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1 SAGE
sei‹ I noun(a plant whose leaves are used as flavouring in cooking.) salvieII 1. noun(a wise man: the sages of past centuries.) vismann2. adjective(wise: sage advice.) vis, klok- sagelyklok--------salvie--------vis--------vismann( litterært) forkortelse for Semi Automatic Ground Environment -
2 sage
sei‹ I noun(a plant whose leaves are used as flavouring in cooking.) salvieII 1. noun(a wise man: the sages of past centuries.) vismann2. adjective(wise: sage advice.) vis, klok- sagelyklok--------salvie--------vis--------vismannIsubst. \/seɪdʒ\/( plantearten Salvia officinalis) tesalvieIIsubst. \/seɪdʒ\/vismannIIIadj. \/seɪdʒ\/1) vis, klok2) ( spøkefullt) snusfornuftig3) ( gammeldags) alvorlig, høytidelig
См. также в других словарях:
Sage — Sage, a. [Compar. {Sager}; superl. {Sagest}.] [F., fr. L. sapius (only in nesapius unwise, foolish), fr. sapere to be wise; perhaps akin to E. sap. Cf. {Savor}, {Sapient}, {Insipid}.] 1. Having nice discernment and powers of judging; prudent;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sage — sage1 sagely, adv. sageness, n. /sayj/, n., adj., sager, sagest. n. 1. a profoundly wise person; a person famed for wisdom. 2. someone venerated for the possession of wisdom, judgment, and experience. adj. 3. wise, judicious, or prudent: sage… … Universalium
sage — [[t]se͟ɪʤ[/t]] sages 1) N COUNT A sage is a person who is regarded as being very wise. [LITERARY] ...ancient Chinese sages. 2) ADJ GRADED Sage means wise and knowledgeable, especially as the result of a lot of experience. [LITERARY] He was famous … English dictionary
sage — I [[t]seɪdʒ[/t]] n. adj. sag•er, sag•est 1) a profoundly wise person, esp. one famed for wisdom 2) an experienced person respected for sound judgment 3) wise, judicious, or prudent: sage advice[/ex] • Etymology: 1250–1300; ME (n. and adj.) <… … From formal English to slang
sage — I. adjective (sager; sagest) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, from Vulgar Latin *sapius, from Latin sapere to taste, have good taste, be wise; akin to Oscan sipus knowing, Old Saxon ansebbian to perceive Date: 14th century 1. a. wise … New Collegiate Dictionary
sage — sage1 [seıdʒ] n [Sense: 1; Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: sauge, from Latin salvia, from salvus; SAFE1] [Sense: 2; Date: 1300 1400; Origin: SAGE2] 1.) [U] a herb with grey green leaves 2.) … Dictionary of contemporary English
sage — 1 noun 1 (U) a plant with grey green leaves that are used in cooking 2 (C) literary someone, especially an old man, who is very wise 2 adjective literary very wise, especially as a result of a lot of experience: sage advice sagely adverb … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
advice — n. 1) to give, offer advice 2) to act on, follow, take advice 3) to disregard, refuse, turn a deaf ear to advice 4) friendly; good, sage, sensible, sound; misleading; parting; professional; unsolicited advice 5) a bit, piece, word of advice 6)… … Combinatory dictionary
sage´like´ — sage1 «sayj», adjective, sag|er, sag|est, noun. –adj. 1. showing wisdom or good judgment: »a sage reply. The sage counsels of Lord Salisbury seemed to bring with them not only wealth and power, but security (Lytton Strachey). SYNONYM( … Useful english dictionary
sage´ness — sage1 «sayj», adjective, sag|er, sag|est, noun. –adj. 1. showing wisdom or good judgment: »a sage reply. The sage counsels of Lord Salisbury seemed to bring with them not only wealth and power, but security (Lytton Strachey). SYNONYM( … Useful english dictionary
sage´ly — sage1 «sayj», adjective, sag|er, sag|est, noun. –adj. 1. showing wisdom or good judgment: »a sage reply. The sage counsels of Lord Salisbury seemed to bring with them not only wealth and power, but security (Lytton Strachey). SYNONYM( … Useful english dictionary