ſ

suomi-englanti sanakirja

ſ englanniksi

  1. s

  2. S

  1. The s, a form of the letter ess (S).

  2. (Latn-def)

  3. (quote-book) The widowe of Reginalde Wolffe|year=1574|section=title page and Table page|passage=VVritten in Latine by M.Iohn Caluine, and tranſlated into Engliſ&8239;he according to the authors laſt edition, By (smallcaps). (..) And the redemptor ſ&8239;hall come to Sion,and vnto thẽ that turne frõ their vvickednes in Iacob.

  4. (quote-book)

  5. (quote-book) James.|location=London|publisher=(...)B. Harris|year=1702|page=1|passage=THE FIRST VISION OF THE ''Algouazil'' (''or Catchpole'') ''Poſſest''.

  6. (quote-book) I have been told, noble Squire, that you once impos’d a certain lady for Dulcinea on your maſter; now what think you if this young lady here ſhould perſonate that incomparable princeſs? / (smc) Who, I? / (smc) Adod! your princeſsſhip has hit it; for he has never ſeen this Dulcinea, nor has any body elſe, that I can hear of;

  7. {{quote-text|en|year=1783|author=Joseph Ritson|title=Remarks, Critical and Illustrative, on the Text and Notes of the Last Edition of Shakspeare|page=223

  8. 1785, Vicesimus Knox, ''Liberal Education: Or, a Practical Treatiſe on the Methods of Acquiring Uſeful and Polite Learning'', vol. II, pp. 1 & 3, section XXXI: On the regulation of puerile diverſions:

  9. Many fanciful methods have been invented by thoſe who wiſhed to render puerile ſports conducive to improvement. I never found that they were ſucceſsful.
    I muſt own myſelf an advocate for puerile liberty*, during the alloted hours of relaxation. Boys have much reſtraint and confinement in the time of ſtudy.
    Thoſe of the effeminate kind ſuperinduce effeminacy; weakneſs of mind, no leſs than imbecility of body. Something ſimilar happens in puerile diverſions. The boy who has been kept in leading-ſtrings too long, and reſtrained from hardy ſports by the fondneſs of his mother, will ſcarcely ever become a man; or poſſeſs that becoming ſpirit which can enable him to act his part with propriety.
  10. {{quote-text|en|year=1796|author=John Hatsell|title=Precedents of Proceedings in the House of Commons: With Observations|page=102

  11. (quote-book); New York: The Cassell Publishing Company,(nb...)|year=1892|page=&91;iii&93;|pageurl=https://archive.org/stream/englishpoems00legapage/n6/mode/1up|passage=Engliſh Poems /(..)/ New York: The Caſsell Publiſhing Company, 104, Fourth Aven(sup).

  12. {{quote-web

  13. (n-g)

  14. (tlb) (n-g), now replaced by (m), and in the trigraph (m), corresponding to modern (m); used primarily in texts written in Fraktur.

  15. (non-gloss definition), typically used for all instances except a final -s