navel

suomi-englanti sanakirja

navel englannista suomeksi

  1. napa

  1. Substantiivi

  2. napa

  3. Verbi

navel englanniksi

  1. The indentation or bump remaining in the abdomen of placental mammals where the cord was attached before birth.

  2. The central part or point of anything; the middle.

  3. (quote-book)|passage=Within the navel of this hideous wood,Immured in cypress shades, a sorcerer dwells,Of Bacchus and Circe born, great Comus

  4. (quote-book)|tlr=(w)|title=Tales translated from the Persian of Inatulla of Delhi|volume=I|publisher=P. and W. Wilson et al.|location=Dublin|page=iv|text=Sweeter than the muſk of Tatar, the morning breeze from the navel of every flower raviſhed perfume.

  5. (RQ:Mitchell Cloud Atlas)

  6. A orange.

  7. {{quote-text|en|year=1981|author=Peter K. Thor; Edward V. Jesse|title=Economic Effects of Terminating Federal Marketing Orders for California-Arizona Oranges

  8. An eye on the underside of a carronade for securing it to a carriage.

  9. To be in the middle of a landscape.

  10. (RQ:Byron Childe Harold)

  11. (quote-book) H(quote-gloss) Wiffen|chapter=Aspley Wood|title=Aonian Hours; and Other Poems|location=London|publisher=Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown|year=1819|section=canto II, stanza LXII|page=102|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=fjNYAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA102|passage=Within the shade a ruined temple stands / To sight conspicuous, navelled in the pines, / Speaking of Grecian art, since Vandal hands / Defaced her structures, and despoiled her shrines.

  12. (quote-journal)|title=Ollapodiana. Number Four.|journal=Knickerbocker|The Knickerbocker, or New-York Monthly Magazine|volume=VI|issue=2|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Gaylord Clark|(quote-gloss) Clark and (quote-gloss) Edson,(nb...)|month=August|year=1835|page=122|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sim_foederal-american-monthly_1835-08_6_2/page/122/mode/1up|passage=I rejoice as I call back those pleasant times, when in the casement of our seminary, I rested my telescope on my shut-up Virgil, and looked off among the far-off hills in the lap of which the edifice was naveled, and saw the pretty girls of the farm-houses, (..)

  13. (quote-book) Day Lewis|chapter=Madrigal for Lowell House|title=The Room & Other Poems|location=London|publisher=Jonathan Cape|year=1965|page=53|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/roomotherpoems0000unse/page/53/mode/1up|passage=The crimson berry tree navelled upon this court / Twinkles a coded message, a wind-sun tingling chord, / Curious round her foot saunters one blue jay: (..)

  14. (C) (l)

  15. (l) (gloss)

  16. centre, point, hub

  17. (l), button

  18. a (l) (hub)