 5|page=693|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=ObURAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA693|column=1|oclc=42340492|passage=Thou mad'st the spacious vault on high, / And thou, in gorgeous wide display, / Spanglest with stars the deep blue sky, (..)

  40. (RQ:Thackeray George Cruikshank)

  41. (quote-journal)|location=Montreal, Que.|publisher=John Lovell,(nb...)|month=July|year=1851|volume=IX (New Series)|issue=7|section=stanza 2|page=307|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZPQzAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA307|column=2|oclc=869318519|passage=When the birds wake to music, and lift up their song, / And thou spanglest with glory the dewy clad thorn; (..)

  42. To adorn or decorate (something).

  43. (RQ:Ward Simple Cobler)

  44. {{quote-journal

  45. To flash, glitter, or sparkle.

  46. (RQ:Bunyan Works)