Definition, Betydelse & Synonymer | Engelska ordet FETTER
FETTER
Definition av FETTER
- boja
- fjättra
- fängsla
Antal bokstäver
6
Är palindrom
Nej
Sök efter FETTER på:
Wikipedia
(Svenska) Wiktionary
(Svenska) Wikipedia
(Engelska) Wiktionary
(Engelska) Google Answers
(Engelska) Britannica
(Engelska)
(Svenska) Wiktionary
(Svenska) Wikipedia
(Engelska) Wiktionary
(Engelska) Google Answers
(Engelska) Britannica
(Engelska)
Exempel på hur man kan använda FETTER i en mening
- Svartálfaheimr ("world of black-elves") appears in the Prose Edda twice, in each case as the place where certain dwarfs can be found to be living: In Gylfaginning 33, the "world of black-elves" is where the dwarfs are sought by the gods to craft the fetter Gleipnir to bind the wolf Fenrir.
- According to Olivier, he had sat down at a desk after being handed a pen and paper, but turned to his host after becoming perplexed when Denke dictated "Adolph, du fetter Wanst!" ("Adolph, you fat slob!"), just in time to see him in the process of raising a pickaxe to strike Olivier's head.
- The Pāli account claims that when he received the news of his son's birth he replied "", meaning "A rāhu is born, a fetter has arisen", that is, an impediment to the search for enlightenment.
- Metaphorically, a fetter may be anything that restricts or restrains in any way, hence the word "unfettered".
- Any attempt to stifle or fetter such criticism amounts to political censorship of the most insidious and objectionable kind.
- The Proto-Sinaitic glyph may have been called , may not have been based on a hieroglyph, and may have depicted a "fetter".
- Fenrir, whose role in the final days was revealed through prophecy, was leashed by the gods with a magical fetter created by the dwarfs.
- As he observed, for most such sections the cross section consists of either one or two ovals; however, when the plane is tangent to the inner surface of the torus, the cross-section takes on a figure-eight shape, which Proclus called a horse fetter (a device for holding two feet of a horse together), or "hippopede" in Greek.
- Placename scholars consider the Fetter- element of the name to be derived from the Gaelic term fetter (or fother, fodder, fether).
- While the fetter of doubt can be seen as pertaining to the teachings of competing samana during the times of the Buddha, this fetter regarding rites and rituals likely refers to some practices of contemporary brahmanic authorities.
- Birtum's name means "fetter" or "shackle" in Akkadian, and he was likely a deification of such objects.
- A lease, in fact being a bargain and sale upon some pecuniary consideration for one year or some other nominal term, is made by the bargainor of a whole freehold (with no fetter on alienation) to a lessee who is in fact the bargainee (buyer), "by the force of the Statute made for transferring Uses into possession".
Förberedelsen av sidan tog: 217,20 ms.