stool

suomi-englanti sanakirja

stool englannista suomeksi

  1. vesoa

  2. wc-istuin

  3. palli, jakkara

  4. uloste

  5. reagoida

  6. kanto

  7. tyhjentää suoli

  8. houkutella syötillä

  1. palli, jakkara, military jäkki

  2. uloste

  3. Substantiivi

stool englanniksi

  1. A seat, especially for one person and without armrests.

  2. (senseid) A seat for one person without a back or armrests.

  3. A footstool.

  4. A seat with a back; a chair.

  5. A throne.

  6. A close-stool; a seat used for urination and defecation: a pot, commode, outhouse seat, or toilet.

  7. (syn)

  8. A plant that has been cut down until its main stem is close to the ground, resembling a stool, to promote new growth.

  9. (quote-book)

  10. (quote-book) The closer the apical meristem is to the roots of the plant, the more juvenile it is likely to be. This feature is exploited by techniques such as hedging or stool bedding that employ severe pruning to decrease the distance between the new growth and the root system, thus acting to rejuvenate the plant and benefit from the ease of rooting that is characteristic of the juvenile phase.

  11. (quote-book) One consequence of coppicing is that the stool enlarges because each subsequent growth of shoots occurs on its outside. The diameter of a stool is thus directly related to its age. (..) stool 1. A tree stump that is capable of producing new shoots. 2. The permanent base of a *coppiced tree.

  12. Feces, excrement.

  13. (ux)

  14. A production of feces or excrement, an act of defecation, stooling.

  15. A decoy; a portable piece of wood to which a pigeon is fastened to lure wild birds.

  16. A small channel on the side of a vessel, for the deadeyes of the backstays.

  17. (quote-journal)

  18. Material, such as oyster shells, spread on the sea bottom for oyster spat to adhere to.

  19. To produce stool: to defecate.

  20. To cut down (a plant) until its main stem is close to the ground, resembling a stool, to promote new growth.

  21. (quote-book)|year=2011|page=411|isbn=978-1-111-30730-1|passage=Cutting back to the same position annually is usually referred to as ''pollarding''; cutting nearly to the ground is usually called ''stooling''. Both are good methods of controlling height and maintaining vigor on plants that would normally grow to a large size. (..) Those plants that generate many small stems crowded together are difficult to pollard so they are normally stooled. Some people refer to stooling as ''coppice''.

  22. (quote-journal) (Review)|location=London|date=23 October 2015|passage=The healthier of your two hollies is multi-stemmed, indicating that it was once stooled (cut down to a point just above the ground). It has since grown back vigorously to become a thick, wide tree which enabled it even more to overshadow the one that you say was quite severely pruned last year.

  23. A plant from which layers are propagated by bending its branches into the soil.1881, Peter Henderson, ''Henderson's Handbook of Plants''

  24. (quote-book) into the soil to a certain depth, and elevating the top part of it out of the soil in an upright direction; in time the buried part takes root, and the shoot becomes a perfect plant. The root which produces the young shoots for layering is called the stool. Stools are planted about six feet apart every way in a deep fresh soil. (..) ''Stool''. – The root of a tree which has been left in the ground, the produce of another tree, or shoot for saplings, underwood, &c.

  25. (quote-book).

  26. To ramify; to tiller, as grain; to shoot out suckers.

  27. {{quote-text|en|year=1869|author=Blackmore|Richard D. Blackmore|title=s:Lorna Doone|section=Doone/Chapter 38|chapter 38

  28. a denouncer or whistleblower; a stoolie