sublime

suomi-englanti sanakirja

sublime englannista suomeksi

  1. sublimoitua, muuttaa

  2. ylevöitynyt

  3. uljas, suurenmoinen, mahtava

  4. ylevä

  5. valtava

  6. sublimoida

  1. hämmästyttävä

  2. mahtipontinen

  3. ylivertainen

  4. suurenmoinen

  5. ylevä, ylhäinen

  6. suurenmoisuus

  7. mahtipontisuus, suurenmoisuus

  8. mahtipontisuus

  9. ylivertaisuus

  10. Verbi

sublime englanniksi

  1. (synonym of)

  2. To heat (a substance) in a container so as to convert it into a gas which then condenses in solid form on cooler parts of the container; to change (a solid substance) into a gas without down|breaking down or passing through the liquid state by heating it gently.

  3. (RQ:Jonson Alchemist). (..) VVho are you? / (smallcaps). A ''faithfull Brother'', if it pleaſe you. / (smallcaps). VVhat's that? / A ''Lullianiſt''? a ''Ripley''? ''Filius artis''? / Can you ''ſublime'', and ''dulcefie''?

  4. (RQ:Grew Plants)

  5. To obtain or purify (a substance) in this manner.

  6. (quote-journal) T. N. for John Martyn(nb...), printer to the (w)|year=1670 July 28 (Gregorian calendar)|volume=V|issue=61|page=2010|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=nxTe6gprrLsC&pg=PA2010|oclc=630046584|passage=It or sodium carbonate Calcineth, Sublimeth and Diſſolveth ''Minerals'' and ''Metals''.

  7. To raise (someone or an intangible thing) to a state of (especially moral or spiritual) excellence; to exalt.

  8. (synonyms)

  9. (RQ:Sidney Astrophel and Stella)

  10. (RQ:Shirley Schoole of Complement)

  11. (RQ:Milton Soveraigne Salve) that confirmation in grace, I say, by which free will is transfigured and sublimed into a state divine; (..)

  12. (RQ:Taylor Great Exemplar)'s&93; preſence he alſo hallovved marriage, and made it honourable, not onely in a civill account, and the rites of Heraldry, but in a ſpirituall ſenſe, he having nevv ſublim'd it by making it a Sacramentall repreſentment of the union of Chriſt and his Spouſe the Church.

  13. (RQ:Taylor Clerus Domini)

  14. (RQ:Du Fresnoy Dryden Painting)

  15. (RQ:Smollett Ferdinand)

  16. (RQ:Burke Revolution in France)

  17. (RQ:Southey Roderick)

  18. (RQ:Hazlitt Dramatic Literature)

  19. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=John Turrill,(nb...)|year=1832|page=243|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=gxwkAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA3-PA243|oclc=1143826143|passage=That beauty, which the hues of thought create / By thee enchanted,—slakes the mental fire / That parches us within: and yearning dreams, / And aspirations high as immortality, / Thy power sublimeth with mysterious aid.

  20. (RQ:Macaulay History of England)

  21. (RQ:Hardy Trumpet-Major) Bob's countenance was sublimed by his recent interview, like that of a priest just come from the ''penetralia'' of the temple.

  22. To cause (someone or something) to ascend; to raise (someone or something) to a high position.

  23. (RQ:Massinger City-Madam)

  24. (RQ:Denham Poems)

  25. (quote-journal)&93;|title=Editor’s Table|journal=Harper's Magazine|Harper’s New Monthly Magazine|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=(publisher)|Harper & Brothers,(nb...)|month=July|year=1857|volume=XV|issue=LXXXVI|page=265|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/harpersnew15harper/page/265/mode/1up|column=1|oclc=924884025|passage=Formerly, to attack a community intrenched in laws, customs, institutions, and beliefs, required dauntless courage—a soul sublimed by an idea above the region of vanity and conceit—a character resolutely facing responsibilities it clearly realized, and especially a penetrating vision into the spirit and heart of the objects assailed.

  26. To cause (juice or sap) to rise in a plant.

  27. (RQ:Parkinson Theatrum Botanicum)

  28. Especially of the sun: to heat (something) and cause vapours, etc., to rise from it.

  29. (RQ:Pope Essay on Criticism) / Meanly they ſeek the Bleſſing to confine, / And force ''that Sun'' but on a ''Part'' to Shine; / VVhich not alone the ''Southern VVit'' ſublimes, / But ripens Spirits in cold ''Northern Climes''; (..)

  30. (RQ:Kingsley At Last)

  31. To purify (someone) from a bad influence or from sin.

  32. To raise (someone) to a high office or status; to dignify, to exalt.

  33. (RQ:Jonson Alchemist) / ''Sublim'd'' thee, and ''exalted'' thee, and ''fix'd'' thee / I'the ''third region'', the ''high ſtate of grace''?

  34. To raise (a physical thing) to a state of excellence; to improve.

  35. (RQ:Taylor Real Presence)

  36. (RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)

  37. (RQ:Cheyne Regimen)

  38. (RQ:Byron Don Juan) / For not the blest sherbet, sublimed with snow, / (..) / After long travel, ennui, love, or slaughter, / Vie with that draught of hock and soda-water.

  39. Of a substance: to change from a solid into a gas without passing through the liquid state, with or without being heated.

  40. (quote-book)|series=Pharmaceutical Preparations|edition=2nd|location=Cincinnati, Oh.|publisher=Robert Clarke & Company|year=1883|page=9|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=NGg3AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA9|oclc=224302115|passage=Then diſtil it, and you ſhall have a Philoſophical ☿ mercury, and what Sublimeth is the Sulphur, which keep apart.

  41. Of a substance: to change from a gas into a solid without passing through the liquid state.

  42. To become higher in quality or status; to improve.

  43. High, tall, towering; also, positioned in a high place; high-up, lofty.

  44. (RQ:Dryden Aeneis) / Vain is the force of Man, and Heav'ns as van, / To cruſh the Pillars vvhich the Pile ſuſtain. / Sublime on theſe a Tovv'r of Steel is rear'd; / And dire ''Tiſiphone'' these keeps the VVard.

  45. Of an aspect of art or nature: causing awe or deep respect due to its beauty or magnificence; awe-inspiring, impressive.

  46. (ux)

  47. (quote-book)|passage=We had entered the clouds. For half-an-hour we were muffled in a cold, damp mist, and total darkness, and had begun to think of going indoors when, all at once, the car burst into the pure and starlit region of the upper air. A cry of joyous admiration escaped from us all. The spectacle before us was indeed sublime.

  48. Of flight: ascending, soaring.

  49. Of an idea or other thing: requiring great intellectual effort to appreciate or understand; very elevated, refined, or subtle.

  50. Of language, style, or writing: expressing opinions in a grand way.

  51. Of a person or their actions or qualities: intellectually, morally, or spiritually superior.

  52. (RQ:Longfellow Voices)

  53. (quote-book)&93;|title=The Passion of Jesus, a Collection of Original Pieces Corresponding with the Five Sorrowful Mysteries in the Rosary of Our Blessed Lady|location=London; Dublin|publisher=Richardson and Son,(nb...)|year=1851 (date written)|year_published=1852|section=stanza 5|page=64|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=OLjLLQNX1EsC&pg=PA64|oclc=506522199|passage=Crown Him the Lord of Years! / The Potentate of Time,— / Creator of the rolling spheres, / Ineffably sublime!

  54. (quote-book)

  55. Of an office or status: very high; exalted; also, (non-gloss definition)

  56. Of a thing: consummate, perfect; excellent, marvellous, wonderful.

  57. (RQ:Prior Poems)

  58. Of a person: dignified, majestic, noble.

  59. (quote-journal)

  60. Of a person: haughty, proud.

  61. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)

  62. Complete, downright, utter.

  63. Elevated by joy; elated.

  64. (RQ:Milton Paradise Regained)

  65. Of a substance: purified, refined; hence, of the highest quality.

  66. Of arms: up|lifted up, raised.

  67. Of a muscle (especially the digitorum superficialis muscle of the forearm which lies above the digitorum profundus muscle): positioned above another muscle; superficial.

  68. (antonyms)

  69. Of breathing: very laboured.

  70. Something which is sublime; a sublimity.

  71. (RQ:Shadwell True Widow) There are a great many ſublimes that are very Poetical.

  72. (RQ:Burnet Varillas)

  73. (RQ:Warburton Prodigies)

  74. ''In the form'' the sublime of: the highest degree; the acme, the height.

  75. (RQ:Byron Beppo)

  76. ''Chiefly preceded by'' the.

  77. An aspect of art or nature which causes awe or deep respect due to its beauty or magnificence; hence, the great beauty or magnificence of a place, a thing, etc.

  78. (RQ:Burke Sublime and Beautiful)

  79. (quote-journal)|month=August|year=1840|volume=XX|page=61|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=DtYRAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA61|column=1|oclc=1041857864|passage=Our old meeting house's double row of windows, of which I knew the number by heart, its doors with great wooden quirls over them, its belfry projecting out that the east end, its steeple and bell, all inspired as much sense of the sublime in me as Stratsburg Cathedral itself, and the inside was not a whit less imposing.

  80. A style of language or writing which expresses opinions in a grand way.

  81. (RQ:Tennyson Princess)

  82. That which is intellectually, morally, or spiritually superior in human life or nature.

  83. (RQ:Paine Age of Reason)

  84. (RQ:Poe Usher)

  85. The quality or state of being sublime; sublimeness, sublimity.

  86. (RQ:Swift Tale of a Tub)

  87. (inflection of)

  88. (monikko) da|sublim

  89. (l), extraordinary

  90. (de-adj form of)

  91. (l)

  92. sublime (noble, majestic, magnificent, etc.)

  93. (pt-verb form of)

  94. (es-verb form of)