Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä
KäännösKonteksti
Verbit
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.slangi, vanhahtava, painaminen
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.slangi, vanhahtava, painaminen
18.voimistelu
19.
20.slangi, vanhahtava, painaminen
21.
Substantiivit
22.kuvaannollinen
23.kuvaannollinen
24.
25.
26.
27.armeija
28.armeija
29.
30.
31.puhekieli
32.
33.
34.ilmailu
35.ilmailu
36.jääkiekko
Muut/tuntemattomat
37.
38.
39.

Määritelmät

Substantiivit

  1. An elongated piece of wood or similar material, typically put to some use, for example as a wand or baton.
  2. (British, uncountable) Criticism or ridicule.
  3. (auto racing) The traction of tires on the road surface.
  4. A small, thin branch from a tree or bush; a twig; a branch.
  5. (fishing, uncountable) The amount of fishing line resting on the water surface before a cast; line stick.
  6. A relatively long, thin piece of wood, of any size.
  7. A thrust with a pointed instrument; a stab.
  8. (US) A timber board, especially a two by four (inches).
  9. A cane or walking stick (usually wooden, metal or plastic) to aid in walking.
  10. A cudgel or truncheon (usually of wood, metal or plastic), especially one carried by police or guards.
  11. (carpentry) The vertical member of a cope-and-stick joint.
  12. (figuratively) A piece (of furniture, especially if wooden).
  13. Any roughly cylindrical (or rectangular) unit of a substance.
  14. (chiefly North America) A small rectangular block, with a length several times its width, which contains by volume one half of a cup of shortening (butter, margarine or lard).
  15. A standard rectangular (often thin) piece of chewing gum.
  16. (slang) A cigarette (usually a tobacco cigarette, less often a marijuana cigarette).
  17. Material or objects attached to a stick or the like.
  18. A bunch of something wrapped around or attached to a stick.
  19. (archaic) A scroll that is rolled around (mounted on, attached to) a stick.
  20. (military) The structure to which a set of bombs in a bomber aircraft are attached and which drops the bombs when it is released. The bombs themselves and, by extension, any load of similar items dropped in quick succession such as paratroopers or containers.
  21. A tool, control, or instrument shaped somewhat like a stick.
  22. (US, colloquial) A manual transmission, a vehicle equipped with a manual transmission, .
  23. (US, colloquial, uncountable) Vehicles, collectively, equipped with manual transmissions.
  24. (aviation) The control column of an aircraft; a joystick. (By convention, a wheel-like control mechanism with a handgrip on opposite sides, similar to the steering wheel ofan automobiles, is also called the "stick".)
  25. (aviation, uncountable) Use of the stick to control the aircraft.
  26. (computing) A memory stick.
  27. (dated, metal typesetting) A composing stick, the tool used by compositors to assemble lines of type.
  28. (jazz, slang) The clarinet. (more often called the liquorice stick)
  29. (sports) A stick-like item:
  30. (sports, generically) A long thin implement used to control a ball or puck in sports like hockey, polo, and lacrosse.
  31. (horse racing) The short whip carried by a jockey.
  32. (boardsports) A board as used in board sports, such as a surfboard, snowboard, or skateboard.
  33. (golf) The pole bearing a small flag that marks the hole.
  34. (US, slang, uncountable) The cue used in billiards, pool, snooker, etc.
  35. The game of pool, or an individual pool game.
  36. (sports, uncountable) Ability; specifically:
  37. (golf) The long-range driving ability of a golf club.
  38. (baseball) The potential hitting power of a specific bat.
  39. (baseball) General hitting ability.
  40. (hockey) The potential accuracy of a hockey stick, implicating also the player using it.
  41. (slang, dated) A person or group of people.
  42. A thin or wiry person; particularly a flat-chested woman.
  43. (magic) An assistant planted in the audience.
  44. (military aviation, from joystick) A fighter pilot.
  45. (military, South Africa) A small group of (infantry) soldiers.
  46. Encouragement or punishment, or (resulting) vigour or other improved behavior.
  47. A negative stimulus or a punishment.
  48. (slang, uncountable) Corporal punishment; beatings.
  49. (slang) Vigor; spirit; effort, energy, intensity.
  50. (slang) Vigorous driving of a car; gas.
  51. A measure.
  52. (obsolete) An English Imperial unit of length equal to 2 inches.
  53. (archaic, rare) A quantity of eels, usually 25.

Adjektiivit

  1. (informal) Likely to stick; sticking, sticky.

Verbit

  1. (intransitive) To become or remain attached; to adhere.
  2. (carpentry) To cut a piece of wood to be the stick member of a cope-and-stick joint.
  3. (intransitive) To jam; to stop moving.
  4. (intransitive) To tolerate, to endure, to stick with.
  5. (intransitive) To persist.
  6. (intransitive) Of snow, to remain frozen on landing.
  7. (intransitive) To remain loyal; to remain firm.
  8. To hesitate, to be reluctant; to refuse.
  9. (dated, intransitive) To cause difficulties, scruples, or hesitation.
  10. (transitive) To attach with glue or as if by gluing.
  11. (transitive) To place, set down (quickly or carelessly).
  12. (transitive) To press (something with a sharp point) into something else.
  13. (transitive, now only in dialects) To stab.
  14. (transitive) To fix on a pointed instrument; to impale.
  15. (transitive, archaic) To adorn or deck with things fastened on as by piercing.
  16. (transitive, gymnastics) To perform (a landing) perfectly.
  17. (transitive) To propagate plants by cuttings.
  18. (transitive, printing, slang, dated) To compose; to set, or arrange, in a composing stick.
  19. (transitive, joinery) To run or plane (mouldings) in a machine, in contradistinction to working them by hand. Such mouldings are said to be stuck.
  20. (dated, transitive) To bring to a halt; to stymie; to puzzle.
  21. (transitive, slang, dated) To impose upon; to compel to pay; sometimes, to cheat.

Esimerkit

  • The tape will not stick if it melts.
  • Some stick not to say, that the parson and attorney forged a will.
  • They will stick long at part of a demonstration for want of perceiving the connection of two ideas.
  • And so careful were they to put off the Honour of great Actions from themselves, and to centre it upon God, that they stuck not sometimes to depreciate themselves that they might more effectually honour him.
  • The First-fruits were a common Oblation to their Deities; but the chief Part of their Worship consisted in sacrificiing Animals : And this they did out of a real Persuasion, that their Gods were pleased with their Blood, and were nourished with the Smoke, and Nidor of them; and therefore the more costly, they thought them the more acceptable, for which Reason, they stuck not sometimes to regale them with human Sacrifices.
  • Just stick to your strategy, and you will win.
  • What I get from work makes me a better mother, and what I get from being a mother makes me a better journalist. At least that's my story and I'm sticking to it.
  • "Our team did brilliantly to be in the game. We stuck at it and did a good job. This is disappointing but we'll think about the next game tomorrow."
  • His old nickname stuck.
  • Why do most course organizers stick the job for less than five years?
  • The lever sticks if you push it too far up.
  • This is the difficulty that sticks with the most reasonable.
  • Where we once sent love letters in a sealed envelope, or stuck photographs of our children in a family album, now such private material is despatched to servers and clouds operated by people we don't know and will never meet.
  • Problem: A lot of stick and a lack of energy on the forward stroke.
  • In the same charter, Nigel granted another 10 sticks of eels yielded by the fishery of Polwere to the abbey[...]
  • The stick is employed for eels, and contained twenty-five.
  • There was another speech in that day's news — a speech which The Times printed on the front page because it was part of a front-page story, and in full — it was only two sticks long; printed in full just after the much longer invocation by the officiating clergyman [...]
  • Skunk really gave it some stick all the way to Caliban's place, we passed a good few Coppers but they all seemed to turn the blind eye.
  • 'Choir gave it some stick on "Unto Us a Son is Born."' ¶ Cynthia nodded. ¶ 'It was always one of Russell's favourites. He makes them try hard on that.'
  • Give it some stick!
  • She really gave that bully some stick.
  • The defendant said he didn't shoot; "he sticked him with a knife."
  • I got some stick personally because of my walking attire. I arrived to training fully kitted out in sturdy walking boots.
  • A sticker type of glue. The stickest kind of gum.
  • A non-stick pan. A stick plaster.
  • to stick somebody with a hard problem
  • to stick type
  • Stick cuttings from geraniums promptly.
  • Once again, the world champion sticks the dismount.
  • my shroud of white, stuck all with yew
  • to stick an apple on a fork
  • He really gave that digging some stick.
  • It was a shame [...] to stick him under the other gentleman's arm while he was redding the fray.
  • [...] would haue [=have] sticked him with a dagger [...]
  • In certain of their sacrifices they had a lamb, they sticked him, they killed him, and made sacrifice of him: this lamb was Christ the Son of God, he was killed, sticked, and made a sweet-smelling sacrifice for our sins.
  • The points of spears are stuck within the shield.
  • to stick a needle into one's finger
  • The balloon will pop when I stick this pin in it.
  • Afore we got to the shanty Colonel Applegate stuck his head out of the door. His temper had been getting raggeder all the time, and the sousing he got when he fell overboard had just about ripped what was left of it to ravellings.
  • Stick your bag over there and come with me.
  • Stick the label on the jar.
  • It is more than poor Philip is worth, with all his savings and his little sticks of furniture.
  • James and I were in the same stick of five guys going through free fall school last September.
  • A stick of bombs fell straight across Wotton; blew up half a dozen houses.
  • Scores of transport planes streamed in to drop stick after stick of containers until the entire sky over the coast was polka-dotted with brightly coloured parachutes.
  • Moreover, thou son of man, take thee one stick, and write upon it[...]
  • My parents bought us each a stick of cotton candy.
  • Cigarettes are taxed at one dollar per stick.
  • Don’t hog all that gum, give me a stick!
  • The recipe calls for half a stick of butter.
  • Sealing wax is available as a cylindrical or rectangular stick.
  • I grew up driving a stick, but many people my age didn’t.
  • We were so poor we didn't have one stick of furniture.
  • When cutting the door parts, I cut all the copes first, then the sticks.
  • As soon as the fight started, the guards came in swinging their sticks.
  • The slightest effort made the patient cough. He would stand leaning on a stick and holding a hand to his side, and when the paroxysm had passed it left him shaking.
  • I don’t need my stick to walk, but it’s helpful.
  • I found enough sticks in dumpsters at construction sites to build my shed.
  • It is a fine stick, about 70 feet long.
  • I found several good sticks in the brush heap.   What do you call a boomerang that won't come back? A stick.
  • Energy has seldom been found where we need it when we want it. Ancient nomads, wishing to ward off the evening chill and enjoy a meal around a campfire, had to collect wood and then spend time and effort coaxing the heat of friction out from between sticks to kindle a flame.
  • Come in, have a good time, drink some beer, shoot some stick, listen to some music.
  • The child killers got some stick. I saw a woman throw a basin of scalding water over a baby killer.
  • What about contempt? Isn't it used by the judiciary as a stick to dissuade people from writing or talking about them?
  • I remember when we dreaded the rain, as our stick of soldiers walked through the damp, tick-infested long grass of the Zambezi valley,[...]
  • Bill Kirk, described by Robin as a "hell of a stick," didn't even attend college until after the Vietnam War.
  • The kid was a stick, a plant, a student from UNLV who picked up a few bucks nightly by saying the words "seven of hearts."
  • "She's a stick, this one. She lacks your—" he patted her left breast— "equipment."
  • Your father's a great old stick. He's really been very good to me.
  • Vaughn has to hit and keep hitting or this will be another year when the Mets don't have enough stick to win.
  • I doubted that the three iron was enough stick.
  • The beaver's dam was made out of sticks.   The bird's nest was made out of sticks.
  • He shoots a mean stick of pool.
  • His stroke with that two-piece stick is a good as anybody's in the club.
  • His wedge shot bounced off the stick and went in the hole.
  • Tripping with the stick is a violation of the rules.
  • Arsene, boy, ain't you worried about your clarinet? Where'd you leave that stick, man?
  • [...]although the headings may often be in other type, still, as these are composed in the same stick, they cannot fail to justify;[...]
  • For ultimate presentation portability, a Powerpoint can be saved to a stick as images.
  • For example: in making a turn, should you throw on too much stick and not enough rudder, you'll sideslip.
  • I grew up driving stick, but many people my age didn't.

Taivutusmuodot

Partisiipin perfektistuckPartisiipin perfektisticked (vanhahtava)
ImperfektistuckImperfektisticked (vanhahtava)
Partisiipin preesensstickingMonikkosticks
Komparatiivisticker (epävirallinen)Superlatiivistickest (epävirallinen)
Yksikön kolmannen persoonan indikatiivin preesenssticksYksikön kolmannen persoonan indikatiivin preesenssticketh (vanhahtava)