wrestle
suomi-englanti sanakirjawrestle englannista suomeksi
painia
painiskella
kamppailu, paini
kamppailla
kiemurrella
Verbi
Substantiivi
wrestle englanniksi
(RQ:Fuller Holy Warre) vvere ſent avvay; (..)|footer=A figurative use; Ptolemais is a city. A (m) is a bout of wrestling.
(RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 1) wilt thou wrestle a fall with me?
(RQ:Scott Tales of the Crusaders)
(RQ:Kingsley Heroes), the king of the city? I must wrestle a fall with him to-day.
''Sometimes followed by'' down: to with or move (someone) into or out of a position by grappling; also, to overcome (someone) by grappling.
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Murray (publishing house)|John Murray,(nb...)|volume=II||page=51|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/landmidnightsun05chaigoog/page/51/mode/1up|oclc=2140620|passage=My driver at the second station was a stout girl of twenty, strong enough to wrestle any man, but shy, modest, and gentle.
(quote-web) Kane was the match-winner with a late header from (w)'s flick, justice being done after referee Roldán|Wilmar Roldan and the video assistant referee (VAR) had failed to spot him being wrestled to the ground twice in the penalty area.
To move or manipulate (something) using physical effort, usually with some difficulty or opposition.
(RQ:Byron Don Juan)
(quote-journal)|quotee=Jimmy Glen Knight, witness|title=Hubert Damon Strange ''v.'' State (quote-gloss)|journal=Reporter|Southern Reporter: Cases Argued and Determined in the Courts of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi|series=Second Series|location=St. Paul, Minn.|publisher=(publisher)|West Publishing Company|year_published=1967|volume=197|page=439|column=1|oclc=64142859|passage=And his brother, Robert, beat me to the ground along with Damon, I carried Damon down with me and when I got Damon to the floor I shot him and wrestled his pistol out of his hand and threw it in a corner and after that Robert wrestled my pistol out of my hand and held it on me and I asked what was going on here with you people, I said, 'You are crazy.'
(RQ:NYT)
To grapple or otherwise contend with an opponent in order to throw or force them to the ground, chiefly as a sport or in unarmed combat.
(synonyms)
(RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement) on thy backe (..)
(RQ:Coverdale Bible) to lerne to fight, to wriſtle, to leape, to daunce, ⁊ to put at y&868; ſtone: (..)
(RQ:d'Anghiera Eden Newe Worlde) woolde oftentymes play and wreſtle vppon the banke with the kynges chamberlens: And eſpecially with a younge man whom the kynge fauoured well, beinge alſo accuſtomed to feede her.
(RQ:Lyly Euphues), of ſthrength to throwe as bigge ſtones as ''(w)'', and what not, (..)
(RQ:Plutarch Holland Morals)
(RQ:Sylvester Du Bartas)
(RQ:More Divine Dialogues)
(RQ:Erasmus Colloquies)
(RQ:Spectator)
(RQ:Burke Revolution in France)
(RQ:Kingsley Heroes) challenges all comers to wrestle with him, for he is the best wrestler in all Attica, and overthrows all who come; and those whom he overthrows he murders miserably, and his palace-court is full of their bones.
''Followed by'' with: to move or manipulate something using physical effort, usually with some difficulty or opposition.
(RQ:Heywood Silver Age)
(RQ:Baillie Metrical Legends) / With her in mimick war they wrestle; / Beneath her twisted robe they nestle; (..)
(quote-book)
(RQ:Faulkner Reivers)
To make one's way or move with some difficulty or effort.
(RQ:T. Herbert Travaile)
(RQ:Joseph Beaumont Psyche) their tvvo-leav'd Door / So cloſe they ſhut, that (..) not Breath it ſelfe, has povver to bore / Its vvay, but forced is to goe about, / And through the Noſes Sluces vvreſtle out.
(RQ:Jefferies Wild Life)
''Followed by'' against ''or'' with: to contend, to struggle; to exert effort, to strive.
(RQ:Tyndale NT).
(RQ:Edward Hall Lancastre & Yorke), diſcended of the houſe of Lancaſtre, claymyng the croune from kyng IV of England|Henry the .iiii. his graund father, firſt author of this diuiſion: and of York, 3rd Duke of York|Rychard duke of Yorke, as heyre to of Antwerp, Duke of Clarence|Lionell, the third ſonne to kyng III of England|Edward the third: wreſteled for the game, and ſtroue for the wager.
(RQ:Latimer Sermons). March the Twenty Ninth|page=132|passage=And thus go theſe Prelates about to vvreſtle for honour, that it may be reported abroad, that vve breed hereſies againſt ourſelves.
(RQ:Virgil Phaer Eneidos)
(RQ:Plutarch Holland Morals) vvas vvont to ſay) hath no eares; vve muſt vvorke another feat and device vvith it; namely, by obſerving the quality of the viands, to make the quantity more light and leſſe offenſive: (..)
(RQ:Camden Holland Britain) I vvould haue the Reader to remember, that I haue in this vvorke vvraſtled vvith that envious and ravenous enemy, (smallcaps), (..)
(RQ:Shirley Bird in a Cage)
(RQ:Wotton Reliquiae) vvas to vvraſtle vvith a Queens declyning, or rather vvith her very ſetting Age (as vve may term it,) vvhich, beſides other reſpects, is commonly even of it ſelfe the more umbratious and apprehenſive, as for the moſt part all Horizons are charged vvith certain Vapours tovvards their Evening.
(RQ:Howell Epistolae)
(RQ:Howell Revolutions) I look on yon unfortunate Iſland, as if one look upon a Ship toſs'd up and dovvn in diſtreſſe of vvind and vveather, by a furious tempeſt, vvhich the more ſhe tugs and vvraſtles vvith the foamie vvaves of the angry Ocean, the more the fury of the ſtorme encreaſeth, and puts her in danger of ſhipvvrack; (..)
(RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 1)
(RQ:Mary Shelley Frankenstein)
(RQ:Keble Christian Year) wilt feel all, that Thou may'st pity all; / And rather wouldst Thou wrestle with strong pain, / Than overcloud thy soul, / So clear in agony.
(RQ:Carlyle Essays)
(RQ:Charlotte Bronte Shirley) at Peniel. Till break of day, she wrestled with in Christianity|God in earnest prayer.
(RQ:Dickens Our Mutual Friend)
(RQ:Donne Works) they were loath to wrestle with the people, or force them from dangerous customs, they came from that supine negligence, in tolerating prayer for the dead, to establish a doctrinal point of purgatory; (..)
(RQ:Sylvester Du Bartas) doth vnlocke / Sterne ''Auſters'' ſtormie gate, making the vvaters vvraſtle / And ruſh vvith vvrathfull rage againſt the ſturdie caſtle, (..)
(RQ:Harte Works)
''Followed by'' with: to concern or occupy oneself closely, or with, a task, etc.
(RQ:Coke Institutes)
A fight or struggle between people during which they grapple or otherwise with each other in order to throw or force their opponent to the ground, chiefly as a sport or in unarmed combat.
(RQ:Milton History) catching aloft, vvith a terrible hugg broke three of his Ribs: nevertheleſs ''(w)'' enrag'd, heaving him up by main force, and on his Shoulders bearing him to the next high Rock, threvv him headlong all ſhatter'd into the Sea, and left his name on the Cliff, call'd ever ſince ''Langoëmagog'', vvhich is to ſay, the Giants leap.
(RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Arthur)
A situation in which people compete with each other; a contest, a struggle.
(RQ:Carlyle Latter-Day Pamphlets)
(RQ:Macaulay History of England)
(RQ:Carlyle Friedrich)