race
suomi-englanti sanakirjarace englannista suomeksi
rotu
alalaji
kilpailla
potkurivirta, voimakas virta
kilpailu
ränni
ajaa vauhdilla
kilpa
kiitää
kilpailuttaa
Substantiivi
race englanniksi
A contest between people, animals, vehicles, etc. where the goal is to be the first to reach some objective.
(ux)
(RQ:King James Version)
(quote-book)
(quote-journal)
Swift progress; rapid motion; an instance of moving or driving at high speed.
(synonyms)
(RQ:Bacon Sylva Sylvarum)
(quote-book)|title=The Nature of Things|volume=2|original=De rerum natura|by=(w)|location=London|publisher=Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme|lines=190–191|section=book 4|page=33|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/natureofthingsdi02lucr/page/33|text=Hence the rapid race / Of light, and lustre from th' effusive sun
{{quote-journal|en|year=1847|month=December|title=The Literature of Humbug|journal=The Young American's Magazine|volume=1|page=318|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=REFAAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA318
A condition; a bug or problem that occurs when two or more components attempt to use the same resource at the same time.
A sequence of events; a progressive movement toward a goal.
{{quote-book|en|year=1624|author=Francis Bacon|editor=Basil Montagu|chapter=Considerations Touching a War with Spain|title=The Works of Francis Bacon|volume=5|publisher=William Pickering
A fast-moving current of water.
A water channel, especially one built to lead water to or from a point where it is utilised, such as that which powers a millwheel.
(hyponyms)
(RQ:Milton Paradise Regained)
A guide or channel that a component of a machine moves along:
A groove on a machine or a loom along which the shuttle moves.
A ring with a groove in which rolling elements (such as balls) ride, forming part of a rolling-element bearing (for example, a bearing).
(quote-book) But because video keno plays so much faster, you're likely to lose more money over a given period. Live keno races start every 10 minutes, but you can make 100 bets on a video version in the same amount of time.
(quote-web)
(quote-journal)a fresh fox popped out of a pit, and they raced him to Cherrington, where hounds were stopped at dark(..)
(quote-song)|album=(w)|date=|year=1988|year_published=1997|artist=Sixpence None the Richer|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68MKLkNSMN4|text=There she goes / There she goes again / Racing through my brain / And I just can't contain / This feeling that remains
To run rapidly when not engaged to a transmission.
(senseid) A group of sentient beings, particularly people, distinguished by common ancestry, heritage or characteristics (see Wikipedia's article on (w)):
A large group of people distinguished from others on the basis of a common heritage.
(quote-book)|location=Oxford, Oxfordshire|publisher=(...) University Press|Clarendon-Press, for S. Leacroft,(nb...); and sold by Daniel Prince(nb...), and John Woodyer(nb...)|year_published=1773|volume=I|page=89|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_the-origin-of-the-englis_1773_1/page/89/mode/1up|oclc=2008850|passage=Felovves, they ſhall never more us vvithſtonde, / For I ſe them all drovvned in the raſe of ''Irlonde''.|footer=(small)
(quote-text)
A large group of people distinguished from others on the basis of common physical characteristics, such as skin color or hair type.
(quote-av); (w)|title=The Inn of the Sixth Happiness|url=https://archive.org/details/the-inn-of-the-sixth-happiness|oclc=732947584|time=1:41:15|publisher=20th Century Fox|roles=(w) as Colonel Lin Nan and (w) as Gladys Aylward|text=Colonel Lin Nan: Would it offend you to be loved by a man of another race?Gladys Aylward: It would honor me.
A large group of people distinguished from others on the basis of shared characteristics or qualities, for example social qualities.
A large group of nonhumans distinguished from others on the basis of a common heritage.
(quote-video game)|genre=fiction|Science Fiction|location=Redwood City|publisher=Electronic Arts|year=2008|system=PC|scene=Normandy SR-1|isbn=9780784546642|oclc=246633669|passage=Tali: My father is responsible for the lives of seventeen million people—our entire race is in his hands. And I'm his only child.|footer=''(Note: Tali is a (w), an extraterrestrial species.)''
A group of organisms distinguished by common characteristics; often an informal infraspecific rank in taxonomy, below species:
(RQ:d'Anghiera Eden Newe Worlde) For in the raſe of this large lande, ''Colonus'' (quote-gloss) him ſelfe brought and ſent to the courte a greate number of euery kynde, the which it was lawfull for all the people to beholde, and are yet dayly browght in like manner.
A population geographically separated from others of its species that develops significantly different characteristics; a mating group.
A strain of plant with characteristics causing it to differ from other plants of the same species.
A breed or strain of domesticated animal.
A strain of microorganism, fungi, etc.
A category or kind of thing distinguished by common characteristics.
(quote-book)
Peculiar flavour, taste, or strength, as of wine; that quality, or assemblage of qualities, which indicates origin or kind, as in wine; hence, characteristic flavour.
Characteristic quality or disposition.
(quote-book)some great race of fancy or judgment in the contrivance(..)
The sexual activity of conceiving and bearing biological offspring.
Ancestry, lineage.
(RQ:Thackeray Barry Lyndon)
A step in a lineage or succession; a generation.
To assign a race to; to perceive as having a (usually specified) race.
(quote-web)
To pass down certain phenotypic traits to offspring.
{{quote-book|en|year=1610|author=William Shakespeare|title=The Winter's Tale|section=act IV, scene III|line=45
To sharpen (a grindstone) by scraping its surface.
(alternative spelling of)
To cut, scratch, or tear (someone or something) with a sharp object; to lacerate, to slash; specifically , to make marks on (something, such as a piece of wood) using a knife.
(syn)
(RQ:Ascham Toxophilus)
(RQ:Markham Cavelarice) the cure is, vvith a ſharp knife to race him alongſt his gummes, cloſe vnder his teeth, both of the inſide and outſide: and then to rubbe them all ouer, either vvith pepper & ſalt vvel mingled together, or vvith claret vvine and pepper heated vpon the fire, (..)
(RQ:Moxon Mechanick Exercises)
To physically destroy; to obliterate:
To level or down (a building, a town, etc.) to the ground; to demolish.
(RQ:Raleigh Mahomet) diſarmed his ſubjects; ſuch Caſtles and ſtrengths as hee vvas jealous of vvere raced, (..)
(RQ:Swift Miscellanies) ''Lyſander'' the General of the ''Lacedemonians'', (..) novv reduces all the Dominions of the ''Athenians'', takes the City, races their VValls, ruins their VVorks, and changes the Form of their Government; (..)|footer=Spelled ''razes'' in the 1st edition (1701), page 20.
(RQ:Grose England and Wales) cauſed de Cobham, 1st Baron Cobham|Henry Cobham, (..) to race the caſtle that Robert de Crevequer had erected, becauſe Crevequer (that vvas the ovvner of it, and heire to Robert) vvas of the number of the nobles that moved and mainteined vvare againſt him; (..)
To make (a path or way) through something by cutting or tearing.
(RQ:Homer Chapman Iliads)
To make a cut or slash in (an item of clothing or footwear) as a decoration.
(RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement)
(RQ:Marlowe Nashe Dido)
To erase (a record, text, etc.), originally by scraping; to out, to out.
(RQ:Wyatt Poems)
(RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)
(RQ:Heywood Fair Maid). My name is Captaine ''Thomas Good——'' / ''Beſſ''(quote-gloss). I can ſee no good in thee, Race that ſyllable / Out of thy name.
To completely remove (someone or something), especially from a place, a situation, etc.; also, to remove from existence; to destroy, to obliterate.
(RQ:Marlowe Tamburlaine)
(RQ:Shakespeare Titus Andronicus Q1)
(quote-book); the Dream of Caesar|Julius Cæsar, Emperor of Rome|editor=B. Wheatley|Henry Benjamin Wheatley|title=Merlin or The Early History of King Arthur: A Prose Romance(nb...)|series=Early English Text Society|seriesvolume=112|location=London|publisher=For the (w) by Kegan Paul|Kegal Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co.|year_published=1899|volume=I|page=424|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/MerlinOrTheEarlyHistory2/page/n483/mode/1up|oclc=1016211061|passage=He be-heilde towarde the fier, and saugh the flesshe that the knaue hadde rosted that was tho I-nough, and raced it of with his hondes madly, and rente it a-sonder in peces, and wette it in mylke, and after in the hony, and ete as a wood man that nought ther lefte of the flessh; (..)|translation=He (quote-gloss) beheld toward the fire, and saw the flesh that the knave had roasted that was though (quote-gloss) enough, and snatched it off with his hands madly, and rent it asunder in pieces, and wet it in milk, and after in the honey, and ate as a woodman, that nought (quote-gloss) there left of the flesh;(nb..)|brackets=on|termlang=en
(RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3 Q1)
(RQ:Warner Albions England)
(l) (q)
a (l) (gloss)
a rush
to (l) (to compete in a race, a contest where the goal is to be the first to reach some objective)
to rush
(infl of)
(l) (gloss)
(l); breed
(inflection of)
race (competition)
(obsolete form of)