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Online Dictionary: translate word or phrase from Indonesian to English or vice versa, and also from english to english on-line.
Hasil cari dari kata atau frase: cuping (0.02933 detik)
Found 5 items, similar to cuping.
English → Indonesian (Kamus Landak) Definition: cup cangkir
English → Indonesian (quick) Definition: cup beker, cangkir, mangkok, piala
Indonesian → English (quick) Definition: cuping earlobe, lobe
English → English (WordNet) Definition: cup cup n 1: a United States liquid unit equal to 8 fluid ounces 2: the quantity a cup will hold; “he drank a cup of coffee”; “he borrowed a cup of sugar” [syn: cupful] 3: a small open container usually used for drinking; usually has a handle; “he put the cup back in the saucer”; “the handle of the cup was missing” 4: a large metal vessel with two handles that is awarded as a trophy to the winner of a competition; “the school kept the cups is a special glass case” [syn: loving cup] 5: any cup-shaped concavity; “bees filled the waxen cups with honey”; “he wore a jock strap with a metal cup”; “the cup of her bra” 6: the hole (or metal container in the hole) on a golf green; “he swore as the ball rimmed the cup and rolled away”; “put the flag back in the cup” 7: a punch served in a pitcher instead of a punch bowl 8: cup-shaped plant organ [also: cupping, cupped] cup v 1: form into the shape of a cup; “She cupped her hands” 2: put into a cup; “cup the milk” 3: treat by applying evacuated cups to the patient's skin [syn: transfuse] [also: cupping, cupped]
English → English (gcide) Definition: cup Trophy \Tro"phy\, n.; pl. Trophies. [F. troph['e]e (cf. It. & Sp. trofeo), L. tropaeum, trophaeum, Gr. ?, strictly, a monument of the enemy's defeat, fr.? a turn, especially, a turning about of the enemy, a putting to flight or routing him, fr. ? to turn. See Trope.] 1. (Gr. & Rom. Antiq.) A sign or memorial of a victory raised on the field of battle, or, in case of a naval victory, on the nearest land. Sometimes trophies were erected in the chief city of the conquered people. [1913 Webster] Note: A trophy consisted originally of some of the armor, weapons, etc., of the defeated enemy fixed to the trunk of a tree or to a post erected on an elevated site, with an inscription, and a dedication to a divinity. The Romans often erected their trophies in the Capitol. [1913 Webster] 2. The representation of such a memorial, as on a medal; esp. (Arch.), an ornament representing a group of arms and military weapons, offensive and defensive. [1913 Webster] 3. Anything taken from an enemy and preserved as a memorial of victory, as arms, flags, standards, etc. [1913 Webster] Around the posts hung helmets, darts, and spears, And captive chariots, axes, shields, and bars, And broken beaks of ships, the trophies of their wars. --Dryden. [1913 Webster] 4. Any evidence or memorial of victory or conquest; as, every redeemed soul is a trophy of grace. [1913 Webster] 5. An object memorializing a victory in a sporting contest. [1913 Webster] Note: Some trophies(5) are unique, temporary possession of the same object passing to the new victors of some periodic contest in subsequent occurrences. Others are objects of little inherent worth, given by the authority sponsoring the contest to the victor. A trophy is sometimes shaped like a cup, and in such cases may be called a cup, as the America's Cup (in Yacht racing). --> [1913 Webster] Trophy money, a duty paid formerly in England, annually, by housekeepers, toward providing harness, drums, colors, and the like, for the militia. [1913 Webster]

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