course deutsch
EN







DKurs WCourse
- Course steht für
- Course (Canche), Fluss in Frankreich
- Old Course, schottischer Golfplatz
- Course ist der Nachname von
- Cynthia Course (* 1990), Badmintonspielerin von den Seychellen
- Siehe auch
- Course Landaise
- Cours
- Kurs
- Race Course
FR course 

- SubstantivPLcourses
- A sequence of events.
- The normal course of events seems to be just one damned thing after another.
- The course of true love never did run smooth.
- I need to take a French course.
- We offer seafood as the first course.
- He appointed [ …] the courses of the priests.
- A path that something or someone moves along.
- His illness ran its course.
- The cross-country course passes the canal.
- The ship changed its course 15 degrees towards south.
- A course was plotted to traverse the ocean.
- (nautical) The lowest square sail in a fully rigged mast, often named according to the mast.
- Main course and mainsail are the same thing in a sailing ship.
- (in the plural, courses, obsolete, euphemistic) Menses.
- A row or file of objects.
- On a building that size, two crews could only lay two courses in a day.
- (music) A string on a lute.
- (music) A pair of strings played together in some musical instruments, like the vihuela.
- A sequence of events.
- VerbSGcoursesPRcoursingPT, PPcoursed
- To run or flow (especially of liquids and more particularly blood).
- The oil coursed through the engine.
- Blood pumped around the human body courses throughout all its veins and arteries.
- To run through or over.
- To pursue by tracking or estimating the course taken by one's prey; to follow or chase after.
- To cause to chase after or pursue game.
- to course greyhounds after deer
- To run or flow (especially of liquids and more particularly blood).
- Adverb
- COL Alternative form of of course.
- COL Alternative form of of course.
- Mehr Beispiele
- Wird in der Mitte des Satzes verwendet
- Of course I'm coming. I wouldn't miss it for worlds!
- 'Aeolisms abound in the course of the episode; 'big blow out,' 'the vent of his jacket,' 'windfall when he kicks out,' etc."
- Data on rare TMB anomalies, such as preligamentous and supraligamentous courses of TMB, was recorded from the studies but not included in the meta-analysis.
- In der Endung des Satzes verwendet
- I needed a waiver from the department head to take the course because I didn't technically have the prerequisite courses.
- I was finding college too hard, so I dropped science and switched to an easier course.
- At the king's coronation feast, several subtleties were served between main courses.
- Wird in der Mitte des Satzes verwendet
Definition of course in English Dictionary
- Wortart Hierarchie
- Adverbien
- Unver Adverbien
- Unver Adverbien
- Substantive
- Zählbare Nomen
- Zählbare Nomen
- Verben
- Adverbien
Source: Wiktionary

