stand
suomi-englanti sanakirjastand englannista suomeksi
pysähdys, yhden yön suhde
seistä
olla pitkä, painaa
koju, myyntikoju
teline
siittää, hedelmöittää
katsomo
sietää
puolustusasema
asettaa, pystyttää
seisoa
näkökanta
ottaa kantaa
jalusta
katko
metsä, metsikkö
vastustaa
olla
pöytä
puolustaa
asema
lava
pysyä
nousta, nousta ylös">nousta ylös, nousta seisomaan">nousta seisomaan
olla mahdollisuus">olla mahdollisuus gain, olla vaarassa">olla vaarassa lose
Substantiivi
Verbi
stand englanniksi
(n-g)
(ux)
(RQ:Churchill Celebrity), and the light of the reflector fell full upon her.
(quote-journal)
To rise to one’s feet; to up.
To remain motionless.
(RQ:King James Version)
(RQ:Maxwell Mirror and the Lamp)
(RQ:Vance Outsider)
(RQ:Jefferies Amateur Poacher)
(RQ:Orwell Animal Farm)
To place in an upright or standing position.
To occupy or hold a place; to be set, placed, fixed, located, or situated.
(quote-text)|passage=The chapel ſtands on the South ſide of the ſquare, near the governor’s houſe.
2017 October 2, "Las Vegas shooting: At least 58 dead at Mandalay Bay Hotel", in (monospace), (w):
- Las Vegas police say the number of people injured now stands at 515.
To measure when erect on the feet.
(RQ:Tennyson Maud)
To be present, to have up|welled up.
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 6-3)
(quote-book)
(RQ:Defoe Moll Flanders)
(RQ:Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit)
(RQ:Buchan Watcher)
To be positioned to gain or lose.
(senseid) To tolerate.
(RQ:Lincoln Pratt's Patients)
To maintain one's ground; to be acquitted; not to fail or yield; to be safe.
(RQ:Spectator)
To maintain an invincible or permanent attitude; to be fixed, steady, or firm; to take a position in resistance or opposition.
(RQ:King James Version)to gather themselves together, and to stand for their life.
(RQ:South Sermons)
To be in some particular state; to have essence or being; to be; to consist.
(RQ:King James Version)which stood only in meats and drinks
(RQ:Dryden Aeneis)
(RQ:Scott Woodstock), and that I may not tarry.
To act as an umpire.
(RQ:Dryden Fables)
(RQ:Addison Cato)/ And stand the judgment of a Roman senate.
(RQ:Pope Arbuthnot)
(senseid) To be a candidate (in an election).
{{quote-text|en|year=1678|author=Izaak Walton|title=The Life of Robert Sanderson
To remain valid.
To oppose, usually as a team, in competition.
(quote-book) "Ron and I will stand everybody!" Louis announced.
To cover the expense of; to pay for.
(RQ:Thackeray Newcomes)
To have or maintain a position, order, or rank; to be in a particular relation.
(RQ:Atlantic)
To be consistent; to agree; to accord.
(RQ:Massinger Field Fatall Dowry)
To appear in court.
Of a ship or its captain, to steer, sail (in a specified direction, for a specified destination etc.).
(quote-book).
To remain without ruin or injury.
(RQ:Dryden Cleomenes)
(RQ:Byron Childe Harold)
To stop asking for more cards; to keep one's hand as it has been dealt so far.
October 2, 1712, (w), ''The Spectator'' No. 499
- I took my stand upon an eminence(..)to look into their several ladings.
A resolute, unwavering position; firm opinion; action for a purpose in the face of opposition.
A period of performance in a given location or venue.
(senseid) A device to hold something upright or aloft.
(ux) (nowrap)
{{RQ:Belloc Lowndes Lodger|II|0091
(quote-text)
The platform on which a witness testifies in court; the stand or box.
{{quote-text|en|year=1923|author=Julius E. Day|title=The Stockbroker's Office: Organisation, Management and Accounts|page=99
{{quote-text|en|year=1934|author=Frances Cosgrove|title=Scenes for Student Actors: Dramatic Selections from New Plays|page=8
{{quote-book|en|year=2000|author=James Beament|title=The Violin Explained: Components, Mechanism, and Sound|page=159
A contiguous group of trees sufficiently uniform in age-class distribution, composition, and structure, and growing on a site of sufficiently uniform quality, to be a distinguishable unit.
A standstill, a motionless state, as of someone confused, or a hunting dog who has found game.
{{quote-text|en|year=1625|author=Francis Bacon|chapter=Of Truth|title=Essays
(quote-text)|section=I.168
A small building, booth, or stage, as in a bandstand or hamburger stand.
A designated spot where someone or something may stand or wait.
The situation of a shop, store, hotel, etc.
(short for)
(senseid) Grandstand. (qualifier)
A partnership.
{{quote-book|en|year=1927|author=Herbert Asbury|title=The Gangs of New York: An Informal History of the Underworld|page=170|publisher=Paragon House|year_published=1990|isbn=1-55778-348-9
Rank; post; station; standing.
(RQ:Daniel Civil Wars)
A state of perplexity or embarrassment.
A young tree, usually reserved when other trees are cut; also, a tree growing or standing upon its own root, in distinction from one produced from a scion set in a stock, either of the same or another kind of tree.
A location or position where one may stand.
(RQ:Shakespeare Measure)
An advertisement filling an entire billboard, comprising many sheets of paper.
{{quote-text|en|year=1900|title=Marketing Communications|volume=30|page=12
{{quote-journal|en|date=February 24 1951|journal=Billboard|page=52
(quote-book)|volume=I|publisher=(...)the Editor &91;Nichols (printer)|John Nichols&93;,(nb...)|year=1559|year_published=1788|page=45|passage=Item, for a ſtande of small ale - ii s.
(quote-book)|seriesvolume=volume XXXIII|location=Durham|publisher=(...)for the Society by George Andrews,(nb...). London: Whittaker & Co.,(nb...); T. & W. Boone,(nb...). Edinburgh: (publishing house)|William Blackwood and Sons|year=1582|year_published=1857|page=172|passage=(..)one gialfatte, 3 stannes 3''s''.,(..)
(quote-book)James Knapton,(nb...); and Jacob Tonson,(nb...)|year=1672|year_published=1720|page=196|passage=I have the rareſt Stand of Ale to drink out in the Afternoon, with three or four honeſt Country-fellows;
(quote-book)John Starkey|year=1674|page=28|passage=(..)that he may have leave to meet ſome few Neighbours to duſt a ſtand of Ale(..)
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...)Edward and Charles Dilly|year=1775|page=395|passage=All his war ſtore of proviſions conſiſted in three ſtands of barbicued veniſon, till he had an opportunity to revenge blood, and return home.
(quote-book); The Riverside Press, Cambridge; London: Henry Stevens,(nb...)|year=a. 1791|year_published=1884|page=344|passage=First dip me in a stand o milk, / And then a stand o water;
A weight of from two hundred and fifty to three hundred pounds, used in weighing pitch.
(l) (q)
score (of a game, match)
(l) (gloss)
(l) (In various senses, such as a small building, booth, or stage, as in a bandstand or hamburger stand.)
Pit.
(verb form of)
(romanization of)
(syn)
(l), gallery (gloss)
(l), case (gloss)
stall (gloss)
a (l) (q)
an estate (q)
stand (rfclarify)
(alternative form of)
(l)