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| Verbit |
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| Substantiivit |
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Määritelmät
Substantiivit
- (countable) An item of clothing (usually worn by a woman or young girl) which both covers the upper part of the body and includes skirts below the waist.
- (uncountable) Apparel, clothing.
- The system of furrows on the face of a millstone.
- A dress rehearsal.
Verbit
- (obsolete, reflexive, intransitive) To prepare oneself; to make ready.
- To adorn, ornament.
- (nautical) To ornament (a ship) by hoisting the national colours at the peak and mastheads, and setting the jack forward; when "dressed full", the signal flags and pennants are added.
- (transitive) To treat (a wound, or wounded person).
- (transitive) To prepare (food) for cooking, especially by seasoning it.
- (transitive) To fit out with the necessary clothing; to clothe, put clothes on (something or someone).
- (intransitive) To clothe oneself; to put on clothes.
- (intransitive) Of a man, to allow the genitals to fall to one side or other of the trousers.
- To prepare for use; to fit for any use; to render suitable for an intended purpose; to get ready.
- (transitive) To prepare the surface of (a material; usually stone or lumber).
- (military, ambitransitive) To arrange in exact continuity of line, as soldiers; commonly to adjust to a straight line and at proper distance; to align. Sometimes an imperative command.
- To break and train for use, as a horse or other animal.
Esimerkit
- He was dressed in the latest fashions.
- Dress his wounds, will you?
- Right, dress!
- to dress the ranks
- three hundred horses[...]smoothly dressed
- When he dresseth the lamps he shall burn incense.
- to dress leather or cloth; to dress a garden; to dress grain, by cleansing it; in mining and metallurgy, to dress ores, by sorting and separating them
- Does sir dress to the right or the left?
- Sunning himself on the board steps, I saw for the first time Mr. Farquhar Fenelon Cooke. He was dressed out in broad gaiters and bright tweeds, like an English tourist, and his face might have belonged to Dagon, idol of the Philistines.
- I rose and dressed before daybreak. It's very cold out. Dress warm.
- ‘[…] I remember a lady coming to inspect St. Mary's Home where I was brought up and seeing us all in our lovely Elizabethan uniforms we were so proud of, and bursting into tears all over us because “it was wicked to dress us like charity children”.’.
- Now that she had rested and had fed from the luncheon tray Mrs. Broome had just removed, she had reverted to her normal gaiety. She looked cool in a grey tailored cotton dress with a terracotta scarf and shoes and her hair a black silk helmet.
- [...]he was deadly pale, and the blood-stained bandage round his head told that he had recently been wounded, and still more recently dressed.
- Daily she dressed him, and did the best / His grievous hurt to guarish, that she might.
- If he felt obliged to expostulate, he might have dressed his censures in a kinder form.
- dressing their hair with the white sea flower
- It was time to dress the windows for Christmas again.
- but syr Gawayns spere brak / but sir marhaus spere helde / And therwith syre Gawayne and his hors russhed doune to the erthe / And lyghtly syre Gawayne rose on his feet / and pulled out his swerd / and dressyd hym toward syr Marhaus on foote
- He came to the party in formal dress.
- Even in an era when individuality in dress is a cult, his clothes were noticeable. He was wearing a hard hat of the low round kind favoured by hunting men, and with it a black duffle-coat lined with white.
- Amy and Mary looked very pretty in their dresses.
Taivutusmuodot