Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä

Ääntäminen

  • Ääntäminen:
  • ÄäntäminenUS:
KäännösKontekstiÄäninäyte
Substantiivit
1.
  • Ääntäminen
2.matematiikka, astronomia
3.
4.
5.
6.musiikki
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.kuvaannollinen
Muut/tuntemattomat
12.
13.

Määritelmät

Substantiivit

  1. (heading) Of time.
  2. (now rare, archaic) Free time; leisure, opportunity.
  3. A specific (specified) period of time.
  4. An undefined period of time (without qualifier, especially a short period); a while.
  5. (heading) Unlimited or generalized physical extent.
  6. Distance between things.
  7. Physical extent across two or three dimensions; area, volume (sometimes for or to do something).
  8. 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.
  9. The near-vacuum in which planets, stars and other celestial objects are situated; the universe beyond the earth's atmosphere.
  10. The physical and psychological area one needs within which to live or operate; personal freedom.
  11. (heading) A bounded or specific physical extent.
  12. A (chiefly empty) area or volume with set limits or boundaries.
  13. (music) A position on the staff or stave bounded by lines.
  14. A gap in text between words, lines etc., or a digital character used to create such a gap.
  15. (metal type) 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).
  16. A gap; an empty place.
  17. (countable, mathematics) A generalized construct or set, the members of which have certain properties in common; often used in combination with the name of a particular mathematician.
  18. (geometry) A set of points, each of which is uniquely specified by a number (the dimensionality) of coordinates.
  19. (countable, figuratively) A marketplace for goods or services.

Verbit

  1. (obsolete, intransitive) To roam, walk, wander.
  2. (transitive) To set some distance apart.
  3. To insert or utilise spaces in a written text.
  4. (transitive) To eject into outer space, usually without a space suit.

Esimerkit

  • A horizontal scar filled the space on her chest where her right breast used to be.
  • 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.
  • The street door was open, and we entered a narrow space with washing facilities, curtained off from the courtyard.
  • 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.
  • They also wanted a larger garden and more space for home working.
  • 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.
  • Come on, thou are granted space.
  • 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.

Taivutusmuodot

Partisiipin perfektispaced
Imperfektispaced
Partisiipin preesensspacing
Monikkospaces
Yksikön kolmannen persoonan indikatiivin preesensspaces