shackle
suomi-englanti sanakirjashackle englannista suomeksi
kahleet
kahlehtia
sakkeli
kahlita
Substantiivi
Verbi
shackle englanniksi
(senseid) A restraint fitted over a human or animal appendage, such as an ankle, finger, or wrist, normally used in a pair joined by a chain.
(synonyms)
(hyponyms)
(ux)
(RQ:Cowper Task)
(RQ:Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin)
(quote-journal) are some other plus factors for this new hog sticking-bleeding method. (..) Conveyors replace the shackle and shackle hoist and a precisely administered incision replaces catch-as-catch-can sticking.
(senseid) A U-shaped piece of metal secured with a bolt or pin across the ends, or a hinged metal loop secured with a quick-release locking pin mechanism, used for attaching things together while allowing for some degree of movement; a clevis.
(senseid) A hook, ring, or other device for connecting, holding, lifting, etc.; specifically , a small incomplete ring secured with a bolt across the ends, used to connect lengths of cable or chain together, or to keep a porthole closed.
(quote-book)
(synonym of).
(RQ:Tusser Good Husbandrie)
(RQ:Markham Maister-peece)
(RQ:Southey Roderick)
A link for connecting cars; a draglink, drawbar, or drawlink.
(ellipsis of).
A fetter-like band worn on an appendage as an ornament; an anklet, an armlet, a bracelet, a wristlet.
(RQ:T. Herbert Travaile)
(RQ:Dampier New Voyage) had all Ear-rings made of Gold, and Gold Shackles about their Legs and Arms: (..)
(RQ:South Twelve Sermons)
(RQ:Young Brothers)
(RQ:Twain Tom Sawyer)
(quote-song)
(senseid) A length of cable or chain equal to 12½ fathoms (75 feet or about 22.9 metres), or later to 15 fathoms (90 feet or about 27.4 metres).
To place (a person or animal) in shackles ''(noun (senseno))''; to immobilize or restrain using shackles.
(antonyms)
(quote-book)|chapter=The Fifth Allurement to Incontinency, Wandring Eyes|translator=R. S. Stanford?|title=Nicetas or The Triumph ouer Incontinencie(nb...)|location=Normandy|publisher=(...) widow of N. Courant|year=1633|section=book I, § II|page=56|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=H_tiAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA56|oclc=55581951|passage=A man giuen ouer to ſenſual appetite carrieth fetters in his eyes, vvhervvith he shackleth, glevv, vvhervvith he layeth faſt hold, hookes, vvhervvith he catcheth, flames vvhervvith he burneth, ſhafts, vvhervvith he transfixeth both his ovvne and the ſoules of other men: ſhackled vvith theſe fetters, caught vvith these hookes, burnt vvith theſe flames: transfixed vvith theſe shafts vvas the Aſſyrian ''(w)''.
(quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=Trefriw, Clwyd, Wales|publisher=(...) I. Davies(nb...)|year=1815|page=269|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/antiqulinqubrita00ric/page/269/mode/1up|column=1|oclc=16270419|passage=Huelydd, ''sub''''stantive'' a fetterer, he that shackleth or fettereth
(quote-book)|chapter=The Nineteenth Dynasty. The People of the Khita.|translator=Henry Danby Seymour; Philip Smith|editor=Philip Smith|title=A History of Egypt under the Pharaohs: Derived Entirely from the Monuments(nb...)|location=London|publisher=Murray (publishing house)|John Murray,(nb...)|year=1879|volume=II|page=107|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/historyofegyptun02brug/page/107/mode/1up|oclc=558461612|passage=The chariot jumps, on which thou art. Thou art troubled to hold up thy horses. If it falls into the abyss, the pole drags thee down too. Thy ''ceintures'' are pulled away. They fall down. Thou shacklest the horse, because the pole is broken on the path of the narrow pass. Not knowing how to bind it up, thou understandest not how it is to be repaired.
(RQ:Stevenson Kidnapped)
To connect or couple (something) to another thing using a shackle ''(noun (senseno), (senseno), etc.)''.
To provide (something) with a shackle.
To inhibit or restrain the ability, action, activity, or progress of (someone or something); to render (someone or something) incapable or ineffectual.
(RQ:Ascham Scholemaster) good nature with ſuch bondes of ſeruitude, in folowyng other.
(quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=(...) Felix Kyngston for Robert Bostocke,(nb...)|year=1632|page=416|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=0cVjAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA416|oclc=228715195|passage=Of it ſelfe it (quote-gloss) is the cord of a Iudge vvhich bindeth hand and foot, and ſhackleth unto condemnation; but by Chriſt it is made ''the cord of a man'', and the band of ''Love'', by vvhich he teacheth us to goe, even as a nurſe her infant.
(RQ:L'Estrange Fables of Aesop)
(RQ:Wollstonecraft Vindication Women)
(quote-book), Eighty-seventh States Congress|Congress, Second Session on S. 2109: A Bill to Amend the Communications Act of 1934 in Order to Give the Federal Communications Commission certain Regulatory Authority over Television Receiving Apparatus(nb...)|location=Washington, D.C.|publisher=States Government Publishing Office|U.S. Government Printing Office|date=22 February 1962|page=240|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=_JcducqZnscC&pg=RA2-PA240|oclc=9708416|passage=Senator W. McGee|(smallcaps). Again to make sure we haven't contradicted the record here, we do not construe anything you say here this morning to favor shackling the Commission? (..) Mr. (smallcaps). No, sir. Well, this is a matter of semantics. By the same token, we don't—it is not our purpose to give them unrestricted power.
(quote-web) for so long as Ferguson|Alex Ferguson surprisingly left (w) on the bench, had previously cut a forlorn and frustrated figure but his natural instincts continue to serve him and United so well.
(RQ:Grew Plants)
(RQ:Grew Musaeum Regalis Societatis)
Of two things: to connect or couple together.
A game; also, an event at which tickets are sold for chances to be drawn to win prizes; a raffle.
To put (something) into disorder; specifically , to cause (standing stalks of corn) to over.
''Often followed by'' about: to be idle or lazy; to avoid work.
to shackle