doff
suomi-englanti sanakirjadoff englannista suomeksi
nostaa, riisua
Verbi
Substantiivi
doff englanniksi
To remove or offVerb|take off (something worn on the body such as armour or clothing, or something carried).
(antonyms)
(RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene) ''Calidore'' perceiuing, thought it beſt / To chaunge the manner of his loftie looke; / And doffing his bright armes, himſelfe addreſt / In ſhepheards vveed, and in his hand he tooke, / In ſtead of ſteelehead ſpeare, a ſhepheards hooke, (..)
(RQ:Shakespeare King John)
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 4-1 Q1)
(RQ:Ovid Sandys Metamorphosis)
(RQ:John Gay Shepherd's Week)
(RQ:Beattie Minstrel)
(RQ:Burney Evelina)
(RQ:Scott Marmion)
(RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 4)
(quote-book).|title=A Lyrical Literal Version of the (w).(nb...)|location=London|publisher=Service|Seeleys(nb...)|volume=I|section=stanza III, verse 11|page=56|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=iEQHAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA56|oclc=1113473353|passage=Thou turnedst my mourning to dancing: / Thou doffedst my sackcloth, / And girdedst me round with gladness.
(RQ:Tennyson Idylls)
(RQ:Emerson May-Day)
(RQ:Wodehouse Jeeves in the Offing)
(senseid) To remove or tip (a hat or other headwear) in greeting or salutation, or as a mark of respect.
(ux)
(quote-song) Jim Burke|title=Hail the Chap|album=I Say!|passage=Were there really seventy-three ways to doff one's hat? / There were! I'd rather suspected that
(quote-book) T. W. for Humphrey Moseley,(nb...)|section=stanza 65|page=72|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_early-english-books-1641-1700_steps-to-the-temple-sac_crashaw-richard_1646/page/n81/mode/1up|oclc=228722669|passage=VVhy art thou troubled ''the Great|Herod''? vvhat vaine feare / Thy blood-revolving Breſt to rage doth move? / Heavens King, vvho doffs himſelfe vveake fleſh to vveare, / Comes not to rule in vvrath, but ſerve in love.|footer=(small) figuratively undressing and putting on human form.
(RQ:Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet Q1-2) ''(w)'' doffe thy name, / And for thy name vvhich is no part of thee, / Take all my ſelfe.
(RQ:Jonson Every Man out of His Humour)
(RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth)
(quote-book) Robinson (bookseller)|George Robinson and Richards Baldwin(nb...), and G. & J. Wilkie(nb...)|section=stanza 3|page=199|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=uUGfIZ9ffMUC&pg=PA199|oclc=1328708144|passage=Thus death, vvho kings and tars deſpatches, / Tom's life hath vainly doff'd; / For though his body's under hatches, / His ſoul is gone aloft.
(senseid) To remove (a bobbin or spindle which is full of spun yarn) from a frame for replacement with an empty one.
(senseid) To remove (small pieces of cotton or other plant fibre, etc.) from a carding cylinder.
(RQ:Shakespeare Othello Q1)''; / And rather, as it ſeemes to me, thou keepeſt from me, / All conueniency, then ſupplieſt me, vvith the leaſt / Aduantage of hope: (..)
(RQ:Jonson Works)
To remove or tip a hat or other headwear in greeting or salutation, or as a mark of respect.
(RQ:Tennyson Poems 1842) feeding high, and living soft, / Grew plump and able-bodied; / Until the grave churchwarden doff'd, / The parson smirk'd and nodded.
''Followed by'' with: to remove or take off something worn on the body, or something carried.
(RQ:Foote Mayor)
''Followed by'' off: an act of off|putting off or away|turning away someone with an excuse, etc.
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Humphrey Lownes for Clement Knight;(nb...)|lines=1221–1222|section=xi|page=38|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=-t1BAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA38|oclc=1008154991|passage=Faith, ''Lelia'' has een giuen him the doff off here, and has made hir father almoſt ſtarke mad.
to strip