fellow
suomi-englanti sanakirjafellow englannista suomeksi
kaveri
kollega
mies
pari
kundikaveri
jäsen
fellow englanniksi
(synonyms)
(RQ:Calvin Golding Ephesians)
(RQ:Shakespeare Timon of Athens)
(RQ:Sylvester Du Bartas)
(RQ:King James Version)&93;, Let this thing be done for me: Let me alone two moneths, that I may goe vp and downe vpon the mountaines, and bewaile my virginitie, I, and my fellowes.
(RQ:Book of Common Prayer)
(RQ:Defoe New Voyage)
(RQ:Scott Canongate 2)
(RQ:Macaulay History of England)
(RQ:Robert Browning Men and Women)
(RQ:Hough Purchase Price)
An animal which is a member of a breed or species, or a flock, herd, etc.
(RQ:Livy Holland Romane Historie)'' chanced to heare them lovv again, and anſvver from out of the cave vvherein they had been beſtovved: vvhereat he turned back, and made haſte thither.
(RQ:L'Estrange Fables of Aesop)
An object which is associated with another object; especially, as part of a set.
(RQ:Homer Pope et al Odyssey)
(RQ:Gibbon Roman Empire)
A person or thing comparable in characteristics with another person or thing; especially, as belonging to the same class or group.
(ux)
(RQ:Middleton Tourneur Revengers Tragaedie)
(RQ:Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress)
(quote-book)|year=1887|oclc=81343284|passage=It is now some five years since I conceived the idea of writing a history of my fellow-countrymen in Australasia, but it was only within the last year or two that I could find sufficient time to make any material progress with the undertaking, although I had been collecting the materials for some period in advance.
(quote-book) ''i.e.'', (w)|chapter=Professions|title=Women and Their Work|location=London|publisher=Publishing|Methuen & Co.(nb...)|month=July|year=1901|page=112|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=IwRPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA112|oclc=2453505|passage=There are journalists who work for a low rate of pay, just as there are poor women who take in needlework at a cheaper rate than their fellows, and they are alike making life more difficult for other women.
(quote-book)
(quote-journal)
A person with abilities, achievements, skills, etc., equal to those of another person; a thing with characteristics, worth, etc., equal to those of another thing.
(RQ:More Robinson Utopia)
(RQ:Shakespeare Julius Caesar)
(RQ:Shakespeare Macbeth)
(RQ:De Quevedo L'Estrange Visions)
(RQ:Swift Directions to Servants)
(RQ:Richardson Pamela)
(RQ:Smollett Peregrine Pickle)
One in the same condition, or situation of need, as another.
(RQ:Hobbes Leviathan)
(RQ:Goldsmith Traveller)
(RQ:Byron Mazeppa)
(RQ:Tasso Fairfax Godfrey of Bulloigne)
A person living at the same time, or about the same age as another, especially when in the same field of study or work.
''Often in the form'' Fello (non-gloss)
Originally, one of a group of academics who up a college or similar institution; now, a senior member of a college or similar educational institution involved in teaching, research, and management of the institution.
(RQ:Fuller Church History)
(RQ:Wood Athenae Oxonienses) vvho dying 1522, left ſeveral Books to the Coll. of vvhich he had been Fellovv; vvhich, if I miſtake not, vvas ''Magd''''alen'' College.
(n-g)
A (senior) member of a learned or professional society.
(RQ:Evelyn Diary) Council) by suffrage of the rest of y(sup) Members, a Fellow of y(sup) Philosophic Society now meeting at Gresham College, where was an assembly of divers learning gentlemen.
A senior member of an of Court.
(RQ:Wood Athenae Oxonienses)
A scholar appointed to a fellowship, that is, a paid academic position held for a certain period which usually requires the scholar to conduct research.
A physician undergoing a fellowship (supervised subspecialty medical training) after having completed a residency (specialty training program).
A member of a college or university who manages its business interests.
A senior researcher or technician in a corporation, especially one engaged in research and development.
A male person; a bloke, a chap, a guy, a man; also, ''preceded by a modifying word, sometimes with a sense of mild reproach'': (non-gloss).
(RQ:Shakespeare Timon of Athens) him a vvorthy Fellovv.
(RQ:Hall Recollection)
(RQ:Spectator)
(RQ:Fielding Tom Jones)
(RQ:Hume Morals)
(RQ:Sterne Sentimental Journey)
(RQ:Marryat Midshipman)
(RQ:Dickens Christmas Carol)"
(quote-book), (late Ingram, Cooke, and Co.)(nb...)|year=1853|page=70|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=uJZhAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA70|oclc=1079210034|passage="(w)" For he's a jolly good fellow! / For he's a jolly good fellow!! / For he's a jolly good f-e-e-ell-ow!!! / Which nobody can deny!
(RQ:Hughes Tom Brown at Oxford)
(RQ:Trollope Prime Minister)
(RQ:Saki Reginald in Russia)
(RQ:Maxwell Mirror and the Lamp)
(RQ:Faulkner As I Lay Dying)
(quote-av )
(senseid) ''Usually qualified by an (glossary) or used in the plural'': an individual or person regardless of gender.
(RQ:Dickens Old Curiosity Shop)
(RQ:Dickens Great Expectations)
(RQ:Stoker Dracula)
(quote-book) pseudonym|chapter=The Great Marine Film|title=The Moving Picture Girls at Sea: Or A Pictured Shipwreck that Became Real|location=Cleveland, Oh.; New York, N.Y.|publisher=The World Syndicate Publishing Co.|year=1915|page=3|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/movingpicturegirhope/page/3/mode/1up|oclc=3388799|passage=Not that the girl on the couch, with closed eyes, was unrefined. But there was a wholesome air of good health about her that caused one to think of a "jolly good fellow," rather than a girl who needed to be helped on and off trolley cars.
(quote-journal) / "What kind fellow this Mary?" I asked him. / Johnny Gorai shook his beflowered head vigorously. At the same time a crafty gleam crept into his faded eyes. / "What for Johnny Gorai know 'em good fellow Mary?" he asked in the ''bêche de mer'' which passed with him for English. / "Don't lie to me," I said. "You know 'em this fellow woman—or you've heard of her. Who is she?"
An animal or object.
(RQ:Twain Huckleberry Finn)
One of a pair of things suited to each other or used together; a counterpart, a mate.
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 5 Q1)
(RQ:Defoe Crusoe) reflecting upon all my Comrades that vvere drovvn'd, (..) I never ſavv them aftervvards, or any Sign of them, except three of their Hats, one Cap, and tvvo Shoes that vvere not Fellovvs.
Originally , a person's partner (of either sex) in life or marriage; a spouse; also, the mate of an animal; now , a person's male lover or partner; a boyfriend; a husband.
(RQ:Pliny Holland Historie of the World)
(RQ:Shakespeare Tempest)
(alternative form of)
A colleague or partner.
(RQ:Bacon Sylva Sylvarum)
An associate in the commission of a crime or other wrongful act; an accomplice.
(RQ:Milton Comus)
A close companion or friend; also, a companion or friend whom one eats or drinks with.
(RQ:Coverdale Bible)
(RQ:Erasmus Udall Apophthegmes) one that drinketh ſingle Beere, ſhould be greued with his next feloe, for drinking ale or wine.
''Followed by'' of: one who participates in an activity; a participant.
(RQ:Shakespeare Winter's Tale)
(RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)|year=1873
A man without good breeding or of lower status; a common or ignoble man; also, (non-gloss).
(RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3)
(RQ:Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost Q1)
(RQ:Sidney Arcadia)
(RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3 Q1)
(RQ:South Twelve Sermons)
(RQ:Pope Essay on Man)
(RQ:Fielding Tom Jones) I knovv he hath, or you, vvhom I knovv to be all Goodneſs and Honour, vvould not, after the many kind and tender Things I have heard you ſay of this poor helpleſs Child, have ſo diſdainfully called him Fellovv.
(RQ:Disraeli Vivian Grey)"
(RQ:Dickens Pickwick Papers)|page=150|passage="Sir," replied Mr. Pickwick in the same tone, "It is not half the insult to you, that your appearance in my presence in a green velvet jacket, with a two-inch tail, would be to me." / "Sir," said Mr. Tupman, "you're a fellow." / "Sir," said Mr. Pickwick, "you're another!"
(synonym of)
A man.
To address (someone) as "fellow", especially in an insulting manner ''(see noun sense 10.6)''.
(RQ:Fielding Amelia)
(RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Ernest Maltravers)
To equal (someone or something); also, to cause or find someone or something to be equal to (some other person or thing).
(RQ:Hall Select Thoughts)
To pair or suit (someone or something) with some other person or thing; also, to pair or suit someone or something with (some other person or thing); to arrange (things) in pairs.
''Followed by'' to ''or'' with: to associate or join (oneself, someone, or something) with some other person or thing in companionship or a partnership.
(RQ:Thomas Smith De Republica Anglorum)|pages=12–13|pageref=12|passage=A man by nature is rather deſirous to fellow him ſelfe to another and ſo to liue in couple, than to adherd(sic) himſelfe with many.
''Followed by'' to or with: to cause or portray (someone or something) to be equal to some other person or thing.
To associate or go together with (someone or something); to become a partner of (someone or something).
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Miles Flesher,(nb...)|year=1628|page=57|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/historieofperfec00flet/page/57/mode/1up|oclc=1049026426|passage=Some fevv there vvere left all to follovv Him: / Eſteeming all to baſe to fellovv Him: / And joyfully receiv'd ''Him'' as their ''Lord'', / Deriving their ſalvation from his ''VVord'', (..)
''Followed by'' with: to associate or join with a person or thing in companionship or a partnership.
(RQ:Dekker Wonder)
(l)