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Tekoälykääntäjä

Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot

  • (vanhentunut) uppe
  • (rikkinäinen englanti) oop

Synonyymit

Ääntäminen

  • ÄäntäminenUS
  • Tuntematon aksentti:
  • AusE:
KäännösKontekstiÄäninäyte
Adjektiivit
1.
  • Ääntäminen
2.
  • Ääntäminen
3.
  • Ääntäminen
  • Ääntäminen
4.
5.
6.
  • Ääntäminen
  • Ääntäminen
7.
Verbit
8.puhekieli
  • Ääntäminen
9.puhekieli
Prepositiot
10.
  • Ääntäminen
11.
  • Ääntäminen
12.
  • Ääntäminen
  • Ääntäminen
Adverbit
13.
  • Ääntäminen
14.
15.
16.
17.puhekieli
18.

Määritelmät

Adverbit

  1. Away from the centre of the Earth or other planet; in opposite direction to the downward pull of gravity.
  2. (intensifier) Thoroughly, completely.
  3. To or from one's possession or consideration.
  4. North.
  5. To a higher level of some quantity or notional quantity, such as price, volume, pitch, happiness, etc.
  6. (rail transport) Traditional term for the direction leading to the principal terminus, towards milepost zero.
  7. (sailing) Against the wind or current.
  8. (Cartesian graph) In a positive vertical direction.
  9. (cricket) Relatively close to the batsman.
  10. (hospitality, US) Without additional ice.
  11. (UK, academia) Towards Cambridge or Oxford.
  12. To or in a position of equal advance or equality; not short of, back of, less advanced than, away from, etc.; usually followed by to or with.
  13. To or in a state of completion; completely; wholly; quite.
  14. Aside, so as not to be in use.

Verbit

  1. (transitive, colloquial) To increase or raise.
  2. (transitive, colloquial) To promote.
  3. (intransitive) To act suddenly, usually with another verb.

Substantiivit

  1. (uncountable) The direction opposed to the pull of gravity.
  2. (countable) A positive thing.
  3. An upstairs room of a two story house.

Adjektiivit

  1. Awake.
  2. Finished, to an end
  3. In a good mood.
  4. Willing; ready.
  5. Next in a sequence.
  6. Happening; new.
  7. Facing upwards; facing toward the top.
  8. Larger, greater in quantity.
  9. Standing.
  10. On a higher level.
  11. Available; made public.
  12. Well-informed; current.
  13. (computing) Functional; working.
  14. (of a railway line or train) Traveling towards a major terminus.
  15. Headed, or designated to go, upward, as an escalator, stairway, elevator etc.
  16. (bar tending) Chilled and strained into a stemmed glass.
  17. (slang) Erect.
  18. (of the Sun or Moon) Above the horizon, in the sky (i.e. during daytime or night-time)
  19. (slang, graffiti) well-known; renowned

Prepositiot

  1. Toward the top of.
  2. Toward the center, source, or main point of reference; toward the end at which something is attached.
  3. Further along (in any direction).
  4. From south to north of

Esimerkit

  • I’m not up on the latest news. What’s going on?
  • Up is a good way to go.
  • From his great rooftop pieces, selected for high visibility, to his sneaky tags and fun loving stickers, he most certainly knows how to get up.
  • Graffiti writers want their names seen by writers and others so that they will be famous. Therefore writers are very serious about any opportunity to “get up.” [...] The throw-up became one of the fundamental techniques for getting up, and thereby gaining recognition and fame.
  • Being "up" means having numerous graffiti in the tagging landscape.
  • I have said I was still in darkness, yet it was not the blackness of the last night; and looking up into the inside of the tomb above, I could see the faintest line of light at one corner, which showed the sun was up.
  • A Cosmopolitan is typically served up.
  • The London train is on the up line.
  • Is the server back up?
  • I hate almost everything about my job. The only up is that it's so close to home.
  • The new notices are up as of last Tuesday.
  • ‘The Phantom! The Phantom is up from the cellars again!’
  • Get up and give her your seat.
  • Sales are up from last quarter.
  • Take a break and put your feet up.
  • Put the notebook face up on the table.
  • What is up with that project at headquarters?
  • Smith is up to bat.
  • "Ryker's a--" He swallowed. "A cop. Used to work Sleeve Theft, then they upped him to the Organic Damage Division.
  • Turn the volume up.
  • Smartphone shipments up 80 percent in last year.
  • CO2 output up 4.8 percent in 2010
  • the up side
  • And she didn't leave a letter, she just upped and ran away.
  • He upped and punched that guy.
  • He just upped and quit.
  • (And who, by the way, got his start as a producer from Desi Arnaz, who upped him from film editor to take charge of the Desilu series The Untouchables
  • If you are up for a trip, let’s go.
  • The other day Mr. Meyer came to see me in Weinbergers, it caused a great sensation & I think upped me a lot in prestige there
  • It wasn’t long before they upped him to Vice President.
  • After a dreadful performance in the opening 45 minutes, they upped their game after the break and might have taken at least a point from the match.
  • Part of the woman's mystique, I guess. Makes people want to meet her all the more. A year ago, she upped her stock with that crowd when she bought the Midnight Star — among the world's most famous star sapphires
  • We upped anchor and sailed away.
  • If we up the volume, we'll be able to make out the details.
  • She lives in a two-up two-down.
  • I will go up to New York to visit my family this weekend.
  • The son of the Dean of Lichfield was only three years older than Steele, who was a lad of only twelve, when at the age of fifteen, Addison went up to Oxford.
  • She's going up to read Classics this September.
  • Would you like that drink up or on ice?
  • The bowler pitched the ball up.
  • Cheer up, the weekend's almost here.
  • Listen to your voice go up at the end of a question.
  • Turn it up, I can barely hear it.
  • Gold has gone up with the uncertainty in the world markets.
  • Others insinuated that women 'crowded up to Cambridge', not for the benefits of a higher education, but because of the proximity of 2,000 young men.
  • She had to give up her driver's license after the accident.
  • The committee will take up your request.
  • I picked up some milk on the way home.
  • Please type up our monthly report.
  • He really messed up.
  • Tear up the contract.
  • I will mix up the puzzle pieces.
  • to lay up riches; put up your weapons
  • I’m feeling up today.
  • Time is up!
  • I can’t believe it’s 3 a.m. and you’re still up.
  • Though the storm raged up the East Coast, it has become increasingly apparent that New Jersey took the brunt of it.
  • Go up the street until you see the sign.
  • The information made its way up the chain of command to the general.   They took a boat up the river from the coast.   I felt something crawling up my arm.
  • The cat went up the tree.   They walk up the steps.
  • Judge Short had gone to town, and Farrar was off for a three days' cruise up the lake. I was bitterly regretting I had not gone with him when the distant notes of a coach horn reached my ear, and I descried a four-in-hand winding its way up the inn road from the direction of Mohair.
  • I looked up and saw the airplane overhead.
  • I need to sew up the hole in this shirt.
  • Drink up. The pub is closing.
  • Can you sum up your research?
  • The comet burned up in the atmosphere.
  • A stranger came up and asked me for directions.
  • I was up to my chin in water.
  • A precocious mathematician, Babbage was already well versed in the Continental mathematical notations when he went up to Cambridge.

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