realize

suomi-englanti sanakirja

realize englannista suomeksi

  1. toteuttaa

  2. realisoida

  3. hankkia

  4. hoksata, tajuta, älytä

  5. täydentää

  1. Verbi

  2. älytä, hoksata, huomata, tajuta, ymmärtää

  3. kuvitella todeksi">kuvitella todeksi

  4. tehdä todeksi">tehdä todeksi transitive

  5. toteuttaa

  6. realisoida

  7. realisoitua

  8. saattaa loppuun">saattaa loppuun

  9. soittaa

realize englanniksi

  1. (senseid) To become aware of, understand{{, or appreciate (a fact or situation, especially something which has been true some time).

  2. (ux)

  3. (RQ:Irving Sketch Book)

  4. (RQ:Swinburne Prose and Poetry)'' to all his other heroines of the same rank or class.

  5. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Ward and Co.,(nb...)|year=1849|page=79|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=NlgEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA79|oclc=557265644|passage=Have faith in God! He shall dispose thy lot, / Nor weep for woe thou realisest not: / They shall precede thee to the better land, / And meet and greet thee on its joyful strand.

  6. (RQ:Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin), (..) that it was impossible to realize that it was death that was approaching.

  7. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Joseph Masters,(nb...)|year=1865|section=part V (Of the State of Grace), paragraph 97|pages=75–76|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=XXJnAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA75|oclc=230720034|passage=Utterly helpleſs, thou wert ſinking for ever, and realiſedſt not the fearfulneſs of thy poſition, for thus wert thou born and nurtured.

  8. (RQ:Churchill Celebrity). And at last I began to realize in my harassed soul that all elusion was futile, and to take such holidays as I could get, when he was off with a girl, in a spirit of thankfulness.

  9. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=H. S. Nichols|year=1898|page=14|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/rubaiyatbodleian00omar/page/14/mode/1up|oclc=603629646|passage=Praise be to God! thou realizest that wine / ''is'' a juice that frees the heart from a hundred pains.

  10. (RQ:Vance Outsider)

  11. (RQ:H. Walpole Dark Forest)

  12. (RQ:Lawrence Lost Girl)

  13. (quote-journal) Uxbridge thought it could safely ignore the railway(nb..). Like many other towns which adopted similar tactics, Uxbridge soon realised its mistake.

  14. (quote-song)

  15. (quote-journal) Heyns points to the experience of drones. Unmanned aerial vehicles were intended initially only for surveillance, and their use for offensive purposes was prohibited, yet once strategists realised their perceived advantages as a means of carrying out targeted killings, all objections were swept out of the way.

  16. (quote-journal)

  17. To sense (something) strongly or vividly as if real.

  18. (quote-book)|location=Andover, Mass.|publisher=Fales Draper (publisher)|Warren Fales Draper|year=1859|page=286|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/natalieorgemamon00valeiala/natalieorgemamon00valeiala/page/286/mode/1up|oclc=36254678|passage=Over the mind of the tourist, visiting the Old World for the first time,—countries where have transpired thrilling events recorded in history, what an immensity of thought and feeling sweeps! It was thus with Natalie; she could not realize that she was treading in the footsteps of royalty, who living in long past days, had held sway over this land, had looked upon this land of "merrie England" as their home.

  19. (RQ:Doyle Study in Scarlet)

  20. To cause (something) to seem real; to make realistic; specifically, to present (something) clearly to the mind, a person, oneself, etc., so that it seems real.

  21. (antonyms)

  22. (RQ:Baxter Blake Kendall)

  23. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) James Rawlins, for Wright (bookseller died 1658)|John Wright,(nb...)|year=1684|pages=16–17|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_early-english-books-1641-1700_divine-contemplations-_dorney-henry_1684/page/16/mode/1up|oclc=912851478|passage=True Faith is ſuch as realizeth Things abſent, remote and future. That it is not the nearneſs of a thing makes it real; but Faith ſeeth a Thing to be real, though afar off; vvhen vve are apt to judge many times of the reality of things, becauſe they are near.

  24. (RQ:Defoe Crusoe 2)

  25. (quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=Edinburgh|publisher=(...) Schaw and Pillans, for the Reverend Joseph Johnston,(nb...)|year=a. 1733 (date written)|year_published=1796|volume=III|section=paragraph 2|page=348|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_an-illustration-of-the-d_boston-thomas_1796_3/page/348/mode/1up|oclc=8948611|passage=Faith realiſeth the ſufferings of Chriſt; it looks upon Chriſt as the common treaſury of all grace, as the principle of life, and root of holineſs.

  26. (RQ:Richardson Grandison) gave me, ſeveral times avvakened me; but ſtill, as I cloſed my eyes, I fell into them again. VVhence, my dear, proceed theſe ideal vagaries, vvhich, for the time, realize pain or pleaſure to us, according to their hue or complexion, or rather according to our ovvn?

  27. (RQ:Sheridan Critic)

  28. (RQ:Johnson Rambler)

  29. (RQ:Emerson Society and Solitude)

  30. (quote-book)|title=(w) Translated into English|location=Oxford, Oxfordshire|publisher=University Press|Clarendon Press|year=1881|volume=!II (Containing the Notes(nb...))|page=xiv|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/thucydides02thuciala/page/xiv/mode/1up|oclc=|passage=The broken form in which the older Greek inscriptions have been preserved to us, though impairing, is far from destroying their value. (..) Many coincidences, slight as well as important, soon begin to appear in them which realize ancient history to us.

  31. (quote-book)’s Neck(nb...)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Pocket Books|year=1996|page=277|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/audreyhepburnsne00brow/page/277/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-671-52671-9|passage=Drawings appear fully realized in his mind's eye at a furious rate, before he even picks up his pencil.

  32. (quote-book)

  33. {{quote-journal|en|year=2015|date=|author=József Zsolt Bernád; Juan Mauricio Torres; Ludwig Kunz; Gernot Alber|title=Multiphoton states assisted entanglement purification of material qubits|journal=arXiv|url=http://arxiv.org/abs/1512.09095|doi=|volume=|issue=|pages=

  34. (senseid) To convert (something imaginary or planned, as a goal or idea) into reality; to bring into real existence, to make real. (defdate)

  35. (coordinate terms)

    (nearsyn)

  36. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Legate|Iohn L&91;egate&93; and are to be sold by Henry Overton,(nb...)|year=1640|pages=44–45|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=vVJtfU2ocBQC&pg=PA45|oclc=772979182|passage=The Apoſtle ſaith, That ''by (w) ſinne'' entred ''into the vvorld''. It ſufficeth to knovv; That God, by juſt imputation, ''realizeth'' the infection into the vvhole race of ''Adam''; in vvhom vve vvere as in a common Lumpe, and in his ''leaven'' ſovvred: (..)

  37. (RQ:Glanvill Vanity of Dogmatizing) it vvill be as hard to apprehend, as that an empty vviſh ſhould remove Mountains: a ſuppoſition vvhich if realized, vvould relieve ''Siſyphus''.

  38. (RQ:Glanvill Scepsis Scientifica)'' had only in ''Hypotheſis''; vveighing a ſingle ''grain'' againſt the ''Globe'' of Earth.

  39. (RQ:Young Night-Thoughts)

  40. (RQ:Boswell Johnson)

  41. (quote-book) I pleaſe myſelf vvith a viſionary anticipation of the future, vvhen my Charles vvill have finiſh'd his apprenticeſhip. (..) I ſee him beloved and admired, by all; the honour and pattern of his juvenile contemporaries. O my ſon! hovv happy canſt thou make thy father! in vvhat an ecſtaſy vvilt thou transport him, if thou realizeſt this!

  42. (RQ:Lowell Among My Books)''.

  43. To achieve (one's) potential.

  44. To convert (an asset or property, especially investments such as bonds, shares, etc.) into a more easily usable form such as money, especially by selling the asset or property.

  45. (RQ:Mill Political Economy) When he retires from business it is into money that he converts the whole, and not until then does he deem himself to have realized his gains: (..)

  46. To acquire (money, a profit, etc.) by selling an asset or property, through trade, etc.; also (''followed by'' on), to make (money or a profit) on an investment, a venture, etc.

  47. (RQ:Pope Works)

  48. (RQ:Macaulay History of England)

  49. (RQ:Cather Professor's House)

  50. Of an asset or property: to generate (a specific amount of money or interest) when invested or sold.

  51. (senseid) To turn (an abstract linguistic object, especially a phoneme) into a speech sound actually used in a language.

  52. (ux) is realized as the voiced approximant (IPAchar).

  53. (quote-book) Many (probably most) speakers realize it as (IPAchar) or (IPAchar) in other contexts as well. In Midi French, schwa is realized more frequently than in northern varieties, including in word-final position, where it generally (but not always) corresponds to etymological (IPAchar).

  54. To obtain an entity from (an abstract group or structure).

  55. To arrange (a musical work written for a single performer) to be performed by an orchestra; to orchestrate.

  56. To complete (a musical work which is incomplete or not fully notated).

  57. Chiefly in Baroque music: to play an accompaniment, harmonies, etc., based on (a bass).

  58. To have an actual or real experience of (something).

  59. To become aware of or understand a fact or situation.

  60. To cause to seem real; to make realistic.

  61. (RQ:Longfellow Hyperion) Goethe never sculptured an (w), nor painted a mother of Jesus|Madonna. He gives us only sinful Magdalene|Magdalens and rampant Fauns. He does not so much idealize as realize.

  62. To convert an asset or property into a more easily usable form such as money.

  63. (RQ:Thackeray Pendennis)

  64. (RQ:Irving Wolfert's Roost)

  65. ''Followed by'' on or upon: to acquire money or a profit from the sale of an asset or property.

  66. ''With an (glossary) like'' badly ''or'' well: of an asset or property being sold: to generate little or lot of money.

  67. to realize.

  68. (pt-verb form of)