thole

suomi-englanti sanakirja

thole englannista suomeksi

  1. hankatappi

  1. hankaintappi

  2. kädensija

  3. Substantiivi

  4. Verbi

thole englanniksi

  1. To suffer.

  2. (RQ:Joyce Ulysses)

  3. {{quote-book|en|year=1922|author=Francis Lynde|title=Pirates' Hope|publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons|location=New York|page=115

  4. To endure, to up with, to tolerate.

  5. (quote-book)

  6. {{quote-text|en|year=1902|author=John Buchan|title=The Outgoing of the Tide

  7. (quote-book) James Leslie Mitchell|chapter=Ploughing|title=Song|Sunset Song: A Novel|series=A Scots Quair|seriesvolume=1|location=London|publisher=Jarrold Group|Jarrolds|year=1932|oclc=2475466|editor2=Tom Crawford|title2=Sunset Song|series2=Canongate Classics|seriesvolume2=12|location2=Edinburgh; New York, N.Y.|publisher2=Canongate Books|year2=2008|page2=34|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=SBJwPncyFjYC&pg=PA34|isbn2=978-1-84767-359-6|passage=But then they heard an awful scream that made them leap to their feet, it was as though mother were being torn and torn in the teeth of beasts and couldn't thole it longer; (..)

  8. A pin in the side of a boat which acts as a fulcrum for the oars.

  9. (RQ:Longfellow Evangeline)

  10. A pin, or handle, of the snath (shaft) of a scythe.

  11. (quote-journal), at their hall|month=May|year=1850|volume=XIX (Third Series; volume XLIX overall)|number=5|page=313|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=afA5AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA313|oclc=1013447426|passage=The nature of my invention consists in curving forward that portion of the scythe snath below the right nib or thole, to such an extent as to form an obtuse angle between the scythe and snath at the point where they are joined, and also in such a manner as to equalize the labor between the right and left hands; whereas, in snaths now in use, the greatest amount of labor falls upon the right arm.

  12. (quote-journal)

  13. A cupola, a dome, a rotunda; a tholus.

  14. (quote-book) for Richard Priestley|year=1828|volume=I|page=206|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=WwUpAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP216|oclc=230659541|passage=Philostratus relates that the king's house in Babylon had a roof of brass, which shone like lightning, and that in that house there was a chamber, whose ceiling was a thole (that is, a concave hemisphere) made in imitation of some system of the heaven, and with sapphire-coloured stones, (..) and from the thole were suspended four golden doves, or iynges, who were called the Tongues of the Gods.

  15. (inflection of)

  16. (l); suffer

  17. (RQ:Chaucer Canterbury Tales)