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have+an+audience

  • 1 house

    • omakotitalo
    finance, business, economy
    • toiminimi
    • huone
    • huonekunta
    • asunto
    • edustajainhuone
    • firma
    • rakennus
    • katsomo
    • katsomatta
    • kauppahuone
    • liike
    • kamari
    • hallitsijasuku
    • hankkia asunto
    • majoittaa
    • suku
    • talo
    • talous
    • koteloida
    • koti
    * * *
    1. plural - houses; noun
    1) (a building in which people, especially a single family, live: Houses have been built on the outskirts of the town for the workers in the new industrial estate.) talo
    2) (a place or building used for a particular purpose: a hen-house; a public house.) rakennus
    3) (a theatre, or the audience in a theatre: There was a full house for the first night of the play.) sali
    4) (a family, usually important or noble, including its ancestors and descendants: the house of David.) suku
    2. verb
    1) (to provide with a house, accommodation or shelter: All these people will have to be housed; The animals are housed in the barn.) majoittaa
    2) (to store or keep somewhere: The electric generator is housed in the garage.) sijoittaa
    - housing benefit
    - house agent
    - house arrest
    - houseboat
    - housebreaker
    - housebreaking
    - house-fly
    - household
    - householder
    - household word
    - housekeeper
    - housekeeping
    - houseman
    - housetrain
    - house-warming
    3. adjective
    a house-warming party.) tupaantuliais-
    - housework
    - like a house on fire

    English-Finnish dictionary > house

  • 2 raise

    • palkankorotus
    • paisuttaa
    • nousta
    • nousu
    • nostaa (korottaa)
    • nostattaa
    • nosto
    • nostaa
    • järjestää
    • herättää
    • viljellä
    • esittää
    • aiheuttaa
    • värvätä
    • pystyttää
    • rakentaa
    • kasvattaa
    • kantaa
    • kohottaa
    • kohotuttaa
    • kohota
    • lisätä
    • kallistaa
    • hankkia
    • pestata
    • synnyttää
    • suurentaa
    • ylentää
    • korotus
    • korottaa
    • loihtia esiin
    * * *
    reiz 1. verb
    1) (to move or lift to a high(er) position: Raise your right hand; Raise the flag.) nostaa
    2) (to make higher: If you paint your flat, that will raise the value of it considerably; We'll raise that wall about 20 centimetres.) kohottaa
    3) (to grow (crops) or breed (animals) for food: We don't raise pigs on this farm.) kasvattaa
    4) (to rear, bring up (a child): She has raised a large family.) kasvattaa
    5) (to state (a question, objection etc which one wishes to have discussed): Has anyone in the audience any points they would like to raise?) esittää
    6) (to collect; to gather: We'll try to raise money; The revolutionaries managed to raise a small army.) kerätä
    7) (to cause: His remarks raised a laugh.) saada aikaan
    8) (to cause to rise or appear: The car raised a cloud of dust.) nostattaa
    9) (to build (a monument etc): They've raised a statue of Robert Burns / in memory of Robert Burns.) pystyttää
    10) (to give (a shout etc).) nostaa
    11) (to make contact with by radio: I can't raise the mainland.) saada yhteys
    2. noun
    (an increase in wages or salary: I'm going to ask the boss for a raise.) palkankorotus
    - raise hell/Cain / the roof
    - raise someone's spirits

    English-Finnish dictionary > raise

См. также в других словарях:

  • Audience — An audience is a group of people who participate in a show or encounter a work of art, literature, theatre, music or academics in any medium. Audience members participate in different ways in different kinds of art; some events invite overt… …   Wikipedia

  • audience — [[t]ɔ͟ːdiəns[/t]] ♦♦ audiences 1) N COUNT COLL The audience at a play, concert, film, or public meeting is the group of people watching or listening to it. The entire audience broke into loud applause... He was speaking to an audience of students …   English dictionary

  • Audience theory — is an element of thinking that developed within academic literary theory and cultural studies. With a specific focus on rhetoric, some, such as Walter Ong, have suggested that the audience is a construct made up by the rhetoric and the rhetorical …   Wikipedia

  • audience research —    Audience research has developed in two main interlinking strands: research by those working in the industry and research by academics. Industry research developed as a mechanism by which media producers and advertisers could both understand… …   Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture

  • Audience design — is a sociolinguistic model outlined by Allan Bell in 1984 which proposes that linguistic style shifting occurs primarily in response to a speaker s audience. According to this model, speakers adjust their speech primarily towards that of their… …   Wikipedia

  • Audience — Au di*ence, n. [F. audience, L. audientia, fr. audire to hear. See {Audible}, a.] 1. The act of hearing; attention to sounds. [1913 Webster] Thou, therefore, give due audience, and attend. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. Admittance to a hearing; a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • audience — Au di*ence, n. [F. audience, L. audientia, fr. audire to hear. See {Audible}, a.] 1. The act of hearing; attention to sounds. [1913 Webster] Thou, therefore, give due audience, and attend. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. Admittance to a hearing; a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Audience court — Audience Au di*ence, n. [F. audience, L. audientia, fr. audire to hear. See {Audible}, a.] 1. The act of hearing; attention to sounds. [1913 Webster] Thou, therefore, give due audience, and attend. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. Admittance to a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Audience Council England — (ACE) was created upon establishment of the BBC Trust in January 2007. It replaced the Broadcasting Council of England which had many responsibilities the present council now has. ACE plays a key role helping the BBC Trust understand the needs,… …   Wikipedia

  • have someone in the palm of one's hand — HAVE CONTROL OVER, have influence over, have someone eating out of one s hand, have someone on a string; N. Amer. have someone in one s hip pocket. → palm * * * have (or hold) someone in the palm of one s hand have someone under one s control or… …   Useful english dictionary

  • have someone in the palm of your hand — phrase to have complete power over someone so that they do what you tell them to do He had the audience in the palm of his hand. Thesaurus: to be in chargesynonym Main entry: palm * * * have someone in the palm of your hand see ↑palm …   Useful english dictionary

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