savour

suomi-englanti sanakirja

savour englannista suomeksi

  1. maustaa

  2. maku

  3. nauttia jstk

  4. maistaa

  5. maistua

  1. maku

  2. aromi, maku

  3. viehätys, sivumaku, mielenkiinto

  4. nautiskella, nauttia

  5. haiskahtaa + ablative

  6. haista smell, maistua taste

  7. vivahtaa + ablative

  8. Substantiivi

savour englanniksi

  1. An aroma or smell.

  2. (RQ:Tyndale Pentateuch) made an aulter vnto the LORDE&11805; and toke of all maner of clene beaſtes and all maner of clene foules&11805; and offred ſacrifyce vppon the aulter. And the LORDE ſmellyd a ſwete ſavoure and ſayd in his hert: I wyll henceforth no more curſe the erth for mannes ſake&11805; (..)

  3. (RQ:Marlowe Edward 2) / ''Gurn''''ey''. And ſo do ''I'', M''atreuis'': yeſternight / ''I'' opened but the doore to throvv him meate, / ''A''nd ''I'' vvas almoſt ſtifeled vvith the ſauor.

  4. (RQ:Dryden Georgics)|footer=Referring to the actions of bees.

  5. (RQ:Tatler)

  6. (RQ:Falkner Moonfleet)

  7. The quality which the sense of taste detects; also , a specific flavour or taste, especially one different from the predominant one.

  8. (RQ:De Mornay Sidney Golding Trewnesse)

  9. (RQ:Estienne Liebault Maison Rustique)

  10. (RQ:Milton Paradise Regained)

  11. (RQ:Homer Pope et al Odyssey)

  12. (quote-journal) &91;page 849&93; The primary facts of knowledge, form, color, sound, weight, savor, odor, etc., can be obtained only by the direct action of material things upon the senses and cannot be taught from books.

  13. (RQ:Vance Outsider)—distilling therefrom an acid envy that robbed her napoleon (quote-gloss) of all its savour.|footer=The 1st edition, published in ''Munsey’s Magazine'', (November 1914) uses ''flavor'' instead.

  14. An appealing or appetizing flavour, especially one which is savoury or strong.

  15. (RQ:Geneva Bible)

  16. (RQ:Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress)

  17. (RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 1)

  18. (RQ:Ouida In Maremma)

  19. A distinctive sensation like a flavour or taste, or an aroma or smell.

  20. (RQ:Baxter Saints)

  21. A particular quality, especially a small amount of it; a hint or trace of something.

  22. (synonyms)

  23. (RQ:Shakespeare King Lear Q1)

  24. A quality which is appealing or enjoyable; merit, value.

  25. A reputation.

  26. (RQ:Coverdale Bible)

  27. (RQ:Fuller Holy Warre) the laſt Patriarch of Jeruſalem; ſince vvhich time the bad ſavour of his life came to the Popes noſe, vvho ſent a Legate to depoſe him.

  28. (RQ:Tennyson Idylls)

  29. Enjoyment or taste for something; appreciation; pleasure; relish; an instance of this.

  30. (RQ:Hollinghurst Line)

  31. Knowledge; understanding.

  32. (RQ:Erasmus Newe Testamente), of whom they had a certeyne ſauour and vnderſtandyng (ſimple though it wer:) who ſodenly ſhould renewe all kynde of men, and theyr ſynnes clerely abolyſhed, bryng them vnto the kyngdõ of righteouſneſſe.

  33. (RQ:Herbert Temple)

  34. To detect (a flavour or taste, or food or drink); to taste; specifically, to enjoy or linger on (a flavour or taste, or food and drink); to relish.

  35. (ux)

  36. To give (food or drink) flavour; to flavour, to season.

  37. (RQ:d'Urfey Wit and Mirth)

  38. (RQ:Southey Brazil)

  39. (quote-book)|edition=1st American|location=Boston, Mass.|publisher=Mifflin Harcourt|Houghton Mifflin Company|year=1975|section=stanza 37|page=47|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sirgawaingreen00tolk/page/47/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-395-21970-6|passage=Soups they served of many sorts, seasoned most choicely, / in double helpings, as was due, and divers sorts of fish; / some baked in bread, some broiled on the coals, / some seethed, some in gravy savoured with spices, / and all with condiments so cunning that it caused him delight.

  40. To detect (an aroma or smell, especially an appealing one); to smell.

  41. To enjoy (something) deeply or in a lingering manner; to appreciate, to in, to relish.

  42. (RQ:Geneva Bible).

  43. (quote-book) as Thou (quote-gloss) savoredst it in thy heart, for it is just and meet, right and for our salvation, Queen of Heaven, thrice-blessed . . .

  44. (quote-journal)

  45. To find (something) appealing; to appreciate, to like.

  46. (RQ:Lodge Usurers)

  47. (RQ:Jonson Cynthia's Revels)

  48. (RQ:John Ford Broken Heart) is novv ſo yoak'd / To a moſt barbarous thraldome, miſery, / Affliction, that she ſauors not humanity.

  49. To possess (a particular, often negative, quality), especially a small amount of it; to be redolent or suggestive of (something).

  50. (RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)

  51. To be appealing to (a person, the senses, etc.).

  52. To experience, perceive, or understand (something).

  53. (RQ:Warner Albions England) ſome Godhead: yeat, is ods. / VVith paſte and preſent times doeſt dreame Pluralitie of Gods. / So did in deed the Monarchies, ſo Miſcreants novv not fevv: / But liſten here vvhat Gods they vvere, and learne them to eſchevv.

  54. (RQ:King James Version) turned, and ſaid vnto Peter|Peter, Get thee behind mee, (w), thou sart an offence vnto me: for thou ſauoureſt not the things that ''be'' of God, but thoſe that ''be'' of men.

  55. To give (something) a particular quality; to imbue with.

  56. (RQ:Lyly Euphues) and hauinge taken a ſurfet of delyght, ſéeme now to ſauor it with deſpight.

  57. To give (something) an aroma or smell.

  58. ''Followed by'' out: to detect or find (something).

  59. To have a suspicion of (something).

  60. (RQ:Marlowe Nashe Dido)

  61. Of a thing: to off a (specified) aroma or smell.

  62. (RQ:Latimer Notable Sermon)

  63. (RQ:Pliny Holland Historie of the World) bringeth forth a vvhite floure, ſavouring like an apple, and having a bitter taſt.

  64. (RQ:Morris Earthly Paradise)

  65. Of food or drink: to have a specified (especially appealing) flavour or taste.

  66. (RQ:Cornaro Herbert Temperance) that pleaſed my taſte brought me commoditie or diſcommoditie; and vvhether that Proverb,(nb..), ''That vvhich ſavours, is good and nouriſheth'', be conſonant to truth. This upon triall I found moſt falſe: (..)

  67. (quote-book)

  68. To possess a particular (often negative) quality, especially a small amount of it; to be redolent or suggestive of.

  69. (RQ:Shakespeare Twelfth Night) Fetch ''Maluolio'' hither, / And yet alas, novv I remember me, / They ſay poore Gentleman, he's much diſtract. (..) Did he vvrite this? / Feste|''Clo''&91;''wn''&93;. I (quote-gloss) Madame. / Orsino (Twelfth Night)|''Du''&91;''ke Orsino''&93;. This ſauours not much of diſtraction.

  70. (RQ:Drayton Poly-Olbion)

  71. (RQ:Dryden Fables)

  72. (RQ:Spectator)

  73. (RQ:Fielding Tom Jones)

  74. (quote-book)|location=Boston, Mass.|publisher=(...) S. Kneeland,(nb...)|year=1750|section=section II (Shewing from what Motives True Love to God Takes Its Rise)|pages=53–54|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/truereligiondeli00bell/page/54/mode/1up|oclc=1204882185|passage=Be gone, thou impudent VVretch, to Hell, thy proper Place: thou art a Deſpiſer of my glorious Majeſty, and your Frame of Spirit ſavours of Blaſphemy.

  75. (RQ:Burke Revolution in France)

  76. (RQ:Cooper Mercedes)

  77. (quote-book)|month=May|year=1915|pages=vi–vii|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/breathoflife0000unse/page/n9/mode/1up|oclc=1484959|passage=An explanation of life phenomena that savors of the laboratory and chemism repels me, and an explanation that savors of the theological point of view is equally distasteful to me. I crave and seek a natural explanation of all phenomena upon this earth, but the word "natural" to me implies more than mere chemistry and physics.

  78. ''Chiefly followed by a descriptive word like'' ill ''or'' well: to have a specified quality.

  79. (RQ:Tennyson Poems 1842)

  80. (quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=(publisher)|Harper & Brothers,(nb...)|year=1888|volume=III|pages=368–369|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/historyinquisition03leah/page/369/mode/1up|oclc=457721431|passage=Leaping from the tower of Beaurevoir into the ditch and preferring death to falling into the hands of the English, after the Voices had forbidden it.—This was pusillanimity, tending to desperation and suicide; and in saying that God had forgiven it, "thou savorest ill as to human free-will."|footer=(small).

  81. To give off a foul smell; to stink.

  82. ''Chiefly followed by'' to'','' unto'','' with'', etc.'': to be appealing.

  83. taste

  84. (alt form)