drake | (n) เป็ดตัวผู้, Syn. gander, cob |
mandrake | (n) ต้นไม้ล้มลุกชนิดหนึ่งมีพิษ รากมีลักษณะคล้ายคน |
sheldrake | (n) เป็ดยุโรปตัวผู้จำพวก Tadorna มีปากหนาและสีสันสดใส, Syn. shelduck |
drake | (เดรค) n. เป็ดตัวผู้. |
mandrake | (แมน'เดรค) n. ต้นจำพวก Mandragora officinarum มีรากคล้ายคน |
drake | (n) เป็ดตัวผู้ |
mandrake | (n) พรรณไม้ชนิดหนึ่งใช้ทำยา |
Mandrake Root | รากของแมนเดรท [การแพทย์] |
**ระวัง คำแปลอาจมีข้อผิดพลาด**
drake | Perry decided to gain information from Drake. |
drake | Drake earns his living by working for the lawyer. |
เป็ด | (n) duck, See also: drake, duckling, Example: เท้าของเป็ดมีพังผืดสำหรับว่ายน้ำ, Count Unit: ตัว, Thai Definition: ชื่อสัตว์ปีกในวงศ์ Anatidae ปากแบน ตีนแบน ระหว่างนิ้วมีพังผืดยึดติดกันเพื่อสะดวกในการว่ายน้ำ ตัวมีหลายสี เช่น น้ำตาล ขาว เขียว ขนาดเล็กกว่าห่าน ว่ายน้ำเก่ง กินปลา พืชน้ำและสัตว์เล็กๆ |
ขว้างเงินทิ้งน้ำ | [khwāng ngoen thing nām] (xp) EN: play ducks and drakes with money |
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drake | (n) English explorer and admiral who was the first Englishman to circumnavigate the globe and who helped to defeat the Spanish Armada (1540-1596), Syn. Francis Drake, Sir Francis Drake |
drake | (n) adult male of a wild or domestic duck |
ducks and drakes | (n) a game in which a flat stone is bounced along the surface of calm water |
mandrake | (n) a plant of southern Europe and North Africa having purple flowers, yellow fruits and a forked root formerly thought to have magical powers, Syn. Mandragora officinarum, devil's apples |
mandrake root | (n) the root of the mandrake plant; used medicinally or as a narcotic, Syn. mandrake |
sheldrake | (n) Old World gooselike duck slightly larger than a mallard with variegated mostly black-and-white plumage and a red bill |
wood drake | (n) male wood duck |
dragon | (n) a creature of Teutonic mythology; usually represented as breathing fire and having a reptilian body and sometimes wings, Syn. firedrake |
hooded merganser | (n) small North American duck with a high circular crest on the male's head, Syn. hooded sheldrake, Lophodytes cucullatus |
mayapple | (n) North American herb with poisonous root stock and edible though insipid fruit, Syn. wild mandrake, May apple, Podophyllum peltatum |
merganser | (n) large crested fish-eating diving duck having a slender hooked bill with serrated edges, Syn. sheldrake, sawbill, fish duck |
Drake | n. [ Akin to LG. drake, OHG. antrache, anetrecho, G. enterich, Icel. andriki, Dan. andrik, OSw. andrak, andrage, masc., and fr. AS. ened, fem., duck; akin to D. eend, G. ente, Icel. önd, Dan. and, Sw. and, Lith. antis, L. anas, Gr. &unr_; (for &unr_;), and perh. Skr. āti a water fowl. √207. In English the first part of the word was lost. The ending is akin to E. rich. Cf. Gulaund. ] The drake will mount steeple height into the air. Walton. [ 1913 Webster ]
The dark drake fly, good in August. Walton. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Drake | n. [ AS. draca dragon, L. draco. See Dragon. ] Beowulf resolves to kill the drake. J. A. Harrison (Beowulf). [ 1913 Webster ] Two or three shots, made at them by a couple of drakes, made them stagger. Clarendon. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Drake | n. [ Cf. F. dravik, W. drewg, darnel, cockle, etc. ] Wild oats, brome grass, or darnel grass; -- called also |
Drakestone | n. A flat stone so thrown along the surface of water as to skip from point to point before it sinks; also, the sport of so throwing stones; -- sometimes called Internal earthquakes, that, not content with one throe, run along spasmodically, like boys playing at what is called drakestone. De Quincey. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Earthdrake | n. A mythical monster of the early Anglo-Saxon literature; a dragon. W. Spalding. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Firedrake | n. [ AS. f&ymacr_;rdraca; f&ymacr_;r fire + draca a dragon. See Fire, and Drake a dragon. ] [ Obs. ] |
mandrake | n. [ AS. mandragora, L. mandragoras, fr. Gr. And shrieks like mandrakes, torn out of the earth, ☞ The mandrake of Scripture was perhaps the same plant, but proof is wanting. [ 1913 Webster ] |
mandrake root | n. The root of the mandrake plant; used medicinally or as a narcotic; as a substance it is also called |
Sea drake | (Zool.) The pewit gull. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Sheldrake | n. [ Sheld + drake. ] ☞ It has the head and neck greenish black, the breast, sides, and forward part of the back brown, the shoulders and middle of belly black, the speculum green, and the bill and frontal bright red. Called also ☞ The Australian sheldrake (Tadorna radja) has the head, neck, breast, flanks, and wing coverts white, the upper part of the back and a band on the breast deep chestnut, and the back and tail black. The chestnut sheldrake of Australia (Casarca tadornoides) is varied with black and chestnut, and has a dark green head and neck. The ruddy sheldrake, or Braminy duck (Casarca rutila), and the white-winged sheldrake (Casarca leucoptera), are related Asiatic species. [ 1913 Webster ] ☞ The name is also loosely applied to other ducks, as the canvasback, and the shoveler. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Shielddrake | n. (Zool.) A sheldrake. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Skieldrake | |
マンドレーク;マンドレイク | [mandore-ku ; mandoreiku] (n) mandrake [Add to Longdo] |
火竜 | [かりょう, karyou] (n) firedrake [Add to Longdo] |
水切り | [みずきり, mizukiri] (n, vs) (1) drainer; strainer; colander; (2) cutwater; forefoot; flashing; throating; (3) (playing) ducks and drakes; stone skipping; skipping rocks; (4) snipping the stem of a cut flower without raising it out of water [Add to Longdo] |
湯水のように使う | [ゆみずのようにつかう, yumizunoyounitsukau] (exp, v5u) to spend (money) like water; to spend (money) like it grows on trees; to throw around (one's money); to play ducks and drakes with [Add to Longdo] |
飛び石;飛石 | [とびいし, tobiishi] (n) (1) stepping stones; (2) (obsc) (See 水切り・3) stone skipping; ducks and drakes [Add to Longdo] |
月ロケット | [つきろけっと, tsukiroketto] Mondrakete [Add to Longdo] |
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