sundry

suomi-englanti sanakirja

sundry englannista suomeksi

  1. sekalainen

sundry englanniksi

  1. More than one or two but not very many; number of, several.

  2. (RQ:Book of Common Prayer)

  3. (RQ:Erasmus Udall Apophthegmes)'' an olde auncient Latin poet, & of great authoritee, whom ''(w)'' verie often times citeth in ſondrie his werkes.

  4. (RQ:Ascham Scholemaster)

  5. (RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth)

  6. (RQ:Parkinson Theatrum Botanicum)

  7. (RQ:Burney Cecilia)

  8. (RQ:Dickens Barnaby Rudge)

  9. (RQ:R. F. Burton Arabian Nights)

  10. (quote-book)|year=1917|page=iii|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/mexicoofmexicans00spen/page/n10/mode/1up|oclc=760589190|passage=The Author sincerely hopes that this volume will clear away some of the mists which surround Mexico at the present time. But he has experienced the utmost difficulty in obtaining news of recent events from the Republic because of the prohibition placed upon correspondence. He feels, however, that he has in a measure overcome this by the piecing together of matter from sundry reliable sources, and hopes that he has been enabled to present his readers with a truthful account of things as they are at the present day, in a land the mighty destinies of which he devoutly and hopefully believes in.

  11. Of various types, especially when numerous; diverse, varied.

  12. (synonyms)

  13. (RQ:Stowe Dred)

  14. Consisting of an assortment of different kinds; miscellaneous.

  15. (antonyms)

  16. (RQ:Hooker Laws) ſhould but induce, and therfore much leſſe enforce vs to thinke, that care of diſſimilitude betvveene the people of God & the heathen nations about them, vvas any more the cauſe of forbidding them to put on garments of ſundry ſtuffe then of charging them vvithall not to ſovv their fields with meſline, or that this vvas any more the cauſe of forbidding them to eate Svvines fleſh, then of charging them vvithall not to eate the fleſh of Eagles, Haukes, and the like?

  17. (RQ:Shakespeare As You Like It)

  18. ''Chiefly preceded by a number or an (glossary) like'' many: of two or more similar people or things: not the same as other persons or things of the same nature; different, distinct, separate. ((non-gloss definition))

  19. (RQ:Turner New Herball)

  20. (RQ:Ovid Art of Love)

  21. Relating to a single person or thing opposed to more than one; individual, respective.

  22. (RQ:Fuller Joseph)

  23. Of a person or thing: not the same as something else; different. ((non-gloss definition))

  24. (RQ:Coverdale Bible)

  25. (RQ:Turner Names of Herbes)

  26. (RQ:Fuller Holy Warre)

  27. Not attached or connected to anything else; physically separate.

  28. (RQ:Burnet Church of England)

  29. A minor miscellaneous item.

  30. (RQ:Fielding Lisbon) I am firmly perſuaded the vvhole pitiful 30 l. came pure and neat into the captain's pocket, and not only ſo, but attended vvith the value of 10 l. more in ſundries, into the bargain.

  31. (quote-book)|year=1865|page=16|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Rs8BAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA16|oclc=905325355|passage=Here she kept her scarlet cloak, her Sunday shoes, her best cap and apron, and her steeple-crowned hat; but down at the very bottom, underneath her new checked petticoat, she found a little bag of sundries, which might serve her purpose, and which she sat down to examine at her leisure.

  32. (quote-journal)

  33. A food item eaten as an accompaniment to a meal; a dish; also, such an item eaten on its own as a light meal.

  34. (RQ:Dickens Sketches by Boz) Mr. Alexander Trott sat down to a fried sole, maintenon cutlet, Madeira, and sundries, with much greater composure than he had experienced since the receipt of Horace Hunter's letter of defiance.

  35. (RQ:Dickens Oliver Twist)

  36. (synonym of)

  37. (quote-book)

  38. Various people or things; several.

  39. (RQ:More Apocalypsis)

  40. (RQ:Buchan Watcher)

  41. (synonym of)

  42. (quote-book)|location=Aberdeen|publisher=(...) Bennett for the Club|month=April 28 (Gregorian calendar)|year=1712|year_published=1841|volume=I|section=part IV (Letters from Professor Blackwell, and Others, to John Ross of Arnage, Provost of Aberdeen)|page=220|pageurl=https://books.google.com.sg/books?id=EcpMAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA220|oclc=1226400976|passage=Our joynts have almost been pulled sundry, with driving in hackney coaches throu all corners, amongst our great men, for some weeks; (..)

  43. Placed separately; apart.

  44. (quote-book)|location=Glasgow|publisher=(...) David Niven, for James Spencer,(nb...)|year=1658|year_published=1788|section=paragraph 5|page=51|pageurl=https://books.google.com.sg/books?id=SD1VAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA51|column=1|oclc=771247930|passage=The church of Epheſus, or, of any certain place, includeth all the profeſſors living there; they are accounted of that church, and no other, as providence hath put them together: and the churches are divided as they live ſundry.

  45. Individually, separately; sundrily.

  46. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)