stereotype

suomi-englanti sanakirja

stereotype englannista suomeksi

  1. stereotyyppi

  2. luokitella

  1. Substantiivi

  2. stereotyyppi, kangistuma, kaavoittuma, stereotypia

  3. stereotyyppi

  4. Verbi

  5. stereotyypitellä, stereotypioida

  6. stereotypioida

stereotype englanniksi

  1. A conventional, formulaic, and often oversimplified or exaggerated conception, opinion, or image of (a person or a group of people).

  2. (cot)

    (ux)

  3. (quote-book)|year=1922|passage= Instead we notice a trait which marks a well known type, and fill in the rest of the picture by means of the stereotypes we carry about in our heads.

  4. (quote-text)

  5. {{quote-book|en|year=2010|author=Nicholas Collins; Nick Collins|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mCpqmESEOEcC&pg=PA328&dq=%22metronomicity%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjo2MS898DaAhUSx58KHfCXD8kQ6AEIOTADv=onepage&q=%22metronomicity%22&f=false|title=Introduction to Computer Music

  6. (quote-journal)

  7. (quote-web)

  8. A person who is regarded as embodying or conforming to a set image or type.

  9. (senseid) A metal printing plate cast from a matrix moulded from a raised printing surface.

  10. (syn)

  11. An extensibility mechanism of the (w), allowing a new element to be derived from an existing one with added specializations.

  12. To make a stereotype of someone or something, or characterize someone by a stereotype.

  13. {{quote-book

  14. (quote-book) Without warning the doctor, she chokes the life out of her child in order to keep him safe from white lynchmobs.

  15. {{quote-text|en|year=2018|author=William James|title=The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature

  16. To prepare for printing in (l); to produce stereotype plates of.

  17. To print from a (l).

  18. To make firm or permanent; to fix.

  19. {{quote-text|en|year=1887|author=George Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll|title=Scotland as it was and as it is

  20. Of an edition: printed in (l).

  21. (quote-journal) Nichols (printer)|Nichols, Son, and Bentley,(nb...)|section=footnote *|page=500|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sim_gentlemans-magazine_1817-12_88/page/500/mode/1up|oclc=14917374|passage=At the present Epoch (1800), the art of Printing is become rather retrograde; or we should not hear so much of (smallcaps) editions. Surely the use and very principle of the invention of Printing, is to have the types moveable!

  22. (quote-book) M(quote-gloss)|chapter=The Catholic Bible Society|title=Supplementary Memoirs of English Catholics, Addressed to Butler (lawyer)|Charles Butler, Esq.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) Keating and Brown, (...) sold also by Murray (publishing house)|Murray,(nb...)|page=243|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/a592903100milnuoft/page/243/mode/1up|oclc=1157054|passage=Yet the whole of this mighty preparation ended in the production of a small stereotype edition of the New Testament, without the usual distinction of verses, and nearly without notes.

  23. (quote-journal) Scott’s Family Bible, Boston Stereotype Edition,(nb...)|journal=Litchfield County Post|volume=II|issue=1 (53 overall)|location=Litchfield, Conn.|page=&91;3&93;|pageurl=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/903560979/|column=5|issn=2770-3401|oclc=8780472|passage=The first edition of this work, (the constant and increasing sale of which proves the high esteem in which it is deservedly held), begun in 1788, and published in London, in numbers, consisted of 5,000 copies; the second in 1805, of 2,000; the third in 1810, of 2,000; the fourth in 1812, of 3,000; and the new edition is ''stereotype'', the largest work ever submitted to that process.

  24. (synonym of).

  25. (quote-book)|chapter=Introductory Epistle, to the Rev. Dr. Fundgruben,(nb...)|title=Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan|The Adventures of Hajji Baba, of Ispahan.(nb...)|volume=I|location=London|publisher=Murray (publishing house)|John Murray,(nb...)|page=xi|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/adventureshajji01morgoog/page/n15/mode/1up|oclc=18278244|passage=It is an ingenious expression which I owe to you, sir, that the manners of the East are as it were stereotype. Ahhough I do not conceive that they are quite so strongly marked, yet, to make my idea understood, I would say that they are like the last impressions taken from a copper-plate engraving, where the whole of the subject to be represented is made out, although parts of it from much use have been obliterated.

  26. (RQ:Carlyle French Revolution)

  27. (quote-journal) Furneaux’s Agricola of Tacitus|journal=The Classical Review|volume=XIII|issue=CXIV|location=London|publisher=Nutt (publisher)|David Nutt,(nb...)|page=216|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/classicalreview13clasuoft/page/216/mode/1up|columns=1–2|issn=0009-840X|oclc=1554850|passage=This wonderful passage, with its piercing tenderness and solemn eloquence, is—one shrinks from saying it—a veritable mosaic of stereotype ideas, characteristic of this particular kind of ‘epilogus,’ or (quote-gloss)consolatio,’ as a few illustrations out of many will show.

  28. (l)

  29. (adj form of)