trope

suomi-englanti sanakirja

trope englannista suomeksi

  1. trooppi

  1. Substantiivi

  2. trooppi

  3. Verbi

  4. troopata

trope englanniksi

  1. Something recurring across a genre or type of art or literature; a motif.

  2. (quote-web)

  3. (quote-journal)|title=China complicit in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, says MI6 chief|work=The Guardian|date=2023-07-20|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jul/20/china-complicit-in-russias-invasion-of-ukraine-says-mi6-chief|issn=0261-3077|passage=They have completely supported the Russians diplomatically, they’ve abstained in key votes at the United Nations, they’ve absolutely cynically repeated all the Russian tropes, particularly in places like Africa and Latin America – by(si) blaming Nato and all of this stuff.

  4. An addition (of dialogue, song, music, etc.) to a standard element of the liturgy, serving as an embellishment.

  5. {{quote-book|en|year=1918|title=Le mystère d'Adam, an Anglo-Norman drama of the twelfth century|author=Paul Studer

  6. (quote-book)

  7. A of speech in which words or phrases are used with a nonliteral or figurative meaning, such as a metaphor.

  8. (RQ:Swift Excellent New Song)

  9. (quote-book) a trope familiar to this author, you have here a compariſon of—a woman's chaſtity to a piece of porcelain,—her honour to a gaudy robe,—her prayers to a fantaſtical diſguiſe,—her heart to a trinket; and all theſe together to her lap-dog, and that founded on one lucky circumſtance (a malicious critic would perhaps diſcern or imagine more) by which theſe things, how unlike ſoever in other reſpects, may be compared, the impreſſion they make on the mind of a fine lady.

  10. (non-gloss definition)

  11. A tangent space meeting a quartic surface in a conic.

  12. The reciprocal of a node on a surface.

  13. (quote-journal)|date=12 November 1868|year_published=1869|volume=159, part I|page=202|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=-HdAL6oQ4UwC&pg=PA202|oclc=715761850|passage=I take account of conical and biplanar nodes, or, as I call them, cnicnodes, and binodes; of pinch-points on the nodal curve; and of close-points and off-points on the cuspidal curve: viz. I assume that there are C, cnicnodes, B, binodes, j, pinch-points, \chi, close points, \theta, off-points, deferring for the present the explanation of these singularities. The same letters, accented, refer to the reciprocal singularities. Or using "trope" as the reciprocal term to node, these will be C', cnictropes, B', bitropes, j', pinch-planes, \chi', close-planes, \theta', off-planes; but these present themselves, not in the equations above referred to, but in the reciprocal equations.

  14. A short cadence at the end of the melody in some early music.

  15. A pair of complementary hexachords in technique.

  16. A cantillation pattern, or one of the marks that represents it.

  17. (quote-book)|year=2006|page=526|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z2cCZBDm8F8C&pg=PA526|column=1|isbn=978-0-8160-5457-2|passage=The trope does not appear on the handwritten Torah scroll, but the assignment of notes for each word was fixed long ago and is accepted by Jewish communities around the world; the trope now appears in nearly every Jewish printed Bible. (..) The symbols that signify the trope for the Hebrew text were introduced at the end of the 10th century of the Common Era.

  18. Any of the ten arguments used in skepticism to refute dogmatism.

  19. (quote-book) Empiricus|Sextus Empiricus explains that the first four tropes are based on the judging subject; these deal with the differences among animals, the differences among human beings, the differences that distinguish the various senses, and, finally, circumstantial differences.

  20. A particular instance of a property (such as the specific redness of a rose), as contrasted with a universal.

  21. To use, or embellish something with, a trope.

  22. To represent something figuratively or metaphorically, ''especially'' as a literary motif.

  23. (quote-book) writes, thus troping Satan's transgression as neither deception, seduction, nor disobedience, though he presents it in those terms elsewhere, but rather as robbery.

  24. (quote-book)'' (w) is not a formal or immanent attribute of the text but must be "engendered" through acts of interpretation. And it suggests that what was at stake in this "engendering" was nothing less than the preservation of powerful forms of authentic masculinity in the face of a work that, puzzlingly, seemed to trope the very notions of masculinity and modernism.

  25. To into, coin, or create a new trope.

  26. To analyse a work in terms of its literary tropes.

  27. To think or write in terms of tropes.

  28. (quote-book) and the Vested Word|location=Chapel Hill, N.C.; London|publisher=University of North Carolina Press|year=1988|pages=39–40|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=QdAPj20wjuEC&pg=PA39|isbn=978-0-8078-1780-3|passage=By acting ''in loco parentis'', the written word performs its own usurpations of generating authority and generated meanings. Therefore, after the brothers demolish the authority of the word as written, they ar able to substitute alternative authorities: the word as spoken, the word as added, the word as troped, the word as altered, the word as hidden.

  29. (l)

  30. (inflection of)

  31. tropics (q), but trope is used in compound words

  32. a (l) (q)

  33. (pt-verb form of)