can you cut a little more off the top - vertaling naar grieks
Diclib.com
Woordenboek ChatGPT
Voer een woord of zin in in een taal naar keuze 👆
Taal:

Vertaling en analyse van woorden door kunstmatige intelligentie ChatGPT

Op deze pagina kunt u een gedetailleerde analyse krijgen van een woord of zin, geproduceerd met behulp van de beste kunstmatige intelligentietechnologie tot nu toe:

  • hoe het woord wordt gebruikt
  • gebruiksfrequentie
  • het wordt vaker gebruikt in mondelinge of schriftelijke toespraken
  • opties voor woordvertaling
  • Gebruiksvoorbeelden (meerdere zinnen met vertaling)
  • etymologie

can you cut a little more off the top - vertaling naar grieks

RADIO AND LATER TELEVISION COMEDY SHOW
Can You Top This

can you cut a little more off the top      
μπορείτε να κόψετε λίγο περισσότερο πάνω
cut glass         
  • Contemporary Czech cut glass in two colours
  • Czech glass-cutter at work
  • Chandelier in the chapel of [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]], donated in 1732, one of the earliest datable cut glass examples.  The shape follows contemporary brass examples, with glass branches but no "drops"; only the pieces down the stem are cut, mostly with flat facets.<ref>Battie & Cottle, 102</ref>
  • American "brilliant cut" [[punch bowl]] on stand, 1895
  • Montgolfier]]" shape (due to its resemblance to an inverted [[hot air balloon]]),<ref>History</ref> in [[Edinburgh]]
  • Regency]] chandeliers in [[Saltram House]], England
  • [[Waterford Crystal]] factory in 2001
  • engraving]] above, England, late 18th-century
GLASS DECORATED WITH GEOMETRICAL OR REPRESENTATIONAL INCISIONS MADE BY GRINDING AND POLISHING
Cut-glass accent; Cut-glass; Cut crystal
ύαλος επεξεργασμένη, κρύσταλλο
little red riding hood         
  • pp=xxxviii}}</ref>
  • A depiction by [[Gustave Doré]], 1883.
  • ''Red Riding Hood'' by [[George Frederic Watts]]
  • Wilhelm (left) and Jacob Grimm, from an 1855 painting by [[Elisabeth Jerichau-Baumann]]
  • chaperon]] being worn
  • "Little Red Riding Hood", illustrated in a 1927 story anthology
  • Little Red Riding Hood in an illustration by Otto Kubel (1930).
  • Works Progress Administration poster by Kenneth Whitley, 1939
  •  An engraving from the ''Cyclopedia of Wit and Humor''.
  • "The better to see you with": woodcut by [[Walter Crane]]
EUROPEAN FAIRY TALE
Little Red-Cap; Little Red-cap; Little Red Ridinghood; Little Red Cap; History of the Little Red Riding Hood tale; Roodkapje; Little red riding hood; The Little Red Riding Hood; LRRH; Little red riding hood!; Red Riding Hood; Huntsman (Little Red Riding Hood); Saglana Salchak; Little Red Riding-Hood
κοκκινοσκουφίτσα

Definitie

can-can
The can-can is a dance in which women kick their legs in the air to fast music.
...can-can dancers from the Moulin Rouge.
N-SING: oft the N

Wikipedia

Can You Top This?

Can You Top This? was a radio panel game in which comedians told jokes and tried to top one another. The unrehearsed program, sponsored at one point by a papaya-flavored soft drink called Par and later by Colgate-Palmolive, was created by veteran vaudevillian "Senator" Edward Hastings Ford, who claimed he was taking part in a joke session at a New York theatrical club when he conceived the idea. However, the format was quite similar to a prior joke-telling radio series, Stop Me If You've Heard This One (1939–40), which featured Ford and cartoonist Harry Hershfield as panelists. Many jokes involved ethnic humor told in dialect.

Listeners were invited to send in jokes of their own, and an average of 3,000 were submitted per week. Host Peter Donald told the best of these jokes, each one centered on a different topic, while a "laugh meter" took note of the audience reaction on a scale of 0 to 1,000. The "Knights of the Clown Table" – Ford, Hershfield and Joe Laurie Jr. – attempted to outscore the listeners' jokes with some of their own, which sometimes presented an extra challenge as their jokes had to be pertinent to the topic.

Initially, a listener whose joke was read on the program received a guaranteed $2, plus $5 more if the panelists failed to beat it. The prize was later augmented to $11, which was "chopped" by $2 every time the joke was outscored. Those whose jokes were topped by all the panelists received a joke book as a consolation prize. Eventually, audience participants received $10, plus a $5 bonus for each panelist who failed to outscore it with his own joke, for a potential maximum prize of $25. Any ties on the laugh meter between a listener and panelist were broken in the listener's favor. Any submitted joke that earned a perfect 1,000 on the laugh meter was thus guaranteed to win the full $25 for its submitter. Every listener whose joke was used received a phonograph recording of Donald telling it on the air. Those who topped the laugh meter were also sent a "1,000 Club certificate." The panelists claimed that together they knew over 15,000 jokes.

Can You Top This? debuted on New York's WOR radio in 1940. NBC picked up the show in 1942, and it continued 12 more years. Hosts at one time or another included, Ward Wilson, Roger Bower and Dennis James, Wilson taking over from original host Bower in 1945. When Ford or Donald was unavailable, Wilson filled in on the panel or as the teller of listener jokes, so James acted as emcee.

Laurie died in 1954. In the show's later years, his place on the panel was filled by others, including former governor of New Jersey Harold Hoffman., Fred Hillebrand, and Bert Lytell. In 1954, Wilson once again told jokes on the panel, with Bower reprising his role as emcee.