Definition, Betydelse & Anagram | Engelska ordet DONKEY'S


DONKEY'S

Definition av DONKEY'S

  1. böjningsform av donkey

1

Antal bokstäver

8

Är palindrom

Nej

13
DO
DON
EY
KE
KEY

412
D'
D'S
DE
DEK
DEN


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Exempel på hur man kan använda DONKEY'S i en mening

  • The biblical account states that Samson was a Nazirite and that he was given immense strength to aid him against his enemies and allow him to perform superhuman feats, including slaying a lion with his bare hands and massacring a Philistine army with a donkey's jawbone after offending groomsmen at his wedding to one.
  • Lamashtu is depicted as a mythological hybrid, with a hairy body, a lioness' head with donkey's teeth and ears, long fingers and fingernails, and the feet of a bird with sharp talons.
  • Diverging from previous zoologically multiplicitous depictions, Seth's appearance during the Hellenistic period onwards was depicted as resembling a man with a donkey's head.
  • The call of the Grévy's zebra has been described as "something like a hippo's grunt combined with a donkey's wheeze".
  • Traditional instruments include the banjo, guitar, drums, dingaling bell, accordion and a donkey's jawbone played by running a stick up and down the teeth, and also a grater.
  • The 3rd-century writer Tertullian, for example, blames him (incorrectly—see history of anti-Semitism) for originating the story that the Jews worshipped a donkey's head in the Holy of Holies and calls him "ille mendaciorum loquacissimus", 'the most loquacious of liars'.
  • The lead instrument in most Boeremusiek ensembles is the concertina, sometimes referred to as "donkielong" (donkey's lung) due to its braying sound and mechanical playability.
  • Midas is outraged at the insinuation and banishes him but Apollo punishes Midas by giving him donkey's ears.
  • In old-fashioned French schoolrooms, misbehaving students were sent to sit in a corner of the room wearing a sign that said "Âne", meaning donkey, and were forced to wear a jester's cap with donkey's ears, sometimes conical in shape, known as a "bonnet d'âne", meaning "donkey's cap".
  • Where Midas sings about his ears, an instrumental donkey's bray resounds, prefiguring his punishment.
  • And there was a great famine in Samaria, as they besieged it, until a donkey's head was sold for eighty shekels of silver, and the fourth part of a kab of dove's dung for five shekels of silver.
  • In 1881, French ethnologist Eugène Rolland cited a wide variety of phrases used to name the donkey, including bête asine, asine in the Morvan, aine in the Berry, aune in the Mâconnais, asé and its variant azé in Provençal Occitan, asou Additionally, it is worth noting that the variant azou is used in Béarnais, aë in Nice, bourri in Allier, bourricot and its variants (such as bourriquet) in various French regions (names Rolland attributes to the presence of fuzz on the donkey's coat), azen in Breton, and asto in Basque.


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