bearded
suomi-englanti sanakirjabearded englannista suomeksi
partainen, parrakas
bearded englanniksi
(infl of)
Having a beard; involving a beard.
(RQ:Shakespeare Othello)
1693, (w), ''(Juvenal)|The Satyrs'', translated by (w) and others, London: J. Tonson, 1735, 6th edition, Satyr VI, p. 80, https://archive.org/details/satyrsdecimusju00creegoog
- There are who in soft Eunuchs place their Bliss; / To shun the Scrubbing of a bearded Kiss, / And 'scape Abortion; but their solid Joy / Is when the Page, already past a Boy, / Is Capon'd late; and to the Gelder shown, / With his two Pounders to Perfection grown. / When all the Navel string cou'd give, appears; / All but the Beard, and that's the Barber's loss, not theirs.
(RQ:Conrad Lord Jim)
Having a fringe or appendage resembling a beard in some way (''often followed by'' with).
(RQ:Longfellow Evangeline)
{{quote-book|en|year=1881|author=Oscar Wilde|chapter=Panthea|title=Poems|location=Boston|publisher=Roberts Brothers|page=182|url=https://archive.org/details/poemsosc00wilduoft
{{quote-book|en|year=1894|author=William Russell|A. E.|chapter=On a Hill-Top|title=Homeward: Songs by the Way|location=London|publisher=John Lane|year_published=1901|page=42|url=https://archive.org/details/homewardsongsbyw00russuoft
(Of an axe) having the lower portion of the axehead extending the cutting edge significantly below the width of the butt, thus providing a wide cutting surface while keeping overall weight low.
(''in combination'') Having a beard (or similar appendage) of a specified type.
(RQ:Shakespeare Antony and Cleopatra)
1855, (w), ''(w)'', Part II, lines 55-7, in ''The Poems of Matthew Arnold, 1840-1867'', Oxford University Press, 1909, p. 248, https://archive.org/details/cu31924013206499
- ... for with his hammer Thor / Smote 'mid the rocks the lichen-bearded pines / And burst their roots ...
{{quote-book|en|year=1951|author=C. S. Lewis|title=Prince Caspian|publisher=Collins|year_published=1998|chapter=11
Having barbs of a certain color.
A (l).
(quote-book)|passage=The herbaceous perennial irises benefit from at least one feeding a year in early spring as growth begins. Siberian and Japanese irises appreciate a second feeding just as the flowers fade. Beardeds do best with a second feeding in late summer.