ure

suomi-englanti sanakirja

ure englanniksi

  1. , ''out of ure'' Use, practise, exercise.

  2. (RQ:Ovid Golding Metamorphosis)

  3. (quote-book) of (w)|location=London|publisher=Nathaniell Butter|section=Book 17, p. 248|url=http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A03512.0001.001

  4. 1597-1625, ''(w) of (w)'', ''On Simulation and Dissimulation'', Random House 1955: Hugh G. Dick, p. 19 https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Index:The_Works_of_Francis_Bacon_(1884)_Volume_1.djvu

  5. ...it maketh him practise simulation in other things, lest his hand should be out of ure
  6. To use; to exercise; to inure; to accustom by practice.

  7. 1551, (w) (translator), ''(w)'' (1516) by (w), edited by William Dallam Armes, New York: Macmillan, 1912, Book 1, p. 37,https://archive.org/details/TheUtopia

  8. (..) the French soldiers (..) from their youth have been practised and ured in feats of arms (..)
  9. (synonym of)

  10. (quote-book )Some extracts from his work are here presented, because the opinion hitherto prevailing in certain circles that our common cattle were the offspring of the Ure; but according to these extracts it will be seen that several striking anatomical differences are found to exist between the Ure and our common cattle.(..)The Ure has fourteen vertebræ, and as many pairs of ribs, or one pair more than common cattle, but has only five lumbar vertebræ of which the common cattle have six.(..)In the old Ure, there was found in the midst of the two seminal passages, vessels, a single duct, shaped somewhat like a bag, one inch in diameter and four and a half inches in length, which is divided in front and at the top into two arching branches, like the horns of the uterus of the cow, extending as channels of 3 to 4 inches in width to the testicle, and there terminating in a cul-de-sac.(..)From the above it appears that the origin of the domesticated cattle and their original native country is, as yet, not fully ascertained. Formerly the ure was considered the parent of the same, but this is improbable on account of the anatomical differences between the ure and the common cattle.

  11. (quote-book ) |author=Baring-Gould|S. Baring-Gould |year=1911 |publisher=London: Bodley Head|John Lane, The Bodley Head; New York: Lane (publisher)|John Lane Company |chapter=Chapter VIII. The Fils Thal |pages=176–177 |pageurl=https://archive.org/stream/landofteckitsnei00bariuoftpage/176/mode/1up |text=In the Nibelungen Lied both beasts, also the giant elk, are spoken of as not extinct when that poem was written:— / (small) / Cæsar describes the ure as “little smaller than an elephant, but in appearance like an ox, of great strength and speed; it never suffers itself to be tamed, and spares no man it sees. To have killed an ure is held in highest honour among the Germans, and its horns, set in silver, serve as drinking vessels at their carouses.”

  12. (quote-journal )From the very early times, the first mention being that of 1510, the herds of ''Bos primigenius'' were under the protection and custody of special game-rangers who were free of all other occupation, as well as of all tax-paying, and were to look only after the wild Ures, feeding them in winter with hay collected from the adjoining meadows, and bringing back to the forest the individuals that occasionally went astray.

  13. (abbreviation of)

  14. (monikko) af|uur

  15. foot

  16. (syn)

  17. eye

  18. (infl of)

  19. fire

  20. (ja-romanization of)

  21. (inflection of)

  22. hour

  23. use, habit, custom

  24. (alt form)

  25. our

  26. (inflection of): ours, of us

  27. penis

  28. (quote-book)

  29. the thigh or leg of an animal; (q) when cooked

  30. valley, wadi