supine

suomi-englanti sanakirja

supine englannista suomeksi

  1. passiivinen

  2. selällään makaava

  1. selällään makaava">selällään makaava

  2. passiivinen, saamaton, vetelä, veltto

  3. kallellaan

  4. Substantiivi

  5. supiini

supine englanniksi

  1. Lying on its back.

  2. (syn)

    (ant)

  3. (quote-book)

  4. (quote-book), (w)|volume=I|section=part A (The Lung, Pleura, Diaphragm, and Chest Wall), section IX (The Chest Wall)|year=2009|page=603|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=bVEEHmpU-1wC&pg=PA603|column=1|isbn=978-0-7817-7982-1|passage=Posterior displacement of the sternum can produce a deformity of the heart, particularly anterior indentation of the right ventricle. ... The physical work capacity in pectus excavatum at a given heart rate was significantly lower in the sitting than the supine position.

  5. Turned facing toward the body or upward: with the thumb outward (palm up), or with the big toe raised relative to the little toe. 1921 306.png|right|thumb|A foot in the prone, normal, and supine positions.

  6. (ux)

  7. Reluctant to take action due to indifference or moral weakness; apathetic or passive towards something.

  8. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for Richard Wilkin(nb...)|year=1695|pages=85–86|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=URhc2d-4qmMC&pg=PA86|oclc=7390908352|passage=When Man was ''fallen'', and had abandoned his primitive Innocence, ... he became puſillanimous, and was eaſily ruffled with every little Paſſion within: ſupine, and as openly expoſed to any Temptation or Aſſault from without.

  9. (RQ:Hume Human Understanding)

  10. (RQ:Federalist)

  11. (quote-journal)

  12. Inclining or leaning backward; inclined, sloping.

  13. (RQ:Dryden Virgil)|page=82|lines=372–375|passage=But if the Vine / On riſing Ground be plac'd, or Hills ſupine, / Extend thy looſe Battalions largely wide, / Opening thy Ranks and Files on either Side: ...

  14. In Latin and other languages: a type of noun used in the case|ablative and cases, which shares the same stem as the participle.

  15. (quote-book)|edition=2nd corrected|location=London|publisher=Printed by William Du-Gard; and are to bee sold by John Saywell(nb...)|year=1653|page=142|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ks9lAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA142|oclc=560510337|passage=And here also you may observ, that the syllable which is doubled in the Preterperfect tens is not doubled in the Supines, as ''totondi'' to clip, make's ''tonsum'': ''cecídi'' to beat, ''cæsum'': (..)

  16. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for the author, and sold by Thomas Bickerton,(nb...)|year=1718|page=354|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=X2UUAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA354|oclc=740857353|passage=There be alſo appertaining unto Verbs, two Supines, the one ending in ''um'', which is called the firſt Supine, becauſe it hath the ſignification of the Verb Active: as, ''Eo amatum'', I go to love: and the other in ''u'', becauſe it hath for the moſt part the ſignification of Paſſive, as ''Difficilis amatu'', hard to be loved.

  17. (quote-book)|year=1898|volume_plain=part II (Syntax)|section=§§ 2314 and 2315|page=118|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/p2newenglishgram00sweeuoft/page/118/mode/1up|oclc=1014571812|passage=Of the large number of verbs which take the infinitive in Old-English the greater number are now followed by the supine. (..) The substitution of the supine for the infinitive began in Old-English itself. Thus the supine of purpose, as in ''hīe cōmon þæt land tō sċēawienne'' 'they came to spy out the land,' gradually supplanted the older infinitive with many verbs of desiring, intending, attempting, etc., so that while such a verb as ''willan'' 'will' continued—as it still does in modern English—to take the infinitive only, other verbs of similar meaning, (..) began to take the supine as well as the infinitive.

  18. (quote-book) The emergence and the spread of the supine clause is very well captured in the Old Romanian texts, a situation that contrasts with the incomplete information we have about other clausal complements.

  19. In Swedish, Faroese, Icelandic and Norse: a form that combines with an inflection of (m)/hafa/hava to form the perfect and pluperfect tenses.

  20. (quote-book) The supine has two basic allomorphs: ''-t'' (weak verbs) and ''-it'' (strong verbs). (..) The supine verb phrase serves as complement of the perfect auxiliary ''ha'' 'have' (''hon hade bundit honom'') which can be deleted, though, in subordinate clauses (''eftersom hon hade bundit honom'' 'since she had bound him'). (The supine has existed as a morphologically distinct category in standard Swedish language at least since the 19th c.; cf. art. 155.)

  21. (obsolete terminology) The 'to'-prefixed infinitive in English or other Germanic languages, so named because the infinitive was regarded as a verbal noun and the 'to'-prefixed form of it was seen as the dative form of the verbal noun; the infinitive.

  22. (adj form of)

  23. (inflection of)