slash
suomi-englanti sanakirjaslash englannista suomeksi
viiltohaava
kauttaviiva, vinoviiva
alentua huomattavasti
viillellä
heittelehtiä
viiltää auki
viiltää
viillos
hakkuuaukea
vinoviiva, kauttaviiva colloquial, kautta when reading out the symbol
Substantiivi
slash englanniksi
A swift, broad cutting stroke, especially one made with an edged weapon or whip.
(ux)
A wide striking motion made with an implement such as a bat, stick, or stick.
A deep cut or laceration, as made by an edged weapon or whip.
Something resembling such a mark:
A slit in an outer garment, usually exposing a lining or inner garment of a contrasting color or design. (anchor)
A clearing in a forest, ''particularly'' one made by logging, fire, or other violent action.
{{quote-text|en|year=1895|author=Henry Van Dyke|title=Little Rivers: A Book of Essays in Profitable Idleness
{{quote-book|en|year=1965|author=Dmitri A. Borgmann|title=Language on Vacation|page=240
The vulva.
The loose woody debris remaining from a slash; the trimmings left while preparing felled trees for removal.
(cap); fiction focused on homoerotic pairing of fictional characters.
{{quote-journal|en|year=2013|author=Katherine Arcement|title=Diary|journal=London Review of Books|volume=35|issue=5
To cut or attempt to cut, ''particularly'':
To strike swiftly and laterally with a stick, usually across another player's arms or legs.
To strike violently and randomly, ''particularly'':
To clear land, with violent action as logging or brushfires or through grazing.
To write fiction.
(quote-newsgroup)
(non-gloss)
(non-gloss)
(ux) is a famous musician/songwriter.
(quote-av)
(quote-web)
(quote-journal)
''Alternatives can be marked by the slash/stroke/solidus punctuation mark, a tall, right-slanting oblique line.''
Read: ''Alternatives can be marked by the slash-slash-stroke-slash-solidus punctuation mark, a tall, right-slanting oblique line.''
(cap); urine.
{{quote-text|en|year=1973|author=Martin Amis|title=The Rachel Papers,|page=189
1687, Colonial Virginia ''Patents 7'', page 590, quoted in 1940, George Davis McJimsey, ''Topographic Terms in Virginia'', page 120:
- On the North side of one of ye Windings of a great Slash or Swamp called ye Roundabout.
1694, Edmond Andros, Isabella Mackland, colonial Virginia record (granting land to Robert Beverly), quoted in 1988, Beverley Fleet, ''Virginia Colonial Abstracts'', page 318:
- three acres one Rood and Six pole of Land ... Extending Northward along the Ditch thirty six poles and two fifths of a pole to a slash called Pitch and Tar Slash or Swamp, then along that Slash till it come to the Main Cart road westward ...
1694 October 26, colonial Virginia record (regarding Capt. Richard Halle of the County of Essex)m quoted in 1988, Beverley Fleet, ''Virginia Colonial Abstracts'', page 406:
- 720 acres "lying in the Forrest between Rappahannock and Mattapony river". Adjoins Goldman's land, the line of Robins by and (SI) old Indian path in a slash, the land of Majr Robert Beverley, deceased.
1714, Colonial Virginia ''Patents 10'', pages 153, 168, quoted in 1940, George Davis McJimsey, ''Topographic Terms in Virginia'', page 121:
- Thence . . . to two small pines by a Slash or Sunken ground. . . . Thence . . . to two white oaks by a slash in lowground.
1715, Colonial Virginia ''Patents 10'', 247, quoted in 1940, George Davis McJimsey, ''Topographic Terms in Virginia'', page 121:
- Beginning at the North side of a Slash incomposeing Long ...
1747 September, John Garrott, Virginia deed (of Amelia County, Deed Book 2, page 542) quoted in 1988, Beverley Fleet, ''Virginia Colonial Abstracts'', page 459:
- 80 acres in Amelia Co., in the fork betw Persimmon Slash and the Gulley.
A pine, which grows in such (swampy) areas.
1932, Mr. Yon, statement regarding a waterway from Choctawhatchee Bay to West Bay, Florida, printed in the ''Hearings'' of the United States House Committee on Rivers and Harbors'' (1932), page 8:
- (..) second growth long-leaf yellow slash. And also we have a short-leaf pine.
1935, ''Miscellaneous Publication'', issue 209, page 15:
- Slash pine (Pinus caribaea Morelet) / Slash pine is also known as yellow slash, swamp pine, hill slash, and Cuban pine.
To work in wet conditions.
(alternative form of): a deep trough of finely-fractured culm or a circular or elliptical pocket of coal.
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