stound

suomi-englanti sanakirja

stound englanniksi

  1. An hour.

  2. 1765, Percy's Reliques, The King and the Tanner of Tamworth (original license: 1564):

  3. What booth wilt thou have? our king reply'd / Now tell me in this stound
  4. A tide, season.

  5. A time, length of time, hour, while.

  6. (syn)

  7. {{quote-text|en|year=1801|author=Walter Scott|title=The Talisman

  8. A brief span of time, moment, instant.

  9. (ux)

  10. (quote-book)

  11. A moment or instance of urgency; exigence.

  12. A sharp or sudden pain; a shock, an attack.

  13. {{quote-text|en|year=1857|author=Alexander Maclaren|title=Expositions of Holy Scripture

  14. (RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)

  15. A stroke or blow (from an object or weapon); a lashing; scourging

  16. {{quote-text|en|year=1807|author=Sir Egerton Brydges|title=Censura Literaria

  17. {{quote-text|en|year=1843|author=Alexander Slidell Mackenzie|title=Proceedings of the Court of Inquiry appointed to inquire into the intended mutiny on board the United States Brig of War Somers, on the high seas

  18. A fit, an episode or sudden outburst of emotion; a rush.

  19. 1893, The Homoeopathic World:

  20. Several stounds of pain in the cleft between great and second toe (anterior tibial nerve). I forget which side, but I think it was the right. Slight pains in left temple, > pressure. Pain in upper part of right eyeball.
  21. {{quote-text|en|year=1895|author=Mansie Wauch|title=The Life of Mansie Wauch: tailor in Dalkeith

  22. Astonishment; amazement.

  23. {{quote-text|en|year=1720|author=John Gay|chapter=Prologue|title=Poems on Several Occasions

  24. To hurt, pain, smart.

  25. {{quote-text|en|year=1819|author=Keats|John Keats|title=Otho the Great|section=act IV, scene II|line_plain=verses 93-95

  26. To be in pain or sorrow, mourn.

  27. To long or pine after, desire.

  28. {{quote-text|en|year=1823|author=Edward Moor|title=Suffolk words and phrases: or, An attempt to collect the lingual localisms of that county

  29. To stand still; stop.

  30. To stop to listen; pause.

  31. A stand; a stop.

  32. A receptacle for holding beer.

  33. {{quote-text|en|year=1987|author=Alastair Mackie|title=Ingaidherins: Selected Poems - Page 54

  34. A while: a short span of time.

  35. Time, ''especially'' the proper time for doing something:

  36. late 14th century, Chaucer|Geoffrey Chaucer, The Reeve's Tale, ''The Canterbury Tales'', line 3992-3994:

  37. (quote)
  38. A moment, a chance, an opportunity.

  39. A season of the year.

  40. A hour: one of the 3-hour divisions of the day, its divine office.

  41. An hour: one of the 24 divisions of the day.

  42. A while: for a short span of time.

  43. a period of time, a moment

  44. sharp pain, pang

  45. stroke, blow (from an object or weapon)

  46. (quote-book)|publisher=Cosimo, Inc.,|date=November 2008|isbn=978-1-60520-528-1|volume=VII, ''Chaucerian and Other Pieces, Being A Supplement to the Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer''|line=538|page=344|pageurl=https://books.google.ca/books?id=kSADWqdN1T8C&pg=PA344|section=XVII. Robert Henryson: (w)|passage='Quhat lord is yon?' quod sho, 'have ye na feill,Hes don to us so greit humanitie?''Yes,' quod a lipper-man, 'I knaw him weill;Shir Troilus it is, gentill and free'Quhen Cresseid understude that it was he,Stiffer than steill thair stert ane bitter stoundThrowout hir hart, and fell doun to the ground.

  47. force, impact

  48. verbal attack, invective

  49. to inflict pain on, to wound

  50. to hurt, to be painful

  51. to astound, to stupefy, to terrify

  52. a sudden pain, a pang

  53. a stroke or blow (from an object or weapon)