Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot
- (rikkinäinen englanti) stap
Ääntäminen
:
US:
UK:
- Tuntematon aksentti:
Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
| Käännös | Konteksti | Ääninäyte |
|---|
| Verbit |
| 1. | | | |
| 2. | | | |
| 3. | | | |
| 4. | | | |
| 5. | | | |
| 6. | | | |
| 7. | | | |
| 8. | | | |
| 9. | | | |
| 10. | | | |
| 11. | | | |
| 12. | | | |
| Substantiivit |
| 13. | | | |
| 14. | | | |
| 15. | | | |
| 16. | | insinööritiede | |
| 17. | | | |
| 18. | | | |
| 19. | | | |
| 20. | | tennis | |
| 21. | | | |
| Huudahdukset |
| 22. | | | |
Määritelmät
Verbit
- (intransitive) To cease moving.
- (intransitive) To come to an end.
- (transitive) To cause (something) to cease moving or progressing.
- (transitive) To cause (something) to come to an end.
- (transitive) To close or block an opening.
- (transitive, intransitive, photography, often with "up" or "down") To adjust the aperture of a camera lens.
- (intransitive) To stay; to spend a short time; to reside temporarily.
- (intransitive) To tarry.
- (music) To regulate the sounds of (musical strings, etc.) by pressing them against the fingerboard with the finger, or otherwise shortening the vibrating part.
- (obsolete) To punctuate.
- (nautical) To make fast; to stopper.
Substantiivit
- (UK dialectal) A small well-bucket; a milk-pail.
- A (usually marked) place where line buses, trams or trains halt to let passengers get on and off, usually smaller than a station.
- An action of stopping; interruption of travel.
- A device intended to block the path of a moving object; as, a door stop.
- (linguistics) A consonant sound in which the passage of air through the mouth is temporarily blocked by the lips, tongue, or glottis; a plosive.
- A symbol used for purposes of punctuation and representing a pause or separating clauses, particularly a full stop, comma, colon or semicolon.
- That which stops, impedes, or obstructs; an obstacle; an impediment.
- A function that halts playback or recording in devices such as videocassette and DVD player.
- (by extension) A button that activates the stop function.
- (music) A knob or pin used to regulate the flow of air in an organ.
- (tennis) A very short shot which touches the ground close behind the net and is intended to bounce as little as possible.
- (zoology) The depression in a dog’s face between the skull and the nasal bones.
- (photography) An f-stop.
- (engineering) A device, or piece, as a pin, block, pawl, etc., for arresting or limiting motion, or for determining the position to which another part shall be brought.
- (architecture) A member, plain or moulded, formed of a separate piece and fixed to a jamb, against which a door or window shuts.
- The diaphragm used in optical instruments to cut off the marginal portions of a beam of light passing through lenses.
Huudahdukset
- halt! stop!
Adverbit
- Prone to halting or hesitation.
Esimerkit
- if his sentences were properly stopped
- It’s been a long hike. Let’s have a stop here for lunch.
- I need to get off at the next bus stop.
- The bus came to a stop.
- He’s stop still.
- The stop in a bulldog's face is very marked.
- The organ is loudest when all the stops are pulled.
- So melancholy a prospect should inspire us with zeal to oppose some stop to the rising torrent.
- A fatal stop traversed their headlong course.
- Pull out all the stops.
- It is a great step toward the mastery of our desires to give this stop to them.
- Occult qualities put a stop to the improvement of natural philosophy.
- It is doubtful [...] whether it contributed anything to the stop of the infection.
- That stop was not planned.
- They agreed to see each other at the bus stop.
- Then everybody once more knelt, and soon the blessing was pronounced. The choir and the clergy trooped out slowly, […], down the nave to the western door. […] At a seemingly immense distance the surpliced group stopped to say the last prayer.
- He stopped at his friend's house before continuing with his drive.
- He stopped for two weeks at the inn.
- “She’s not going away. She’s going to stop here forever.”
- by stopping at home till the money was gone
- to stop with a friend
- To achieve maximum depth of field, he stopped down to an f-stop of 22.
- He stopped the wound with gauze.
- The referees stopped the fight.
- This guy is a fraudster. I need to stop the cheque I wrote him.
- The sight of the armed men stopped him in his tracks.
- A “moving platform” scheme[...]is more technologically ambitious than maglev trains even though it relies on conventional rails.[...]This set-up solves several problems […]. Stopping high-speed trains wastes energy and time, so why not simply slow them down enough for a moving platform to pull alongside?
- Soon the rain will stop.
- The riots stopped when police moved in.
- I stopped at the traffic lights.
Taivutusmuodot