Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot
Ääntäminen
:
US:
Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
| Kieli | Käännökset |
|---|
| bulgaria | простор (prostór), място |
| espanja | espacio, espacial, espaciar, cabida, cosmos |
| esperanto | spaco, spaceto, kosmo |
| hollanti | ruimte, spatie, hokje, naar, tussenruimte |
| italia | vano, interlineare, spaziatore, spaziare, spaziale, piazza, distanziare, spazio, posto, giro |
| japani | 宇宙 (uchū), 場所 (basho), 間 (aida), あいだ (aida), 空白 (kūhaku), くうかん (kūkan), 余白 (yohaku), 間隔 (kankaku), うちゅう (uchū / uchiュu), よち (yochi), スペース (supēsu), 空き, 余地 (yochi), 餘地 (yochi), 空間 (kūkan), 空中, ま (ma) |
| kreikka | διάστημα (diástima / ðiástima), χώρος (chóros / xóros / khóros) |
| latina | spatium, spacium, coelus |
| latvia | kosmoss, palodze, vieta |
| liettua | erdvė, kosmosas, tarpas |
| portugali | espaçar, espaço |
| puola | miejsce, spacja, odstęp, przestrzeń |
| ranska | spatial, espacer, espace, blanc, vide, zone, écart, place |
| ruotsi | rum, rymd, världsrymd, universum, utrymme, tidsperiod, mellanrum, mellanslag, blanksteg, plats, nästa |
| saksa | Weltraum, All, Weltall, Freiraum, Platz, Leerzeichen, Leerstelle, Zwischenraum, Leerschritt, Raum, Platzangebot |
| suomi | aika, avaruus, aikaväli, tyhjyys, tila, paikka, välilyönti, alue, sija, väli, maailmanavaruus, sanaväli, ala |
| tanska | areal, rum, plads |
| turkki | boşluk, uzay |
| tšekki | vesmír, místo, mezera, kosmický, prostor |
| unkari | űr, világűr, hely, szóköz, térség, tér, köz |
| venäjä | космос (kosmos), площадь (ploštšad), пробел (probel), космический (kosmitšeski), интервал (interval), пространство (prostranstvo), промежуток (promežutok), просвет (prosvet), расстояние (rasstojanije), место (mesto) |
| viro | maailmaruum, tühik, sõnavahe, ruum |
Määritelmät
Substantiivi
- (heading) Unlimited or generalized extent, physical or otherwise.
- The distance between objects.
- A physical extent across two or three dimensions (sometimes for or to do something).
- A physical extent in all directions, seen as an attribute of the universe (now usually considered as a part of space-time), or a mathematical model of this.
- The near-vacuum in which planets, stars and other celestial objects are situated; the universe beyond the earth's atmosphere.
- The physical and psychological area one needs within which to live or operate; personal freedom.
- (heading) Of time.
- (now rare, archaic) Free time; leisure, opportunity.
- A specific (specified) period of time.
- An undefined period of time (without qualifier, especially a short period); a while.
- (heading) A bounded or specific extent, physical or otherwise.
- A (chiefly empty) area or volume with set limits or boundaries; (architecture) such a space inside or outside a building, often with a specified use.
- (music) A position on the staff or stave bounded by lines.
- A gap in text between words, lines etc., or a digital character used to create such a gap.
- (letterpress typography) A piece of metal type used to separate words, cast lower than other type so as not to take ink, especially one that is narrower than one en (compare quad).
- A gap; an empty place.
- (geometry) A set of points, each of which is uniquely specified by a number (the dimensionality) of coordinates.
- (countable, mathematics) A generalized construct or set whose members have some property in common; typically there will be a geometric metaphor allowing these members to be viewed as "points". Often used with a restricting modifier describing the members (e.g. vector space), or indicating the inventor of the construct (e.g. Hilbert space).
- (countable, figuratively) A field, area, or sphere of activity or endeavour.
- Anything analogous to a physical space in which one can interact, such as an online chat room.
Verbi
- (obsolete, intransitive) To roam, walk, wander.
- (transitive) To set some distance apart.
- To insert or utilise spaces in a written text.
- To space out (become distracted, lose focus).
- (transitive, science fiction) To kill (someone) by ejection into outer space, usually without a space suit.
- (intransitive, science fiction) To travel into and through outer space.
Esimerkit
- Come on, thou are granted space.
- In two days hence / The judge of life and death ascends his seat. / —This will afford him space to reach the camp.
- I pray you, sirs, to take some cheers the while I go for a moment's space to my poor afflicted child.
- The match was lost, though, in the space of just twenty minutes or so.
- But their lead lasted just 10 minutes before Roman Pavlyuchenko and Jermain Defoe both headed home in the space of two minutes to wrestle back control.
- Even Comrade Butt cast off his gloom for a space and immersed his whole being in scrambled eggs.
- But neere him, thy Angell / Becomes a feare: as being o're-powr'd, therefore / Make space enough betweene you.
- Which means that for every car there was 10 years ago, there are now 40. Which means - and this is my own, not totally scientific, calculation - that the space between cars on the roads in 1991 was roughly 39 car lengths, because today there is no space at all.
- O God, I could be bounded in a nutshell, and / count my selfe a King of infinite space; were it not that / I haue bad dreames.
- They also wanted a larger garden and more space for home working.
- Space is the Phantasme of a Thing existing without the Mind simply.
- These are not questions which can be decided by reference to our space intuitions, for our intuitions are confined to Euclidean space, and even there are insufficient, approximative.
- The early results from Gravity Probe B, one of Nasa's most complicated satellites, confirmed yesterday 'to a precision of better than 1 per cent' the assertion Einstein made 90 years ago - that an object such as the Earth does indeed distort the fabric of space and time.
- After all, to go into outer space is not so much worse, if at all, than a polar expedition.
- The human race must colonise space within the next two centuries or it will become extinct, Stephen Hawking warned today.
- Around the time of my parents' divorce, I learned that reading could also give me space.
- "I care about you Billy, whether you believe it or not; but right now I need my space."
- Carried somehow, somewhither, for some reason, on these surging floods, were these travelers,. Even such a boat as the Mount Vernon offered a total deck space so cramped as to leave secrecy or privacy well out of the question, even had the motley and democratic assemblage of passengers been disposed to accord either.
- The street door was open, and we entered a narrow space with washing facilities, curtained off from the courtyard.
- Converted from vast chambers beneath the old Bankside Power Station which once held a million gallons of oil, the new public areas consist of two large circular spaces for performances and film installations, plus a warren of smaller rooms.
- The note next above Sol is La; La, therefore, stands in the 2nd space; Si, on the 3rd line, &c.
- The lines and spaces of the staff are named according to the first seven letters of the alphabet, that is, A B C D E F G.
- According to experts, a single line of text should rarely exceed about 50 characters (including letters and all the spaces between words).
- It should be typed a space below the salutation : Dear Sir, Subject : Replacement of defective items.
- If it be only a Single Letter or two that drops, he thruſts the end of his Bodkin between every Letter of that Word, till he comes to a Space: and then perhaps by forcing thoſe Letters closer, he may have room to put in another Space or a Thin Space; which if he cannot do, and he finds the Space ſtand Looſe in the Form; he with the Point of his Bodkin picks the Space up and bows it a little; which bowing makes the Letters on each ſide of the Space keep their parallel diſtance; for by its Spring it thruſts the Letters that were cloſed with the end of the Bodkin to their adjunct Letters, that needed no cloſing.
- Horizontal spacing is further divided into multiples and fractions of the em. The multiples are called quads. The fractions are called spaces.
- Other larger spaces – known as quads – were used to space out lines.
- Mainstream Hollywood would not cater to the taste for sexual sensation, which left a space for B-movies, including noir.
- A horizontal scar filled the space on her chest where her right breast used to be.
- Functional analysis is best approached through a sound knowledge of Hilbert space theory.
- innovation in the browser space
- But she as Fayes are wont, in priuie place / Did spend her dayes, and lov'd in forests wyld to space.
- Faye had spaced the pots at 8-inch intervals on the windowsill.
- The cities are evenly spaced.
- This paragraph seems badly spaced.
- The captain spaced the traitors.
- Le président Kennedy promit que le programme spatial des États-Unis enverrait un homme sur la lune avant 1970.
Taivutusmuodot