trinket
suomi-englanti sanakirjatrinket englannista suomeksi
rihkamakorut, pukukorut, helyt, koru
koristella helyin">koristella helyin
Verbi
trinket englanniksi
(senseid) A small, showy ornament, especially a piece of jewellery.
(synonyms)
(ux)
(RQ:Beaumont Fletcher Comedies and Tragedies)
(RQ:John Gay Fan)
(RQ:Swift Gulliver's Travels) up in a Handkerchief; and carried it home in her Pocket to keep among other Trinkets, of vvhich the Girl vvas very fond, as Children at her Age uſually are.
(RQ:Goldsmith History of the Earth) is the animal that ſupplies the tortoiſe-ſhell, of vvhich ſuch a variety of beautiful trinkets are made.
(RQ:Macaulay History of England) ordered an estimate to be made of the cost of such a procession, and found that it would amount to about half as much as he proposed to expend in covering his wife (quote-gloss) with trinkets. He accordingly determined to be profuse where he ought to have been frugal, and niggardly where he might pardonably have been profuse. More than one hundred thousand pounds were laid out in dressing the queen, and the procession from the Tower was omitted.
(RQ:Gandhi Experiments)
(RQ:Scott Fortunes of Nigel)
A small item forming part of a set of equipment; an accessory, an accoutrement.
(RQ:Tusser Good Husbandrie)
(RQ:Hakluyt Principall Navigations)|transl=1|volume=I|chapter=Voyage of Giovanni da Pian del Carpine|Johannes de Plano Carpini vnto the Northeast Parts of the World, in the Yeere of Our Lord, 1246. Of the First Sending of Certaine Friers Prędicants and Minorites vnto the Tartars, Taken Out of the 32. Booke of Vincentius Beluacensis His Speculum Historiale: Beginning at the Second Chapter. Chap(quote-gloss) 17. How the Tartars Behaue Themselues in Warre.|page=62|passage=The poorer ſort of common ſouldiers haue euery man his leather bag or ſachell well ſowen together, wherin he packs vp all his trinkets, and ſtrongly truſſing it vp hangs it at his horſes tayle, and ſo paſſeth ouer, in manner aforeſaid.
(RQ:Fuller Church History) ''Dunſtan'' perceiving it, pluckt his Tongs glovving hot out of the Fire, and vvith them kept him (or her ſhall I ſay?) there along time by the Noſe roaring and bellovving; till at laſt he brake looſe, by vvhat accident it is not told unto us.
(RQ:Dryden Juvenal Satires)
An item used in a religious rite (also, a religious rite, belief, etc.) regarded as superfluous or trivial.
(RQ:Erasmus Newe Testamente) in hand that thei were alſo bound to do the ſame.
(RQ:Fuller Church History)
''Often followed by'' out: to adorn (someone or something) with (l) ''(noun (senseno))''.
(quote-journal)|volume=XXIX|issue=6|page=498|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sim_foederal-american-monthly_1847-06_29_6/page/498/mode/1up|oclc=1013391387|passage=Oh! those were good Dame ''Nature''’s times! / How memories sweet o’er-swarm us, / Ere wasp-like forms were girt around / With ‘bustles’ so enormous; / When modest arms were never bared / And trinketed for show, / Nor ever left their hiding-place, / Save to be hid in dough!
(RQ:Sala Captain Dangerous) Private View; and their Captors seek to render 'em docile by giving 'em plenty of Sweetmeats. As if the intolerable pangs of Slavery were to be allayed by Lollipops!
(RQ:James Roderick Hudson) to be always arrayed and anointed, trinketed and gloved,—that to move in such society, we say, though it might be a privilege, was a privilege with a penalty attached.
(quote-book)|page=31|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=gFA2AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA31|oclc=5340902|passage=The grim idol of war is trinketed out and decked with all the colors of the rainbow. (..) But no sooner is the sickle exchanged for the sword, than the soldier findeth this (goddess)|Bellona, whom he had wooed as a goddess in courtship, turneth out to be a demon in possession.|footer=(small) CCLXXXIII|title=Lacon: Or Many Things in Few Words;(nb...)|edition=new|location=London|publisher=Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green,(nb...)|year=1826|volume=II|page=181|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/laconormanythin00coltgoog/page/n177/mode/1up|oclc=10382609.
(quote-book), Ambassador of the Plains|location=Niwot, Colo.|publisher=University Press of Colorado|page=85|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/jessechisholmamb0000hoig/page/85/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-87081-198-2|passage=On June 26 the party of sun and wind-weathered visitors from the heart of the Texas plains, dressed in their blankets and buckskins, befeathered and trinketed, arrived at the capital city's Globe Hotel and took up residence there
A narrow or small watercourse.
(quote-journal)|volume=CLXX|issue=MXXXI|page=362|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/blackwoodsmagazi170edinuoft/page/362/mode/1up|column=1|oclc=1042815524|passage=It must have been about the same moment that a smack drew through the fine mist in the Firth (quote-gloss), and, sailing up the trinket, landed Provost Trail on the east pier-head.
A small vessel for drinking from; a cup, a mug, a porringer.
(RQ:Defoe Apparition)
A small sail, specifically, a three-cornered sail formerly carried on a ship's foremast, probably on a lateen yard.
(RQ:Livy Holland Romane Historie) (singular (m)).
(RQ:Hakluyt Principall Navigations)|transl=1|chapter=The First and Second Discouery of the Gulfe of California,(nb...) Chap(quote-gloss) 15. They Goe on Land in the Isle of Cedars, and Take Diuers Wilde Beasts, and Refresh and Solace Themselues.(nb...).|page=422|passage=And the farther we went, the more the winds increaſed, ſo that they put vs to great diſtreſſe, ſayling alwayes with the ſheates of maineſaile and trinket warily in our hands, and with great diligence we looſed the ties of all the ſailes, to ſaue them the better, that the wind might not charge them too vehemently.
To act in a secret, and often dishonest, way; to have secret, and often dishonest, dealings; to intrigue, to scheme.
(quote-book) 10. Compliance with England the Onely Meanes of the Commonwealths Continuation.|chapterurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=YD_cbDEj10sC&pg=RA6-PP3|title=The Interest of These United Provinces. Being a Defence of the Zeelanders Choice.(nb...)|location=Middelburg, Zeeland|publisher=(...) Thomas Berry,(nb...)|oclc=5527610|passage=And if any one aſkes me, hovv? and if I be of their Cabinet Council? I ſhall onely ſmile, perceiving they doe not knovv me. I am far from that, or having ever to doe vvith Kings or States in that kind, or pragmatically trinketing vvith State affaires, it being a Rule vvhich I live by, ''never to aſke great men mercy.''
(RQ:South Sermons) Alexandra, and afterwards in the court of the Great|Herod (quote-gloss); where by their tricks and trinketing between party and party, and their intriguing it with courtiers and court-ladies, they had upon the matter set the whole court together by the ears; (..)
(RQ:Scott Kenilworth)
(RQ:Johnstone Elizabeth de Bruce)
(RQ:Scott Canongate)
(verb form of)