ding
suomi-englanti sanakirjading englannista suomeksi
kolhu, kuhmu
kilahdus
soida
ding englanniksi
Very minor damage caused by being struck; a small dent or chip.
(quote-av)|title=(w)|text=Mike hit the bottom and picked up a little ding on his head.
2007 September, “Ding Repairs”, ''Cymru Wales|BBC Wales'', archived on 5 October 2014:
- If you surf regularly, then you're going to ding your board. Here's a rough guide on how to repair them... If the ding is on the rail, run tape across the ding conforming to the rail curve, leaving a gap to pour in resin and make sure it is sealed to prevent resin escaping and forming dribbles.
A rejection.
(ux)
(RQ:Milton Areopagitica)
{{quote-text|en|year=1630|title=Taylor's Works
To inflict minor damage upon, especially by hitting or striking.
- If you surf regularly, then you're going to ding your board.
To deduct, as points, from (somebody), in the manner of a penalty; to penalize.
(quote-journal) Employees don't feel like they're going to get dinged on performance reviews because they had the same goals as a guy who had been there all 12 months with no leave.
To mishit (a golf ball).
To fall heavily and continually, with great force.
{{quote-book|en|year=1821|author=William Liddle (of Edinburgh.)|title=Poems on different occasions, chiefly in the Scottish dialect|page=226
{{quote-book|en|year=1832|author=John Burness|title=Thrummy Cap, a Tale Verse; and The Brownie O' Fearnden, a Ballad|page=4
{{quote-text|en|year=1876|publisher=MacDonald|title=Alec Forbes|page=193
The high-pitched resonant sound of a bell.
The act of up|levelling up.
To make a high-pitched resonant sound like a bell.
{{RQ:Irving Tales of a Traveller
(RQ:Dickens Dombey and Son)
To keep repeating; impress by reiteration, with reference to the monotonous striking of a bell.
{{quote-text|en|year=1884|author=Oswald Crawfurd|title=English comic dramatists
To up.
An indigenous inhabitant of the Territories entitled to the building a village house under the (w).
an Italian person, specifically an (w)
(l)
(quote-song)
{{quote-song
thing (gloss)
(infl of)
to wedge
dint (gl)
(quote-book))|year=1955|chapter=Ezekiel 30:8
(nonstandard spelling of)
(alt form)
to up
for right-handed people
(l), object
{{quote-song|sco|title=Jock o Braidislee|year=Traditional
{{quote-text|sco|year=1817|publisher=Walter Scott|title=Rob Roy|section=II.3
(quote-song) dings the fell gallows o the burghers doun|translation=And the black lad from distant Nyanga tears the foul gallows of the bourgeois down.
the fourth of the ten stems
to drink
to be straight