22 ผลลัพธ์ สำหรับ -crip-
/คริ ผึ/     /K R IH1 P/     /krˈɪp/
ฝึกออกเสียง
หรือค้นหา: -crip-, *crip*

ตัวอย่างประโยคจาก Open Subtitles
**ระวัง คำแปลอาจมีข้อผิดพลาด**
Three years ago, a local kid named Derek Vinyard... was sent up for murdering a couple of Crips... who were trying to jack his car. เมื่อสามปีที่แล้ว เด็กในท้องถิ่น ชื่อเดเร็ค วินยาร์ด์... ถูกส่งเข้าคุกในข้อหาฆ่า ขโมยสองสามคน... ซึ่งกำลังจะลักรถของเขา American History X (1998)
You can stay here together and have fun. I bought crips and soft drinks. คืนนี้ลูกต้องอยู่บ้านกัน \ แม่ซื้อมันฝรั่งกับเครื่องดื่มไว้ให้แล้ว Show Me Love (1998)
Have to eat the crips or she'll know we've been out. กินมันฝรั่งน่ะสิ \ เดี๋ยวแม่จะรู้ว่าเราออกไปข้างนอก Show Me Love (1998)
You're no longer a Blood, no longer a Crip, no longer an esé. ที่นี่คือถิ่นของพวกคุณ ไม่ใช่แก๊งบลัด ไม่ใช่แก๊งคริพ หรือแก๊งไหนๆ Gridiron Gang (2006)
The man who sold the Dragon his fire, stole it back, and sold it again to the Crips. ชายคนนั้น ที่ขายมังกรไฟของเขา ขโมยกลับ และขายมันอีกครั้ง เพื่อ Crips Balls of Fury (2007)
When you wrote "hangin' with a crip" ตอนคุณเขียน "Hangin' with a crip" Never Been Kissed (2010)
What with being a crip and all. ไหนจะทั้งพิการอะไรอีก Prom-asaurus (2012)

ตัวอย่างประโยคจาก Tanaka JP-EN Corpus
cripOld and crippled, he had courage enough to do the work.
cripThe Tokaido Line was crippled by the typhoon.

CMU Pronouncing Dictionary
crip
 /K R IH1 P/
/คริ ผึ/
/krˈɪp/

WordNet (3.0)
cripple(n) someone who is unable to walk normally because of an injury or disability to the legs or back
cripple(v) deprive of strength or efficiency; make useless or worthless, Syn. stultify, Example: This measure crippled our efforts; Their behavior stultified the boss's hard work
cripple(v) deprive of the use of a limb, especially a leg, Syn. lame, Example: The accident has crippled her for life

Collaborative International Dictionary (GCIDE)
Cripple

n. [ Local. U. S. ] (a) Swampy or low wet ground, often covered with brush or with thickets; bog.

The flats or cripple land lying between high- and low-water lines, and over which the waters of the stream ordinarily come and go. Pennsylvania Law Reports.

(b) A rocky shallow in a stream; -- a lumberman's term. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]

Cripple

a. Lame; halting. [ R. ] “The cripple, tardy-gaited night.” Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]

Cripple

v. t. [ imp. & p. p. Crippled p. pr. & vb. n. Crippling ] 1. To deprive of the use of a limb, particularly of a leg or foot; to lame. [ 1913 Webster ]

He had crippled the joints of the noble child. Sir W. Scott. [ 1913 Webster ]

2. To deprive of strength, activity, or capability for service or use; to disable; to deprive of resources; as, to be financially crippled. [ 1913 Webster ]

More serious embarrassments . . . were crippling the energy of the settlement in the Bay. Palfrey. [ 1913 Webster ]

An incumbrance which would permanently cripple the body politic. Macaulay. [ 1913 Webster ]

Cripple

n. [ OE. cripel, crepel, crupel, AS. crypel (akin to D. kreuple, G. krüppel, Dan. kröbling, Icel. kryppill), prop., one that can not walk, but must creep, fr. AS. creópan to creep. See Creep. ] One who creeps, halts, or limps; one who has lost, or never had, the use of a limb or limbs; a lame person; hence, one who is partially disabled. [ 1913 Webster ]

I am a cripple in my limbs; but what decays are in my mind, the reader must determine. Dryden. [ 1913 Webster ]

Crippled

a. Lamed; lame; disabled; impeded. “The crippled crone.” Longfellow. [ 1913 Webster ]

Crippleness

n. Lameness. [ R. ] Johnson. [ 1913 Webster ]

Crippler

n. A wooden tool used in graining leather. Knight. [ 1913 Webster ]

Crippling

n. Spars or timbers set up as a support against the side of a building. [ 1913 Webster ]

Cripply

a. Lame; disabled; in a crippled condition. [ R. ] Mrs. Trollope. [ 1913 Webster ]


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