Ääntäminen
UK
US
Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
| Käännös | Konteksti |
|---|
| Substantiivit |
| 1. | | arkikielessä |
| 2. | | liiketalous, taloustiede |
| 3. | | |
| 4. | | arkikielessä |
| 5. | | |
| 6. | | slangi |
| 7. | | slangi |
| Adjektiivit |
| 8. | | |
| 9. | | |
| 10. | | |
| 11. | | |
| 12. | | |
| 13. | | |
| 14. | | |
| 15. | | |
| 16. | | vanhahtava |
| 17. | | |
| Verbit |
| 18. | | |
| 19. | | |
| 20. | | |
| 21. | | |
| Muut/tuntemattomat |
| 22. | | |
| 23. | | |
| 24. | | |
| 25. | | |
Määritelmät
Adjektiivi
- Steadfast, secure, solid (in position)
- Fixed (in opinion).
- Insistent upon something, not accepting dissent.
- Durable, rigid (material state).
- Mentally resistant to hurt or stress.
- Not frivolous or fallacious; trustworthy; solid; dependable.
Substantiivi
- (UK, business) A business partnership; the name under which it trades.
- (business, economics) A business enterprise, however organized.
- (slang) A criminal gang, especially based around football hooliganism.
Adverbi
- (now rare) firmly, steadily
Verbi
- (transitive) To make firm or strong; fix securely.
- (transitive) To make compact or resistant to pressure; solidify.
- (intransitive) To become firm; stabilise.
- (intransitive) To improve after decline.
- (intransitive, Australia) To shorten (of betting odds).
- (transitive, colloquial) To grit one's teeth and bear; to push through something unpleasant.
- (transitive, UK, slang) To select (a higher education institution) as one's preferred choice, so as to enrol automatically if one's grades match the conditional offer.
Esimerkit
- He has a firm body.
- Hänellä on kiinteä vartalo.
- Finance is seldom romantic. But the idea of peer-to-peer lending comes close. This is an industry that brings together individual savers and lenders on online platforms.[...]Banks and credit-card firms are kept out of the picture. Talk to enough people in the field and someone is bound to mention the “democratisation of finance”.
- It's good to have a firm grip when shaking hands.
- He was firm that selling his company would a good choice and didn't let anyone talk him out of it.
- a firm believer; a firm friend; a firm adherent
- With such constant off-field turmoil Hughton’s work has been remarkable and this may have been his last game in charge. West Bromwich Albion, searching for a replacement for Roy Hodgson, are firm admirers.
- firm flesh; firm muscles, firm wood; firm land (i.e. not soft and marshy)
Taivutusmuodot