Dicţionarul Englez - Ojibwe:

white

Este utilă această traducere? Adaugă la favorite!
Definiţia cuvântului "white":
+23 rate 1. color which has no hue, color of milk; something that is white in color (i.e. wine, game piece, etc.); white part of something (i.e of an egg, of a printed page, of the eye); person having pale skin, Caucasian
+6 rate 2. P E O P L E (adj), (n) -r, -st - (of) a person of a race which has a pale skin; caucasian He had a black mother and a white father. It's a predominantly white neighbourhood. This neighbourhood mainly has whites living in it, though there are a few blacks. (US) White flight is the act of white people moving out of an area because people of other races are moving in. White supremacy is the belief that people with pale skin are better than people with darker skin. A white supremacist is someone who believes this. (US disapproving slang) White trash means poor, badly educated white people.
+3 rate 3. family name
+2 rate 4. anagram withe
+2 rate 5. born May 29, 1906, Bombay, India; died January 17, 1964, Piraeus, Greece; English novelist, social historian and satirist. Educated at Cambridge University, White was working as a teacher when he attained his first critical success with the autobiographical England Have My Bones (1936). He later devoted himself to writing, studying subjects such as Arthurian legend while living a largely reclusive life. He is best known for his adaptation of Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur in the tetralogy The Once and Future King (1958), comprising The Sword in the Stone (1938), The Queen of Air and Darkness (originally The Witch in the Wood, 1939), The Ill-Made Knight (1940) and The Candle in the Wind (1958).
+2 rate 6. born May 6, 1915, Boston, Mass., United States died May 15, 1986, New York, New York United States journalist, historian and novelist. White became one of Time magazine's first foreign correspondents, serving in East Asia (1939–45) and later as a European correspondent. He is best known for his accounts of two presidential elections, The Making of the President, 1960 (1961, Pulitzer Prize) and The Making of the President, 1964 (1965) and for associating the short-lived presidency of John F. Kennedy with the legend of Camelot. His intimate style of journalism, centring on the personalities of his subjects, strongly influenced the course of political journalism and campaign coverage.
+2 rate 7. born May 6, 1915, Boston, Mass., United States died May 15, 1986, New York, New York United States journalist, historian and novelist. White became one of Time magazine's first foreign correspondents, serving in East Asia (1939–45) and later as a European correspondent. He is best known for his accounts of two presidential elections, The Making of the President, 1960 (1961, Pulitzer Prize) and The Making of the President, 1964 (1965) and for associating the short-lived presidency of John F. Kennedy with the legend of Camelot. His intimate style of journalism, centring on the personalities of his subjects, strongly influenced the course of political journalism and campaign coverage.
+2 rate 8. white whale
+2 rate 9. white butterfly
+2 rate 10. White Lotus
+1 rate 11. having a white color; lacking color or pigment (e.g. white wine, white hair, etc.); white-skinned, Caucasian; pure; having no print, blank; dressed in white; covered in or having snow; politically conservative
+1 rate 12. orig. Mary White; born 1637, England; died January 5, 1710/11, Wethersfield, Conn. British-American colonial author. She was the daughter of the original proprietor of Lancaster, Mass., where she lived with her minister husband and their four children. When Indians razed the settlement in 1676, she was captured and held hostage for 11 weeks. Ransomed, she moved to Connecticut with her husband and two surviving children. Her narrative of captivity, titled The Soveraignty & Goodness of God, Together with the Faithfulness of His Promises Displayed; Being a Narrative of the Captivity and Restauration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson and published in 1682, became popular in the colonies and in London.
+1 rate 13. born July 11, 1899, Mount Vernon, New York, United States died October 1, 1985, North Brooklin, Maine; United States essayist and literary stylist. White attended Cornell University and in 1927 joined The New Yorker; he would contribute to it and later to Harper's magazine over several decades. He collaborated with James Thurber on Is Sex Necessary? (1929). His novels Stuart Little (1945), Charlotte's Web (1952) and The Trumpet of the Swan (1970) are classics of children's literature. White's revision of The Elements of Style (1959) by his professor William Strunk became a standard style manual for writers. He received a Pulitzer Prize special citation in 1978.
+1 rate 14. white footed mouse
+1 rate 15. white shark
+1 rate 16. White Sea
+1 rate 17. White Volta River
+1 rate 18. White Byron Raymond
+1 rate 19. White Elwyn Brooks
+1 rate 20. White James Springer and Ellen Gould
rate 21. born June 8, 1917, Fort Collins, Colo., United States died April 15, 2002, Denver, Colo. United States jurist. An accomplished athlete, he played football with the Pittsburgh Pirates (now Steelers) and the Detroit Lions. He attended the University of Oxford as a Rhodes scholar before studying law at Yale. White clerked for Fred M. Vinson and later practiced corporate law in Colorado. In 1961 he was named deputy United States attorney general by Pres. John F. Kennedy and the following year he was appointed to the United States Supreme Court. His opinions and votes on the court were generally moderate to conservative. He retired in 1993.
rate 22. born June 8, 1917, Fort Collins, Colo., United States died April 15, 2002, Denver, Colo. United States jurist. An accomplished athlete, he played football with the Pittsburgh Pirates (now Steelers) and the Detroit Lions. He attended the University of Oxford as a Rhodes scholar before studying law at Yale. White clerked for Fred M. Vinson and later practiced corporate law in Colorado. In 1961 he was named deputy United States attorney general by Pres. John F. Kennedy and the following year he was appointed to the United States Supreme Court. His opinions and votes on the court were generally moderate to conservative. He retired in 1993.
rate 23. born July 11, 1899, Mount Vernon, New York, United States died October 1, 1985, North Brooklin, Maine; United States essayist and literary stylist. White attended Cornell University and in 1927 joined The New Yorker; he would contribute to it and later to Harper's magazine over several decades. He collaborated with James Thurber on Is Sex Necessary? (1929). His novels Stuart Little (1945), Charlotte's Web (1952) and The Trumpet of the Swan (1970) are classics of children's literature. White's revision of The Elements of Style (1959) by his professor William Strunk became a standard style manual for writers. He received a Pulitzer Prize special citation in 1978.
rate 24. orig. Ellen Gould Harmon; born April 8, 1821, Palmyra, Me., United States died June 8, 1881, Battle Creek, Mich.; born November 26, 1827, Gorham, Me. died July 16, 1915, St. Helena, Cal. Cofounders of the Seventh-Day Adventists. James was a schoolteacher and then a minister who accepted the Adventist views of William Miller (1782–1849). He married Ellen Harmon in 1846; she had become a Millerite in 1840, at 13. A visionary, Ellen had more than 2,000 visions before she died; these helped guide the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, which was formed in 1863. They preached together until James's death. Ellen continued, speaking on many subjects, notably temperance and was regarded by some as a prophet. Of her many books, the best known is Steps to Christ.
rate 25. flourished 1585–93; British artist, explorer and North American colonist. He sailed on an expedition to Greenland in 1577 and returned to England with sketches of the land and its people. His 1585 trip to colonize Roanoke was sponsored by Sir Walter Raleigh. White's paintings and sketches illustrated a report of the region after the colony was abandoned (1586). He was appointed governor of a second colony and arrived at Roanoke with 100 colonists (1587). He returned to England for supplies that year but was unable to send a relief expedition to Roanoke until 1590; the expedition found no trace of the colonists, including White's granddaughter, Virginia Dare.
rate 26. born July 9, 1908, Minneapolis, Minn., U.S; died June 24, 1976, Cambridge, Mass. United States photographer and editor. He began to photograph seriously in 1938 when he went to work for the Works Progress Administration. In 1946 he studied with Edward Weston and Alfred Stieglitz before moving to San Francisco, where he worked closely with Ansel Adams. He succeeded Adams as head of the photography department at the California School of Fine Arts and later taught at MIT. He founded and edited (1952–76) the photography magazine Aperture and also edited Image (1953–57). His efforts to extend photography's range of expression made him one of the century's most influential photographers.
rate 27. born May 28, 1912, London, Eng. died September 30, 1990, Sydney, N.S.W., Austrl. Australian writer. As a youth White moved between Australia and England, where he attended Cambridge University. After serving in the Royal Air Force during World War II, he returned to Australia, which he saw as a country in a volatile process of growth and self-definition. His somewhat misanthropic novels often explore the possibilities of savagery in that context; they include The Tree of Man (1955), Voss (1957), Riders in the Chariot (1961) and The Twyborn Affair (1979). His other works include plays and short stories, the latter collected in The Burnt Ones (1964) and The Cockatoos (1974). He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973.
rate 28. born May 28, 1912, London, Eng. died September 30, 1990, Sydney, N.S.W., Austrl. Australian writer. As a youth White moved between Australia and England, where he attended Cambridge University. After serving in the Royal Air Force during World War II, he returned to Australia, which he saw as a country in a volatile process of growth and self-definition. His somewhat misanthropic novels often explore the possibilities of savagery in that context; they include The Tree of Man (1955), Voss (1957), Riders in the Chariot (1961) and The Twyborn Affair (1979). His other works include plays and short stories, the latter collected in The Burnt Ones (1964) and The Cockatoos (1974). He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973.
rate 29. born November 9, 1853, New York, New York, United States died June 25, 1906, New York City; United States architect. He trained with Henry Hobson Richardson. In 1880 he formed an architectural firm with Charles F. McKim and William R. Mead that soon became the most famous in the country, known especially for its Shingle-style country and seaside mansions. The firm later led the United States trend toward Neoclassical architecture. White's design for the Casino (1881) at Newport, R.I., exhibited his characteristic use of gracefully proportioned structures and Italian Renaissance ornamentation. His New York commissions included Madison Square Garden (1891) and the Washington Arch (1891). A versatile artist, he also designed jewelry, furniture and interiors. An extrovert noted for his lavish entertainments, he was shot to death at Madison Square Garden by Harry Thaw, the husband of the showgirl Evelyn Nesbit, with whom White had had a love affair.
rate 30. born May 29, 1906, Bombay, India; died January 17, 1964, Piraeus, Greece; English novelist, social historian and satirist. Educated at Cambridge University, White was working as a teacher when he attained his first critical success with the autobiographical England Have My Bones (1936). He later devoted himself to writing, studying subjects such as Arthurian legend while living a largely reclusive life. He is best known for his adaptation of Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur in the tetralogy The Once and Future King (1958), comprising The Sword in the Stone (1938), The Queen of Air and Darkness (originally The Witch in the Wood, 1939), The Ill-Made Knight (1940) and The Candle in the Wind (1958).
rate 31. born February 10, 1868, Emporia, Kan., United States died January 29, 1944, Emporia; United States journalist. White purchased the Emporia Daily and Weekly Gazette in 1895. His editorial writing was a mixture of tolerance, optimism, liberal Republicanism and provincialism. His widely circulated 1896 editorial "What's the Matter with Kansas?" was credited with helping elect William McKinley president. He also wrote fiction, biographies and an autobiography. His son and successor, William Lindsay White (1900–73), wrote one of the best-selling books on World War II, They Were Expendable (1942).
rate 32. white-footed mouse; Any of about 60 species (genus Peromyscus, family Cricetidae) of small, delicate rodents that are active at night and are found in habitats from Alaska to South America. They often outnumber all other mammals in an area. Deer mice are 3–6.5 in. (8–17 cm) long (excluding the long tail) and have large eyes, soft fur and relatively large ears. Colours range from white to brown or blackish, with white underparts and feet. They eat plant and animal matter and nest in burrows or trees. Clean, easily cared for and prolific, they are often used as laboratory animals.
rate 33. White Monk
rate 34. white corpuscle
rate 35. white blood cell
rate 36. Bourke White Margaret
rate 37. cabbage white
rate 38. great white shark
rate 39. Mary White
rate 40. white cedar
rate 41. white dwarf star
rate 42. White Horse Vale of the
rate 43. White House
rate 44. White Mountain Battle of
rate 45. White Mountains
rate 46. White River
rate 47. White Sands National Monument
rate 48. White John
rate 49. White Minor
rate 50. White Patrick Victor Martindale
rate 51. White Stanford
rate 52. White Terence Hanbury
rate 53. White Theodore Harold
rate 54. White William Allen
rate 55. white tailed deer;
rate 56. Similar to Green Tea. Identifiable by the presence of the white hairs on the leaf tips, and a light infusion. White tea is minimally processed - generally only air dried and slightly fermented. The highest quality white teas are picked before the leaf buds have opened, while still covered with silky white hairs. Of all teas, whites have the least amount of caffeine. These teas should be steeped in water well below boiling and for at least 4-5 minutes.
rate 57. coffee, tea etc. with cream or milk
Te rugăm sa votezi definiţia cuvântului "white" care este cea mai utilă pentru tine.
 
Dicţionarul conţine următoarele traduceri în ojibwe pentru "white":
Engleză Ojibwe
Aşadar, astfel se spune "white" în ojibwe.
 
Expresiile conţinând "white":
Engleză Ojibwe
Sperăm că aceste expresii vă dau o idee bună despre cum să folosiţi cuvântul "white" în propoziţii.
Până în prezent, există un număr de 4.615.433 cuvinte / expresii căutate, dintre care 24.462 astăzi.
Tag-uri: white, waabi-, waabishki-, Dicţionar Englez - Ojibwe, Englez, traduceri, dicţionar online Englez, traducător Engleză-Ojibwe
 
Inseraţi codul de mai jos ori de câte ori doriţi să apară în site-ul dumneavoastră widget-ul conţinând acest dicţionar:


Widget-ul se va afişa astfel:


Un serviciu al translateojibwe.com
Inseraţi (embed) dicţionarul în alt site.

Clic aici pentru a obţine codul HTML
0.097 / 0.078 (32)
Înapoi la partea de sus