spring
suomi-englanti sanakirjaspring englannista suomeksi
jousi
käynnistyä
hyppy, hypähdys
lähde
saada
kimmota
täräyttää, paukauttaa
kevät
hypätä
joustavuus
spring englanniksi
To move or burst forth.
(ux)
{{quote-text|en|year=c. 1540|translator=John Bellenden|author=Livy|title=History of Rome|section=Vol. I, i, xxii, p. 125
To appear.
(RQ:KJV)
(RQ:Otway Venice Preserv'd)
To grow, to sprout.
(RQ:Shelley Queen Mab)
{{quote-book|en|year=1936|author=Dale Carnegie|title=How to Win Friends and Influence People|page=42
{{quote-text|en|year=1974|author=James Albert Michener|title=Centennial|page=338
{{quote-text|en|year=2006|author=N. Roberts|title=Morrigann's Cross|section=vi
To mature.
(syn)
To enliven.
(c.), ''Life of St Margaret'', Trin. Col. MS B.14.39 (323), f. 22v:
- ...into helle spring...
{{quote-text|en|year=1474|translator=William Caxton|title=Game and Playe of the Chesse|section=iii, vii, 141
{{quote-text|en|year=1722|author=Ambrose Philips|title=The Briton
(quote-text)
(RQ:Churchill Celebrity)
(quote-book)
{{quote-journal|en|date=April 11 2011|journal=The Atlantic
{{quote-book|en|year=2008|author=George McCandless|title=The ABCs of RBCs|publisher=Harvard University Press|page=7
To rise in social position or military rank, to be promoted.
To cause to spring (all senses).
{{quote-text|en|year=1625|author=Samuel Purchas|title=Purchas His Pilgrimes|section=Vol. II, x, ix
{{quote-text|en|year=1747|title=The London Magazine, Or, Gentleman's Monthly Intelligencer
To leap over.
{{quote-book|en|year=1876|author=Matilda Leathes|title=Our village worthies; or, Stories of village life|page=112
To breed with, to impregnate.
{{quote-text|en|year=1585|translator=Thomas Washington|author=Nicolas De Nicolay|title=The Navigations, Peregrinations, and Voyages, Made into Turkie...|section=Bk. IV, p. 154
{{quote-text|en|year=1698|author=François Froger|title=A Relation of a Voyage Made... on the Coasts of Africa|page=30
To off.
{{quote-journal|en|date=April 21 2012|journal=Sydney Morning Herald|page=5
To crack.
1582 August 2, Richard Madox, diary:
{{quote-book|en|year=1921|title=Field and Stream|page=832
{{quote-journal|en|year=1940|author=Allen A. Day|title=Dachsunds for Woodchucks|editor=Dwight Williams Huntington|work=The Game Breeder and Sportsman|page=94
{{quote-book|en|date=2003-08-01|author=Dennis Walrod|title=Grouse Hunter's Guide: Solid Facts, Insights, and Observations on How to Hunt Ruffled Grouse|publisher=Stackpole Books|isbn=9780811743020
To catch in an illegal act or compromising position.
{{quote-text|en|year=1980|author=John Hepworth; et al|title=Boozing Out in Melbourne Pubs...|page=42
To begin.
To put bad money into circulation.
(quote-journal )
To free from imprisonment, especially by facilitating an illegal escape.
(quote-song)
To be free of imprisonment, especially by illegal escape.
To turn a vessel using a spring attached to its anchor cable.
{{quote-text|en|year=1957|author=Pelham Grenville Wodehouse|title=Over Seventy|page=137
(alt form).
To equip with springs, especially to equip with a suspension.
To deform owing to excessive pressure, to become warped; to intentionally deform order to position and then straighten place.
{{quote-journal|en|year=1873|month=July|journal=Routledge's Young Gentleman's Magazine|page=503
{{quote-text|en|year=1955|author=Patrick White|title=The Tree of Man|url=https://archive.org/details/treeofmannovel00whit/page/228/mode/1up?q=springing|chapter=15|page=228|publisher=Viking|location=New York
To find or get enough food during springtime.
{{quote-text|en|year=1700|author=John Dryden|url=https://www.poetrynook.com/poem/cock-and-fox-1|title=The Cock and the Fox
(senseid) The season of the year in temperate regions in which plants spring from the ground and into bloom and dormant animals to life.
(coordinate terms)
(RQ:Tennyson In Memoriam)
The period from the moment of equinox (around March 21 in the Hemisphere) to the moment of the solstice (around June 21); (season)|the equivalent periods reckoned in other cultures and calendars.
The three months of March, April, and May in the Hemisphere and September, October, and November in the Hemisphere.
The time of something's growth; the early stages of some process.
(RQ:Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona)
a period of political liberalization and democratization
Someone with ivory or peach skin tone and eyes and hair that are not extremely dark, seen as best suited to certain colors of clothing.
Something which springs, springs forth, up, or back, ''particularly''
(senseid) A spray or body of water springing from the ground.
(short for), the especially high tide shortly after moon|full and moons.
(ant)
A mechanical device made of flexible or coiled material that exerts force and attempts to back when bent, compressed, or stretched.
A line from a vessel's end or side to its anchor cable used to diminish or control its movement.
{{quote-text|en|year=1836|author=Frederick Marryat|title=Mr. Midshipman Easy|volume=III|page=72
A line out from a vessel's end to the opposite end of an adjacent vessel or mooring to diminish or control its movement.
{{quote-text|en|year=1769|author=William Falconer|title=An Universal Dictionary of the Marine|section=s.v
{{quote-journal|en|date=January 26 2007|journal=Business Times:
A youth.
{{quote-text|en|year=1846|author=Arthur Young|title=Nautical Dictionary|page=292
Springiness: an attribute or quality of springing, up|springing up, or back|springing back, ''particularly''
Elasticity: the property of a body back to its original form after compression, stretching, etc.
energy|Elastic energy, power, or force.
1697, (w), ''(w) Aeneis'', Bk. xi, ll. 437–8:
- heav'ns|Heav'ns what a spring was in his Arm, to throHow high he held his Shield, and rose at ev'ry blow!
The source from which an action or supply of something springs.
{{quote-text|en|year=1693|publisher=Richard Bentley|title=The Folly and Unreasonableness of Atheism...|section=Sermon 1
(quote-book ) discover, at least in some degree, the secret springs and principles, by which the human mind is actuated in its operations?
(RQ:Fry Liar) ''Religion seems to bubble from its sands.’''
Something which causes others or another to spring forth or spring into action, ''particularly''
(RQ:Addison Cato)
(senseid) To spend the springtime somewhere.
(quote-journal)
(infl of)
(verb form of)
(verb form of)
(alt form)
(inflection of)
a spring (gloss)
(l), springtime
growth of vegetation in springtime
to (l)
a running (back and forth)
1918, ''Goss-skolan i Plumfield'', the Swedish translation of Louisa M. Alcott, ''Men|Little Men: Life at Plumfield with Jo's Boys'' (1871)
- {{quote|sv|''Eftermiddagen tillbragtes med att ordna sakerna, och när springet och släpet och hamrandet var förbi, inbjödos damerna att beskåda anstalten.''