glean

suomi-englanti sanakirja

glean englannista suomeksi

  1. kerätä

  1. poimia often with a qualifier, poimia tähkiä">poimia tähkiä glean ears of corn, tehdä jälkikorjuu">tehdä jälkikorjuu

  2. kartuttaa experience, etc., poimia, saada selville information

  3. poimia, siepata

  4. Substantiivi

glean englanniksi

  1. To collect (fruit, grain, or other produce) from a field, an orchard, etc., after the main gathering or harvest.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (RQ:Shakespeare As You Like It)

  4. (RQ:King James Version)

  5. (RQ:Morris Earthly Paradise) ruined vineyards lying in the sun, / After his harvesting the men must glean / What he had left; right glad they had not been / Among the tall stalks of the ripening wheat, / The fell destroyer's fatal tusks to meet.

  6. (quote-book)

  7. To collect fruit, grain, or other produce from (a field, an orchard, etc.), after the main gathering or harvest.

  8. (RQ:King James Version) your God.

  9. (RQ:Thomson Autumn)'s fields.

  10. To gather (something, now chiefly something intangible such as experience or information) in small amounts over a of time, often with some difficulty; to together.

  11. (synonyms)

  12. (RQ:Herbert Travaile) ''Magellan'' ſoone after ſailes yet more South, and paſſes that ''Fretum'' or ſtrait, vvith more reaſon called ''Magellan'', a hundred others haue ſince that gleaned ſeueral additions of Titles and nevv names their diſtributed.

  13. (RQ:Locke Human Understanding)

  14. (RQ:Addison Italy)

  15. (RQ:Fielding Author's Farce)

  16. (RQ:Byron Childe Harold)

  17. (RQ:Lowell Poems)

  18. (quote-journal) Victor.|journal=The Union Review. A Magazine of Catholic Literature and Art|location=London|publisher=J. T. Hayes,(nb...); & Marshall|Simpkin, Marshall, & Co.|volume=I|page=504|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bag9AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA504|oclc=4952380|passage=All thy joys from earth thou gleanest / From things basest and obscenest, (..)

  19. (RQ:Morris Sigurd)

  20. (quote-book)|series=International Pocket Library|seriesvolume=36|location=Boston, Mass.|publisher=International Pocket Library|page=xi|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/threeplayscounte00striuoft/page/ix/mode/1up|oclc=82814583|passage=Strindberg|(quote-gloss) Strindberg went to Stockholm, where for a few months he gleaned a living from newspaper work; but in the summer he went to a remote island in Bothnia Bay, where in his twenty-third year he wrote his great historical drama, ''(w)''.

  21. (quote-web) said Iran was "well aware of what priceless technological information" could be gleaned from the aircraft.

  22. To away (someone's) possessions; to strip (someone) bare.

  23. Of an animal, especially a bat or a bird: to feed by upVerb|picking up or plucking (prey, mainly arthropods such as insects) from various places.

  24. (quote-journal)

  25. To collect or gather (things) into one mass.

  26. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Bynneman|Henrie Bynneman, for Toy|Humfrey Toye|page=98|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=-yQA8x4w12gC&pg=PA98|oclc=1351293092|passage=Such ſlender arguments be gleaneth together agaynſt vs, ſeeking bye matters. But what ſhould he do? elſe ſhould he haue nought to furniſhe his counterblaſt withall.

  27. (RQ:Shakespeare Henry 8)

  28. To offVerb|cut off (straggling soldiers separated from their units) during a conflict; to isolate.

  29. To collect fruit, grain, or other produce after the main gathering or harvest.

  30. (RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement)

  31. (RQ:Wyatt Poems)

  32. (RQ:King James Version) ſaid, I pray you, let mee gleane and gather after the reapers amongſt the ſheaues: (..)

  33. (quote-book) 12. 1.|editor=William Milbourne|title=Sapientia Clamitans, Wisdome Crying Out to Sinners to Returne from Their Evill Wayes:(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) Iohn Haviland, for Robert Milbourne(nb...)|year_published=1638|page=268|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Oc-ZjM7y2-oC&pg=PA268|oclc=1356147182|passage=Offer thy ſelfe to God then, as ''Primitas ſpicarium'' (quote-gloss), vvhether thou gleaneſt in the vvorld, or bindeſt up by vvhole ſheaves; vvhether thine increaſe be by little and little, or thou be rich at once, by the devolution of a rich inheritance and patrimony unto thee.

  34. (RQ:Blackstone Commentaries)

  35. Of an animal, especially a bat or a bird: to feed by picking up or plucking prey, mainly arthropods such as insects, from various places.

  36. (quote-book) appears as a sunny flash of gold in roadside shrubs or swamp thickets, refueling on insects gleaned from leaves or caught in midair forays.

  37. (quote-book)|page=236|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/marianne-taylor-bats-an-illustrated-guide-to-all-species/page/236/mode/1up|isbn=978-1-78240-5-573|passage=The species (quote-gloss) takes flying and non-flying prey, suggesting it gleans as well as hawking; it has been observed hunting over water.

  38. A collection of something made by gleaning.

  39. (RQ:Fuller Two Sermons)'' gleaned a great gleane of Faith; ''Moſes'', of Meekneſſe; (..)|footer=A figurative use.

  40. (RQ:Dryden Georgics)|footer=A figurative use.

  41. The afterbirth or placenta of an animal, especially a cow or sheep.

  42. (RQ:Pliny Holland Historie of the World)

  43. (quote-book) Osborne (publisher)|Thomas Osborne,(nb...), and Cooper (publisher)|Mary Cooper(nb...)|volume=!II (Containing, the Months of April, May, and June)|page=150|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/modernhusbandma01elligoog/page/150/mode/1up|oclc=37143455|passage=This Method of giving VVater to a nevv-calved Covv, vvherein Aſhes are thus put, is conſtantly practiſed by ſome to cleanſe her, and bring avvay her Glean.

  44. Of an animal, especially a cow or sheep: to deliver its afterbirth or placenta.

  45. (quote-book) Osborne (publisher)|Thomas Osborne,(nb...), and Cooper (publisher)|Mary Cooper(nb...)|volume=!II (Containing, the Months of April, May, and June)|page=150|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/modernhusbandma01elligoog/page/n287/mode/1up|oclc=37143455|passage=''To make a Covv glean vvell, and keep her in Health aftervvards.''— (..) And as it is a Cuſtom vvith ſome to give all their Covvs a cleanſing Drink after Calving, I recommend this to be a good one for that Purpoſe.— (..) A fourth is, to boil a Quart of ground Malt in tvvo Quarts of Ale, and give all vvarm. A certain Perſon gave this laſt to a Covv, vvhich, on the third Day after Calving, had not gleaned; but in five Days after it came avvay vvhole.

  46. (eclipsis of)