endue

suomi-englanti sanakirja

endue englannista suomeksi

  1. antaa

  1. Verbi

  2. varustaa

endue englanniksi

  1. (senseid)(non-gloss)

  2. Of a person or thing: to on (a different form); to adopt, to assume.

  3. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene) are bred, / And vncouth formes, vvhich none yet euer knevv, / (..) / Some fitt for reaſonable ſovvles t’indew, / Some made for beaſts, ſome made for birds to vveare, (..)

  4. (RQ:Ovid Sandys Metamorphosis), forth-vvith, an old-vviues ſhape indues; / Her hair all vvhite; her lims, appearing vveake, / A ſtaffe ſupports: vvho thus began to ſpeake.

  5. (RQ:Tennyson Complete Poetical Works)

  6. (RQ:Burgess Any Old Iron)

  7. To put on (a piece of clothing, etc.); to wear; also (''followed by'' with), to clothe (someone) with something.

  8. (RQ:Dryden Fables) flies, / And flying dravvs an Arch, (a ſegment of the Skies:) / Then leaves her bending Bovv, and from the ſteep / Deſcends to ſearch the ſilent Houſe of Sleep.

  9. (RQ:Scott Waverley)boots of large dimension, and now invited our hero to follow him as he stalked clattering down the ample staircase, (..)

  10. (RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Harold)

  11. (RQ:Hawthorne Scarlet Letter)

  12. (RQ:Blackmore Lorna Doone) John Fry's sad-coloured Sunday hat was indued with a plume of marish-weed.

  13. (RQ:Burgess Kingdom)

  14. To put (something) on top of a thing; to cover, to overlay.

  15. (RQ:Evelyn Diary) of Veronica|St. Veronica made by Mochi|Fra(quote-gloss) Mochi, has over it in the Reliquary, where they shew'd us the miraculous Sudarium indued w(sup) the picture of o(sup) Saviour (quote-gloss)'s face, (..)

  16. (senseid) ''Followed by'' with: to invest (someone or something) with a certain power, quality, etc.

  17. (RQ:Bacon Learning)

  18. (RQ:King James Version) ſend the promiſe of my Father vpon you: but tarie ye in the citie of Hieruſalem, vntill ye be indued with power from on high.

  19. (RQ:Book of Common Prayer) 138:3.&93;|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t8tCG6Tlr60C&pg=RA2-PP1|column=2|passage=VVhen I called upon thee, thou heardeſt me: and enduedſt my ſoul vvith much ſtrength.

  20. (RQ:Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica)|page=46|passage=That the Sun, Moone, and Stars are living creatures, endued vvith ſoule and life, ſeemes an innocent error, and a harmeleſſe digreſſion from truth; (..)

  21. (RQ:Fuller Church History), the yearly budding of the Havv-thorn near ''Glaſſenbury'', on ''Chriſtmas'' day, no leſſe then an annual Miracle. (..) Hovvever, there is no neceſſity, that this ſhould be imputed to the Holineſs of ''Arimathean Ioſeph''. For there is (as is credibly ſaid) an Oake in ''Nevv-Foreſt'', nigh ''Lindhurſt'', in ''Hantſhire'', vvhich is indued vvith the ſame quality, putting forth leaves about the ſame time; (..)

  22. (RQ:Baxter Universal Concord)|footer=Footnote references omitted.

  23. (RQ:Butler Hudibras)

  24. (RQ:Boyle Works)

  25. (RQ:Milton Defence) Kings, though not indued vvith the Supream Povver, are not by Vertue of that Sovereign and Kingly Right of theirs Lords over the people, nor ought to Govern them alone; (..)

  26. (RQ:Berkeley Vision) our Sight vvou'd be endued vvith a far greater Sharpneſs and Penetration than it novv hath.

  27. (RQ:Mary Shelley Frankenstein)

  28. (RQ:Bridges Poetical Works)

  29. (RQ:T. S. Eliot Murder)

  30. Of a quality, etc.: to be inherent in (something).

  31. (RQ:Milton Poems)

  32. (RQ:Stanley History of Philosophy)

  33. To supply (someone) with a thing.

  34. (RQ:Shakespeare King John)

  35. (RQ:Shakespeare Coriolanus)

  36. (synonym of).

  37. (RQ:Grafton Chronicle) would be content to take in mariage the Lady Katheryn (quote-gloss) daughter vnto the French king (quote-gloss), and to endue her with all the Duchye and countryes before reherſed.

  38. (RQ:King James Version) ſaid, in Christianity|God hath endued me ''with'' a good dowry: Now will my huſband dwel with me, because I haue borne him ſixe ſonnes: and ſhee called his name (w).

  39. (synonym of).

  40. (senseid) (non-gloss)

  41. To raise or rear (someone); to up; also, to educate or instruct (someone).

  42. To bring (something) to a certain condition.

  43. (RQ:Shakespeare Othello Q1)

  44. (senseid) Of a hawk: originally, to pass (food in the crop or gizzard) into the stomach; later, to digest (food).

  45. (RQ:Skelton Poetical Works)

  46. (RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement) as a hauke dothe whan ſhe hath endued her gorge.

  47. (RQ:Turberville Faulconrie)

  48. Of a person or animal: to digest (food).

  49. (RQ:Skelton Complete)

  50. (RQ:Donne Works)

  51. (RQ:Rabelais Gargantua)

  52. To take on; to absorb.

  53. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)

  54. Of food: to be digested.