numerous oor Kornies

numerous

adjektief
en
Indefinitely large numerically, many.

Vertalings in die woordeboek Engels - Kornies

lies

hanow gwann / hanow gwadn
langbot

niverus

hanow gwann / hanow gwadn
langbot

pals

hanow gwann / hanow gwadn
langbot

Geskatte vertalings

Vertoon algoritmies gegenereerde vertalings

Soortgelyke frases

numerous occasions
lowr gweyth
on numerous occasions
lies gweyth · liestorn · lower gweyth · lowr gweyth · menowgh · yn fenowgh
numerous books
lies lyver
numerous ways that
lies fordh may
numerous pamphlets
lies folennik
numerousness
palster
non-numeric
an-niverek
numerical control
kontrolyans niverek · kontrolyans niverel
numerator
mynsriv

voorbeelde

Advanced filtering
Voorbeelde moet herlaai word.
There were, as I’ve said, low privet hedges on both sides of the garden – leading to a small, wrought-iron gate on the street corner. A concrete pathway then led to the front door. Curiously, the gate had been secured with a chain. This did not seem to make any sense because the gate itself was low enough simply to jump over and was therefore not designed to keep intruders out. Maybe it was meant to keep pet dogs in – I don’t really know. So, why mention it at all? Well, it had obviously presented an obstacle to someone who had come to deliver a parcel to the residence. Instead of taking it to the front door, the parcel had simply been dropped by the gate and left for the residents to find later . Serendipity! Regardless of its contents, I decided the parcel was mine – and I immediately took possession of it. Having done so, I left the somnolent guard to his snoring and discreetly returned to the crypt to examine my prize. o0o I was pleased to note that David had apparently missed me. He met me at the door of the crypt and displayed what I interpreted as unusual attention towards me. However, given that he had been largely ignoring me for some days, this was not saying a great deal. “Hey, Dave,” I whispered exultantly and held the parcel high. “Santa’s been! He brought you a prezzo. You must have been a good little zombie!” He emitted an amused sort of grunt – leastwise, that’s how it seemed to me. Maybe his rudimentary brain still computed ‘Santa’ and ‘prezzo’. These concepts are, after all, deeply ingrained in the psyche of all western children. I placed the parcel on the floor. It was wrapped in several layers of stiff, brown tar-paper and tied with numerous turns of thick twine. (Ah! They don’t wrap ‘em like that anymore, do they?). There was an envelope pushed roughly under the twine but not otherwise secured to the parcel. Was it meant to go with the parcel or was it separate? I decided to put it aside in favour of watching what David would do with ‘Santa’s prezzo’.
Res yw dhymm leverel neppyth.langbot langbot
numeral
Henn yw nowodhow koth.langbot langbot
numeral
A wra glaw hedhyw?langbot langbot
numerous books
Ny vynnav dos.langbot langbot
numerous [hanow gwadn]
Deg, ugens, deg warn ugens, dew-ugens, deg ha dew-ugens, tri-ugens, deg ha tri-ugens, peswar-ugens, deg ha peswar-ugens, kans.langbot langbot
numeral
I a gewsi Frynkek.langbot langbot
numerous
Fatla genes hedhyw?langbot langbot
I realised immediately that I’d been overly optimistic – I had thought he might remember, in the deep recesses of his ‘mind’ that he had once been the family’s resident card-sharp. Apparently not – poker was out of the question. Maybe ‘snap’? No, I thought, I would start at an even more basic level than that – just as you would start with a small child. I would spread the cards out in front of him, grouping them in their suits and lining them up according to their numbers and images. Did David still have the capacity for pattern recognition with his degraded sight and his degraded mind? David and I sat cross-legged on the floor, facing each other in the semi- darkness of the crypt. He seemed to be watching me carefully as I lay out the four rows of cards in front of him: all the diamonds, all the hearts, all the spades and all the clubs in numerical order. What did he see? I sat silently as he seemed to move his head slowly in order to scan across the rows of cards – and back again. He started to make little grunting noises and then, with a roar and a violent sweep of his hand, scattered the deck across the floor. He put his face up close to mine and roared angrily once more – and then retreated to his makeshift bed and turned his back on me. “That went well,” I thought to myself, believing the opposite. I remained seated (and stunned) on the floor – but, within a short time, started to reconsider what had just happened. “If the cards truly meant nothing to him,” I wondered, “why the sudden display of anger?” Why the pointed retreat from me? That was not mere boredom or irritation. Had the cards triggered some painful memory? Was he suddenly aware of what he had now lost? I would have to wait and see. I was not going to get any more out of him today.
Lowen on ni.langbot langbot
The largest number of Cornish speakers was around the 15th century, and after that for numerous reasons (the Bible wasn't translated into Cornish, many Cornish speakers were murdered by Henry VII in 1497, and many had to leave Cornwall to find work) the language lost its footing until the 19th century when a Cornish scholar, Henry Jenner, collected all of the phrases and words together, publishing his book 'A Handbook of the Cornish language' in 1904 and started to build connections with the other Celtic countries through the Gorsedh in Brittany first of all, and then with the one in Wales.
Da yw genev tykkies Duw.langbot langbot
The Bodmin Gaol registers and Quarter Sessions records (see the Crime and Punishment, Law and Order page) contain numerous references to people sentenced to be transported overseas.
Ple’ma va?langbot langbot
niveronieth arithmetic; musuronieth mathematics; numeration; Arabic numeral
Pur yeyn yw hi hedhyw.langbot langbot
Palladium is a chemical element with the symbol Pd and atomic number 46. It is a rare and lustrous silvery-white metal discovered in 1803 by the English chemist William Hyde Wollaston. He named it after the asteroid Pallas, which was itself named after the epithet of the Greek goddess Athena, acquired by her when she slew Pallas. Palladium, platinum, rhodium, ruthenium, iridium and osmium form a group of elements referred to as the platinum group metals (PGMs). They have similar chemical properties, but palladium has the lowest melting point and is the least dense of them. More than half the supply of palladium and its congener platinum is used in catalytic converters, which convert as much as 90% of the harmful gases in automobile exhaust (hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen dioxide) into harmless substances (nitrogen, carbon dioxide and water vapor). Palladium is also used in electronics, dentistry, medicine, hydrogen purification, chemical applications, groundwater treatment, and jewelry. Palladium is a key component of fuel cells, in which hydrogen and oxygen react to produce electricity, heat, and water. Ore deposits of palladium and other PGMs are rare. The most extensive deposits have been found in the norite belt of the Bushveld Igneous Complex covering the Transvaal Basin in South Africa, the Stillwater Complex in Montana, United States; the Sudbury Basin and Thunder Bay District of Ontario, Canada, and the Norilsk Complex in Russia. Recycling is also a source, mostly from scrapped catalytic converters. The numerous applications and limited supply sources result in considerable investment interest.
Benyn deg os.langbot langbot
on numerous occasions
Yth eson ni ow tybri avalow.langbot langbot
(hkg.); niverenn numeral, number; kowlniver integer
My a garsa kavos nebes moy a dhowr.langbot langbot
; niverenn numeral, number; kowlniver integer
Res yw dhis fistena.langbot langbot
He seemed offended. He walked with me back to the front of the office. When we reached the reception area, he passed his eyes over the numerous zombies which were seated there. “Mr Tremelling?” he called. An elderly zombie stood and walked towards his office. But I caught his arm before he left the area himself. “But, sir, all your staff are dead. They’re rotting on the floor.” “Nonsense!” he retorted. “Staff morale in this office has never been higher.” “And, as I’ve said, all your clients are zombies.” He was incensed. “Young man, please leave. You’re upsetting my clients.” I looked towards the other zombies, still seated. Were they upset? Difficult to say. Certainly, David seemed very happy. The solicitor left, walked along the corridor with his client and closed his office door behind him. I decided to leave as well and called David to come with me. He was reluctant to go. Why would we leave all these lovely people? Then, I heard singing from the rear of building. Another survivor. The singing was loud and out of tune. The words were poorly enunciated. I decided to go back down the corridor to investigate – and to leave David to his new friends for the moment. The singing stopped and a racist tirade began. The subjects of the tirade seemed to be anyone who was not white. Australian aboriginals were especially ‘favoured’ by the speaker. I arrived at this other survivor’s office. He sat amongst huge piles of legal files and empty wine bottles. He saw me and started singing again. Then he stopped abruptly. “Are you Jewish?” he shouted. “No,” I answered quietly.
Yma nown dhis.langbot langbot
Kresen Kernow also looks after the archive of H W Abbiss, Cornwall’s Horticultural Advisor in the mid-20th century, which contains numerous pamphlets, reports and publications about flower farming, spring shows and Gulval Experimental Station, among other items. Council documents from the Agricultural Committee (1920-1967), including more than twenty minute books, can help shed light on formal agricultural policy.
A wodhes neuvya?langbot langbot
numerous
Lavar neppyth.langbot langbot
numerous
Yma'n amari ryb an yeynel.langbot langbot
numerous
My a dhybris an kig.langbot langbot
niveronieth arithmetic; musuronieth mathematics; numeration; Arabic numeral
Yth esa taran ha lughes nyhewer.langbot langbot
numerous
Yth esov vy ow astelwolya.langbot langbot
The pasty is Cornwall’s most famous edible export. Kresen Kernow holds a 1746 recipe for a venison pasty, as well as many other recipes for Cornish treats such as saffron cake, splits and starry-gazey pie, in numerous published books. An insight into food in the past can be seen in menus, photographs of meals and household account books.
Glaw a wra.langbot langbot
numeral
Ple’ma ow harr-tan?langbot langbot
numerical
Prag y fynn'ta metya Tom?langbot langbot
147 sinne gevind in 7 ms. Hulle kom uit baie bronne en word nie nagegaan nie.