proper 意味
EN[ˈprɔp.ə] [ˈpɹɒ.pə] [ˈpɹɑ.pɚ] [-ɒpə(ɹ)]US
日適切な, 適切です
- 形容詞 (Adjective)COMmore properSUPmost properPREprop-
- (heading) Suitable.
- the proper time to plant potatoes
- a very proper young lady
- (heading) Possessed, related.
- They have a proper saint almost for every peculiar infirmity: for poison, gouts, agues [ …] .
- my proper son
- (heading) Accurate, strictly applied.
- Now that was a proper breakfast.
- The same tyme was Moses borne, and was a propper [transl. ἀστεῖος (asteîos )] childe in the sight of God, which was norisshed up in his fathers housse thre monethes.
- Though unusual in the Dublin area he knew that it was not by any means unknown for desperadoes who had next to nothing to live on to be abroad waylaying and generally terrorising peaceable pedestrians by placing a pistol at their head in some secluded spot outside the city proper [ …] .
- When I realized I was wearing my shirt inside out, I felt a proper fool.
- (heading) Suitable.
- 副詞 (Adverb)COMmore properSUPmost proper
- より多くの例
- 文の途中で使用される
- He was a shortstop then, and he hit with a crosshanded grip — nobody had taught him the proper way to hold a bat.
- Because of the lack of proper tools he bodges the repair.
- You do not need a proper singing voice to perform the part, but you do have to be uninhibited. Mr. Robertson’s performance was a tour de force of uninhibition.
- 文の初めに使われる
- Proper bud pruning, green harvests where whole clusters are dumped on the ground to bolster final berry concentration, as well as a myriad of intensive practices between budset and harvest.
- 文の終わに使われる
- He's gonna do me, Jarvis. I kid you not, this time he's gonna do me proper.
- 文の途中で使用される
Definition of proper in English Dictionary
- 品詞階層 (Part-of-Speech Hierarchy)
- 形容詞
- 屈曲型による形容詞
- 不規則な形容詞
- Adjectives commonly used as postmodifiers
- Adjectives commonly used as postmodifiers
- 不規則な形容詞
- 屈曲型による形容詞
- 副詞
- 不可比較副詞
- 不可比較副詞
- 形容詞
- en property
- en properly
- en properties
- en propers
- en properer
出典: ウィクショナリー