read

suomi-englanti sanakirja

read englannista suomeksi

  1. osoittaa

  2. lukea

  3. koe-esiintyä

  4. kuulua

  5. opiskella

  6. tulkita, selittää

  7. ymmärtää

  8. lukeminen

  9. kuulla

  1. lukea

  2. kuulla

  3. lukea, opiskella

  4. Substantiivi

read englanniksi

  1. To at and interpret letters or other information that is written.

  2. (syn)

    (ux)

  3. To be understood or physically read in a specific way.

  4. To read a work or works written by the named author.

  5. (quote-text)|title=The Life of the most learned, reverend and pious Dr. H. Hammond|url=http://archive.org/stream/a615775104worduoft/a615775104worduoft_djvu.txt

  6. (quote-journal)

  7. {{quote-book

  8. To speak aloud words or other information that is written. (q)

  9. (RQ:Churchill Celebrity) and therefore my lack of detection of his promise may in some degree be pardoned.

  10. (RQ:Travers Cuckoo in the Nest)

  11. To interpret, or infer a meaning, significance, thought, intention, etc., from.

  12. To consist of certain text.

  13. To substitute a corrected piece of text in place of an erroneous one; (n-g).

  14. 1832, John Lemprière et al., ''Bibliotheca classica'', Seventh Edition, W. E. Dean, page 263:

  15. In Urbe Condita (book)|Livy, it is nearly certain that for Pylleon we should read Pteleon, as this place is mentioned in connection with Antron.
  16. 2001, ''Astronomy & Astrophysics'', volume 376, issue 3, p. 1039:

  17. The sign of coefficient ''a''(3) in the general formula of Table 2 should be plus instead of minus. Thus, the formula should read(..)
  18. (non-gloss).

  19. (quote-book)

  20. {{quote-journal|en|journal=Time|title=From Tickle Me Elmo to Squinkies: Top 10 Toy Crazes|author=Tamara Weston|date=December 23 2010

  21. To be able to hear what another person is saying over a radio connection.

  22. (quote-av)

  23. To observe and comprehend (a displayed signal).

  24. To study (a subject) at a high level, especially at university.

  25. To fetch data from (a storage medium, ''etc.'').

  26. To recognise (someone) as being transgender.

  27. To call attention to the flaws of (someone) in a playful, taunting, or insulting way.

  28. 1997, ''Framing Culture: Africanism, Sexuality and Performance'', page 186 (also discussing ''Paris is Burning''):

  29. Snapping, we are told, comes from ''reading'', or exposing hidden flaws in a person's life, and out of reading comes ''shade'' (..)
  30. (quote-book)." In the first example, the interviewee CB used snapping to read his white friend in a playful way, (..).

  31. 2013, ''Queer Looks'', page 114 (discussing ''Paris is Burning'' and "the ball world"):

  32. One assumes that such language contests are racially motivated—black folks talking back to white folks. However, the ball world makes it clear that blacks can read each other too.
  33. To imagine sequences of potential moves and responses without actually placing stones.

  34. To think, believe; to consider (that).

  35. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene) / That short reuenge the man may ouertake (..)

  36. To advise; to counsel. See (m).

  37. (RQ:Tyndale Obedience)

  38. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)

  39. To tell; to declare; to recite.

  40. A reading or an act of reading, especially of an actor's part of a play or a piece of stored data.

  41. {{quote-text|en|year=1879|author=Frederick James Furnivall|title=letter to the editor of "The Spectator"

  42. {{quote-text|en|year=1958|author=Philip Larkin|title=Self's the Man

  43. {{quote-text|en|year=2006|title=MySQL administrator's guide and language reference|page=393

  44. Something to be read; a written work.

  45. A person's interpretation or impression of something.

  46. (ux)

  47. An instance of (l).

  48. As Corey points out, "if you and I are both black queens then we can't call each other black queens because that's not a read. That's a fact."
  49. (quote-book).

  50. The identification of a specific sequence of genes in a genome or bases in a acid string

  51. (inflection of)

  52. (noun form of)

  53. red

  54. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle

  55. (quote)
  56. ''Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church

  57. (past participle of)

  58. (topics) red