syrinx

suomi-englanti sanakirja

syrinx englannista suomeksi

  1. panhuilu

  2. syrinx

  1. Substantiivi

  2. ura

  3. ontelo

  4. syrinx, äänielin

syrinx englanniksi

  1. A set of panpipes.

  2. (quote-journal)|journal=The Gentleman's Magazine|The Gentleman’s Magazine, and Historical Chronicle|location=London|publisher=(...) David Henry and R. Cave,(nb...)|year=1754 March 25 (date written)|year_published=April 1754|volume=XXIV|page=161|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/s2492id1330002/page/161/mode/1up|column=2|oclc=192374019|passage=The ''Syrinx'' might give occaſion to the bagpipe, by leading the vvay to its invention; for it vvas certainly very natural, both for eaſe in playing, and for the ſaving of breath, and even for the health and ſafety of the performer's lungs, to contrive a method of conveying vvind to the ſeveral pipes by means of bellovvs.

  3. (RQ:Keats Endymion)

  4. (quote-journal) Baptist Mission Press the The Asiatic Society|Asiatic Society of Bengal|year=1901|volume=LXX, part I (History, Literature, &c.)|issue=1 (extra)|section=section IV (Pottery, Terracottas, Miscellaneous Objects)|page=49|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/journalofasiatic7019asia/page/n162/mode/1up|oclc=1047491870|passage=In Dr. (w)'s collection there is a fragment of a neck of a jar, which shows a whole circle of Gandharvas performing on drums, harps, syrinxes, etc. Noteworthy is the existence of the syrinx on artware of Eastern Turkestan. That instrument has never, so far as I am aware, been observed in Indian art.

  5. (quote-book)|series=An Avon Library Book|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=(publisher)|Avon Books|year=1961|year_published=1966|section=footnote 26|page=87|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/tinct/page/n89/mode/1up|oclc=252702464|passage=The Panpipe is indeed one of the most characteristic instruments of South America, especially of the Western regions. the ancient Peruvian civilizations produced syrinxes not only of reeds but also of terra cotta (those of the coastal civilizations, especially of Nazca, are sometimes real works of art) and even carved in stone, chiefly among the Araucans.

  6. (RQ:Fowles Mantissa)

  7. (RQ:Pynchon Against the Day)

  8. ''Chiefly in the (glossary)'': a narrow channel cut in rock, especially in EgyptianAdjective|Ancient Egyptian chambers.

  9. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Evan Tyler, for John Crook,(nb...), and for Gabriel Bedell,(nb...)|year=1658|page=374|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_early-english-books-1641-1700_the-annals-of-the-world-_ussher-james-abp_1658/page/374/mode/1up|oclc=1116228715|passage=And novv vvhen the people of all ſorts came flocking to the Court, in a tumultuous manner, Agathocles of (w), taking the King vvith him, vvent and hid himſelf, in a place called Syringes, vvhich vvas a gallery or vvalk, vvhich had every vvay three vvalls and gates to paſſe, before one could come unto it.

  10. (RQ:Cudworth Universe)'' ''i.e.'', the god (w), vvas the Inventor of Arts and Sciences, the Latter Siphoas, the Reſtorer and Advancer of them: the Firſt vvrote in ''Hieroglyphicks'' upon Pillars, (lang) the land of Syringes (as the learned ''Valois|Valeſius'' conjectures it ſhould be read, instead of (lang).) VVhich ''Syringes'' vvhat they vvere, Ammianus Marcellinus|''Am''''mianus'' ''Marcellinus'' vvill inſtruct us; (..)

  11. (quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=(...) Rivington|Charles Rivington,(nb...)|year=1733|volume=I|pages=247–248|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/revelationexamin01dela/page/247/mode/1up|oclc=4294142|passage=There are alſo (in ''Egypt'') ''Syrinxes'', certain ſubterraneous and vvinding receſſes, vvhich (as it is ſaid) men skilled in antient rites, foreknovving the coming of the deluge, and fearing that the memory of their ceremonies ſhould be blotted out, hevved and faſhioned out of quarries in ſeveral places, vvith immenſe labour, and carved on the vvalls vvhich they had ſo hevvn, many kinds of fovvls, and vvild beaſts, and figures of animals innumerable, vvhich they called hieroglyphick (ſo ſome read the text) or ſacred characters.

  12. (quote-book); Gottlieb Welcker|Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker|chapter=History of Art in Antiquity. Appendix. The Nations Not of Greek Race.|translator=John Leitch|title=Ancient Art and Its Remains; or A Manual of the Archæology of Art.(nb...)|edition=new|location=London|publisher=Fullarton|Archibald Fullarton and Co.,(nb...)|year=1850|section=note 3|page=216|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/ancientartitsrem01mull/page/216/mode/1up|oclc=982201915|passage=Further the Ramesseion (the Osmandyeion of the Descript.) with the alley of sphinxes, the Menephtheion (palace at Kurnah) and other monuments as late as I Soter|Ptolemy the First's time. Grottoes and syrinxes all around.

  13. Any of several abnormal tube-shaped structures in the body, especially a rare, fluid-filled neuroglial cavity in the stem or within the cord.

  14. (quote-book)

  15. (senseid) The voice organ in birds, located at or near where the trachea and the bronchi join.

  16. (synonyms)

  17. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Burness for Scott, Webster, and Geary,(nb...)|year=1839|volume=II (Cantatores, Songsters)|page=19|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/historyofbritish02macg/page/19/mode/1up|oclc=1118227594|passage=This tube is named the ''Windpipe'', ''Trachea'', or ''Aspera-arteria''; (..) its lower extremity, or the part at which it bifurcates, is the ''Lower Larynx'', or the ''Syrinx''. Besides acting as a pipe to the lungs, it is also the organ of the voice, the air in passing through it causing its membranes so to vibrate, and being so acted upon by the muscles attached to it, as to give rise to the various cries and notes emitted by birds, although the palate, the tongue, and the mandibles also operate in modifying the sounds thus produced.

  18. (quote-book) For species with relatively simple syringes but complex vocal behavior (such as Grey parrots), these data imply that other structures must modify syringeal output.

  19. (quote-book) Birds vocalise by expelling air over the elastic membranes of the syrinx housed within the inter-clavicular sac, an air sac in the pleural cavity.

  20. (quote-book). Four to six muscles on either side are attached to the syrinx, and sound is produced when air is expelled through it. The flow of air induces part of the syrinx wall to vibrate and generate sound, in a similar way to the operation of the human larynx.

  21. (l) (gloss)

  22. (alternative spelling of)

  23. (l), (l), (l), (l), (l)