turd

turd

englanti
  1. alatyylinen pökäle, kikkare

  2. alatyylinen ääliö

Esimerkkejä:

Oh my god that turd is massive! – Herrajumala minkäkokoinen kakka!

Hes a world-class turd. – Hän on suuremman luokan ääliö.

Synonyymisanakirja

turd

ruokottomuus, rivous, karkeus, törkeys, ruma sana, uloste, ulosteet, kökkö, moska, paska, jätökset, kakka, jöötti, kakkapökäle, kikkare, pökäle, sonta.

Rimmaavat sanat

turd rimmaa näiden kanssa:

jacquard, hereford...

Katso kaikki

Englannin sanakirja

turd (englanti > suomi)

  1. pökäle, kikale, kikkare, torttu

turd englanniksi

  1. puhekieltä A piece of solid animal or human feces.

  2. (ux)

  3. 1658, (w); w:James Smith (priest)|James Smith, “A Poeticall Poem, by Mr. Stephen Locket to Mistrisse Bess Sarney”, in Wit Restord in Severall Select Poems Not Formerly Publish't, London: Printed for R. Pollard, N. Brooks, and w:Thomas Dring|Thomas Dring, and are to be sold at the Old Exchange, and in w:Fleet Street|Fleetstreet, (w) http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/82393304 82393304; republished in Facetiae. Musarum Deliciae: Or, The Muses Recreation. Conteining Severall Pieces of Poetique Wit by Sr. John Mennes and James Smith 1656. And Wit Restor'd, in Severall Select Poems, not Formerly Publish't. 1658. Also Wits Recreations, Selected from the Finest Fancies of Moderne Muses. With a Thousand Out-landish Proverbs. Printed from Edition 1640, with All the Wood Engravings, and Improvements of Subsequent Editions. To which are now added memoirs of Sir John Mennis and Dr. James Smith. With a Preface. In two volumes'', London: Printed by T. Davison, for w:Longman Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1817, (w) http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/230583538 230583538, https://books.google.com/books?id=Ocs4AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA203 page 203:

  4. Thy teeth more comely than two dirty rakes are, / Thy breath is stronger than a douzen jakes are. / A fart for all perfumes, a turd for roses / Smell men but thee, they wish them selves all noses.
  5. (quote-book) or Henry Munday, transl.|chapter=The Sermon, or Merdardus|title=w:Colloquies The Colloquies, or Familiar Discourses of Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam, Rendered into English. A Work of Very Great Use to such as Desire to Attain an Exact Knowledge of the Latin Tongue|location=London|publisher=Printed by E. T. and R. H. for H. Brome, B. Tooke, and T. Sawbridge, at the Gun at the West-end of w:St Paul's Cathedral|St. Pauls, the Ship in St Pauls Church-Yard, and the Three Flower-de-luces in w:Little Britain, London|Little-Britain|year=1671|page=462|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=DFssAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA462|oclc=|passage=How gladly would I have ſtopt the filthy mouth of that long-tongued fellow with a turd!

  6. (quote-book)

  7. (quote-book)|author2=(w), transl.|chapter=Of the Qualities and Conditions of Panurge|title=The Works of Francis Rabelais, M.D. The Second Book. Now Carefully Revised, and Compared throughout with the Late New Edition of M. Le du Chat. By Mr. Ozell. ...|location=London|publisher=Printed by J. Hughs, near w:Lincoln's Inn|Lincoln's-Inn-Fields, for J. Brindley, bookseller to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, at the King's-Arms in w:Bond Street|New-Bond-Street; and C. Corbett, at Addison's Head, against w:St Dunstan-in-the-West|St. Dunstan's Church, w:Fleet Street|Fleet-Street|year=1737|volume_plain=book II (w:Gargantua and Pantagruel|The Second Book of Rabelais, Treating of the Heroic Deeds and Sayings of the Good Pantagruel)|pages=142–143|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=RetYAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA142|oclc=642372363|passage=When he met with any of them upon the Street, he would never fail to put ſome Trick or other upon them; ſometimes putting a fry'd Turd in their graduate Hoods; (..) One Day that the Theologians were appointed all to meet in the Sorbonne, he made a Barbonneſa Tart, made of Store of Garlick, galbanum Galbanum, asafoetida Aſſa fœtida, castoreum Caſtoreum, Dogs Turds very warm; which he ſteep'd, temper'd, and liquify'd in the corrupt Matter of pocky Biles and peſtiferous botchEtymology 2|Botches; and, very early in the Morning, therewith anointed all the Lattices and Grates of the Sorbonne in ſuch ſort, that the Devil could not have endured it.

  8. (quote-journal)|location=London|publisher=w:Time Inc. UK|IPC Magazines|date=11 December 1986|volume=112|issue=1538|page=56|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=S0vI7Yz2550C&pg=PA56|oclc=2378350|passage=Preadaptation involves the changes in a plant or animal that eventually contribute to, say, a structure that helps survival, but which take place before that structure is fully formed. (..) Thus, an insect that has evolved the useful disguise of looking very much like a piece of dung in order to damp the enthusiasm of any non-coprophagous predator is clearly on to a good thing but, as (w) has wisely observed, what is the adaptive value in looking only 5 per cent like a turd?

  9. puhekieltä (non-gloss definition)

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