ลองค้นหาคำในรูปแบบอื่น ๆ เพื่อให้ได้ผลลัพธ์มากขึ้นหรือน้อยลง: otho, -otho- |
มีผลลัพธ์ที่ไม่แสดงผลอยู่ hemothorax | (n) เลือดออกในช่องเยื่อหุ้มปอด อาจเกิดจากอุบัติเหตุซี่โครงหักแล้วมีการฉีกขาดของหลอดเลือดintercostal artery หรือเกิดจากการฉีกขาดของเอออร์ตา |
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| | pothole | (พอท'โฮล) n. รู้สึก, โพรงลึก, หลุมตามถนน |
| foothold | (n) หลักฐาน, ฐานะ, ที่มั่น, จุดมั่น |
| | | | | ตะเข็บ | (n) Pothos scandens Linn., Syn. หวายตะมอย, Thai Definition: ชื่อไม้เถาชนิด Pothos scandens Linn. ในวงศ์ Araceae เกาะติดกับต้นไม้ใหญ่ | ตั้งหลัก | (v) stand firm, See also: gain a firm foothold, pause for breath, Example: พวกเขาถอยมาตั้งหลักห่างจากขอบตลิ่งเจ็ดแปดก้าวแล้ววิ่งหนีอย่างรวดเร็ว, Thai Definition: เตรียมพร้อมที่จะรับมือเหตุการณ์ต่างๆ ที่อาจจะเกิดขึ้น | ตั้งหลัก | (v) stand firm, See also: gain a firm foothold, pause for breath, Example: พวกเขาถอยมาตั้งหลักห่างจากขอบตลิ่งเจ็ดแปดก้าวแล้ววิ่งหนีอย่างรวดเร็ว, Thai Definition: เตรียมพร้อมที่จะรับมือเหตุการณ์ต่างๆ ที่อาจจะเกิดขึ้น | ยโสธร | (n) Yasothon, Syn. จังหวัดยโสธร, Example: จังหวัดยโสธรมีสถานที่ท่องเที่ยวมากมาย, Thai Definition: จังหวัดในภาคตะวันออกเฉียงเหนือของประเทศไทย |
| หูน้ำหนวก | [hū nāmnūak] (n, exp) EN: otorrhea FR: othorrée [ f ] | จังหวัดยโสธร | [Jangwat Yasōthøn] (n, prop) EN: Yasothon province FR: province de Yasothon [ f ] | แมงกินลิ้น | [maēng kin lin] (n, exp) EN: Tongue eating louse ; Cymothoa exigua FR: Cymothoa exigua | พลูด่าง | [phlū dāng] (n, exp) EN: Devil's iIvy ; Golden pothos ; Hunter's-robe | ประเทศเลโซโท | [Prathēt Lēsōthō] (n, exp) EN: Lesotho | ตะเข็บ | [takep] (n) EN: Pothos scandens Linn. | ยโสธร | [Yasōthøn] (n, prop) EN: Yasothon (Northeast) FR: Yasothon (Nord-Est) |
| | | basotho | (n) a member of a subgroup of people who inhabit Lesotho | boothose | (n) protective stockings worn with or in place of boots | cistothorus | (n) marsh wrens, Syn. genus Cistothorus | clotho | (n) the Greek goddess of fate who spins the thread of life, Syn. Klotho | foothold | (n) a place providing support for the foot in standing or climbing, Syn. footing | genus leucothoe | (n) American and Asiatic deciduous and evergreen shrubs | genus nothosaurus | (n) a genus of Nothosauria | genus othonna | (n) genus of western African herbs or shrubs | golden pothos | (n) evergreen liana widely cultivated for its variegated foliage, Syn. ivy arum, Epipremnum aureum, pothos, Scindapsus aureus | hemothorax | (n) accumulation of blood in the pleural cavity (the space between the lungs and the walls of the chest), Syn. haemothorax | hydrothorax | (n) accumulation of fluid in the pleural cavity (the space between the lungs and the walls of the chest) often resulting from disease of the heart or kidneys | knothole | (n) a hole in a board where a knot came out | lesotho | (n) a landlocked constitutional monarchy in southern Africa; achieved independence from the United Kingdom in 1966, Syn. Kingdom of Lesotho, Basutoland | lesotho monetary unit | (n) monetary unit in Lesotho | leucothoe | (n) any plant of the genus Leucothoe; grown for their beautiful white flowers; glossy foliage contains a poisonous substance similar to that found in genus Kalmia | nothofagus | (n) beeches of temperate southern hemisphere except Africa: southern beech, Syn. genus Nothofagus | nothosaur | (n) extinct marine reptile with longer more slender limbs than plesiosaurs and less completely modified for swimming | nothosauria | (n) a suborder of Sauropterygia, Syn. suborder Nothosauria | othonna | (n) a South African plant of the genus Othonna having smooth often fleshy leaves and heads of yellow flowers | pilothouse | (n) an enclosed compartment from which a vessel can be navigated, Syn. wheelhouse | pneumothorax | (n) abnormal presence of air in the pleural cavity resulting in the collapse of the lung; may be spontaneous (due to injury to the chest) or induced (as a treatment for tuberculosis) | potholder | (n) an insulated pad for holding hot pots | pothole | (n) a pit or hole produced by wear or weathering (especially in a road surface), Syn. chuckhole | potholer | (n) a person who explores caves, Syn. spelunker, spelaeologist, speleologist | pothook | (n) an S-shaped hook to suspend a pot over a fire | pothos | (n) any of various tropical lianas of the genus Scindapsus | prothorax | (n) the anterior part of an insect's thorax; bears the first pair of legs | sesotho | (n) the dialect of Sotho spoken by the Basotho; an official language of Lesotho, Syn. Basuto | sotho | (n) a member of the Bantu people who inhabit Botswana, Lesotho, and northern South Africa and who speak the Sotho languages | sotho | (n) any of the mutually intelligible southern Bantu languages of the Sotho in Botswana and South Africa and Lesotho | sotho | (adj) of or relating to any of the group of Sotho languages | thryothorus | (n) Carolina wrens, Syn. genus Thryothorus | beachhead | (n) an initial accomplishment that opens the way for further developments, Syn. foothold | black beech | (n) New Zealand forest tree, Syn. Nothofagus solanderi | bridgehead | (n) an area in hostile territory that has been captured and is held awaiting further troops and supplies, Syn. foothold | carolina wren | (n) large United States wren with a musical call, Syn. Thryothorus ludovicianus | coigue | (n) Chilean evergreen whose leafy boughs are used for thatching, Syn. Nothofagus dombeyi | conservatory | (n) a greenhouse in which plants are arranged in a pleasing manner, Syn. indoor garden, hothouse | dog laurel | (n) fast-growing evergreen shrub of southeastern United States having arching interlaced branches and racemes of white flowers, Syn. Leucothoe fontanesiana, Leucothoe editorum, dog hobble, switch-ivy | hard beech | (n) tall New Zealand tree yielding very hard wood, Syn. Nothofagus truncata | long-billed marsh wren | (n) American wren that inhabits tall reed beds, Syn. Cistothorus palustris | maseru | (n) the capital of Lesotho; located in northwestern Lesotho, Syn. capital of Lesotho | myrtle beech | (n) large evergreen tree of Tasmania, Syn. Nothofagus cuninghamii | otto i | (n) King of the Germans and Holy Roman Emperor (912-973), Syn. Otto the Great, Otho I | public house | (n) tavern consisting of a building with a bar and public rooms; often provides light meals, Syn. saloon, pub, taphouse, pothouse, gin mill | rauli beech | (n) large Chilean timber tree yielding coarse lumber, Syn. Nothofagus procera | roble beech | (n) tall deciduous South American tree, Syn. Nothofagus obliqua | scindapsus | (n) evergreen climbers with adhesive adventitious roots; southeastern Asia and Brazil, Syn. genus Pothos, genus Scindapsus | sedge wren | (n) small American wren inhabiting wet sedgy meadows, Syn. Cistothorus platensis, short-billed marsh wren | silver beech | (n) New Zealand beech with usually pale silvery bark, Syn. Nothofagus menziesii |
| Abdominothoracic | a. Relating to the abdomen and the thorax, or chest. [ 1913 Webster ] | Boothose | n. 1. Stocking hose, or spatterdashes, in lieu of boots. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ] 2. Hose made to be worn with boots, as by travelers on horseback. Sir W. Scott. [ 1913 Webster ] | Cephalothorax | n. [ Cephalo- + thorax. ] (Zool.) The anterior portion of any one of the Arachnida and higher Crustacea, consisting of the united head and thorax. [ 1913 Webster ] | Endothorax | n. [ Endo- + thorax. ] (Zoöl.) An internal process of the sternal plates in the thorax of insects. [ 1913 Webster ] | Entothorax | n. [ Ento- + thorax. ] (Zoöl.) See Endothorax. [ 1913 Webster ] | Foothold | n. A holding with the feet; firm standing; that on which one may tread or rest securely; footing. L'Estrange. [ 1913 Webster ] | Foothook | n. (Naut.) See Futtock. [ 1913 Webster ] | Foothot | adv. Hastily; immediately; instantly; on the spot; hotfoot. Gower. [ 1913 Webster ] Custance have they taken anon, foothot. Chaucer. [ 1913 Webster ] | Haematothorax | n. Same as Hemothorax. [ 1913 Webster ] | Hemothorax | n. [ NL. See Hemo-, and Thorax. ] (Med.) An effusion of blood into the cavity of the pleura. [ 1913 Webster ] | Hothouse | n. 1. A house kept warm to shelter tender plants and shrubs from the cold air; a place in which the plants of warmer climates may be reared, and fruits ripened. [ 1913 Webster ] 2. A bagnio, or bathing house. [ Obs. ] Shak. [ 1913 Webster ] 3. A brothel; a bagnio. [ Obs. ] B. Jonson. [ 1913 Webster ] 4. (Pottery) A heated room for drying green ware. [ 1913 Webster ] | Hydrothorax | n. [ Hydro-, 1 + thorax. ] (Med.) An accumulation of serous fluid in the cavity of the chest. [ 1913 Webster ] | Mesothoracic | a. (Zool.) Of or pertaining to the mesothorax. [ 1913 Webster ] | Mesothorax | n. [ Meso- + thorax: cf. F. mésothorax. ] (Zool.) The middle segment of the thorax in insects. See Illust. of Coleoptera. [ 1913 Webster ] | Mesothorium | n. [ NL.; meso- + thorium. ] (Chem.) a radioactive isotope of radium (radium-228) with a half-life of 5.8 years. Also called mesothorium-1 or mesothorium I to distinguish it from a subsequent decay product, mesothorium II (actinium-228). It was discovered in 1907 by Otto Hahn as a decay product of thorium (produced by decay of thorium-232). Mesothorium-1 (radium-228) in turn produces actinium-228 (mesothorium-2) as the first product of its radioactive decay, and the actinium-228 in turn decays quickly (half-life of 6 hours) to thorium-228 (which is also called radiothorium; the thorium-228 has a half-life of 1.91 years, shorter than that of the radium-228). It was discovered and named before full recognition of the nature of isotopes of the elements, and was distinguished from other variants of radium by its half-life and mode of production and decay. It was also cheaper to prepare than other short-lived radium isotopes, and was thus sold commercially, for use, e.g. in making watch dials readable in the dark by painting the hands and hour marks with a self-luminous paint containing the radioactive substance; it is therefore often referred to (e.g. in regulatory legislation) as though distinct from radium. It was one of the isotopes believed responsible for radiation-induced diseases observed in industrial workers who painted radium on watch dials in the late 1950's and early 1960's. The primary isotope of radium (radium-226) has a half-life of 1620 years, and these isotopes with shorter half-lives proved difficult to isolate and study for the purpose of finding the cause of such diseases. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC ] | Nothofagus | prop. n. A genus of beeches of temperate southern hemisphere except Africa; the southern beech. Syn. -- genus Nothofagus. [ WordNet 1.5 ] | nothosaur | n. An extinct marine reptile with longer more slender limbs than plesiosaurs and less completely modified for swimming. [ WordNet 1.5 ] | octothorpe | , n. [ octo- eight + thorp Etymology of thorp uncertain. (ca. 1965). See quotes below. Possibly derived from octalthorpe or octotherp (once used by the Bell System?). ] A typographic symbol (#) having two vertical lines intersected by two horizontal lines. It is also called the crosshatch, hash, numeral sign and number sign; in the U. S. it is commonly called the pound sign, especially to designate the symbol as used on digital telephone dials, but this can be confusing to Europeans who think of the pound sign as the symbol for the British pound. It is commonly used as a symbol for the word number; as in #36 (meaning: number thirty-six). [ PJC ] For the following explanation, I am indebted to Michael Quinion, whose World Wide Words web site (www.quinion.com/words) is a fascinating and invaluable resource for anyone interested in words and their origins. Anyone who has ever used a touch-tone telephone has seen the octothorpe. It's that little tic-tac-toe symbol in the lower right corner of the keypad, right across from the asterisk (which the telco folks, in their infinite wisdom, insist on calling a "star"). According to a Bell Laboratories engineer named Ralph Carlsen, the octothorpe and asterisk keys were developed in the early 1960s and originally intended to be used only to access computer systems via a telephone line. The octothorpe symbol itself had already existed for many years, although it was usually called a "pound sign" or "number sign" because it was often used in commerce to designate weight or quantity. According to Ralph Carlsen, a fellow Bell Labs engineer named Don MacPherson invented the term "octothorpe" when faced with the task of explaining the new touch-tone phones to corporate users. MacPherson chose "octo" (Latin for "eight") because there were eight points on the symbol. "Thorpe" is indeed an Old Norse word meaning "village," often found in the names of English towns, but that was evidently not the source in this case. According to Carlsen, "thorpe" was chosen because at the time MacPherson was involved in a campaign pressing for the return of legendary athlete Jim Thorpe's Olympic medals from Sweden.. Word Detective (http://www.word-detective.com/072999.html#octothorpe [ accessed 20090708 ] [ PJC ] octothorp Otherwise known as the numeral sign. It has also been used as a symbol for the pound avoirdupois, but this usage is now archaic. In cartography, it is also a symbol for village: eight fields around a central square, and this is the source of its name. Octothorp means eight fields. Robert Bringhurst (The Elements of Typographic Style (2d edition, 1996), Hartley & Marks, Publishers, Point Roberts, WA; Vancouver, BC, Canada, p. 282) [ Joel Neely ]Variants: octothorp | othonna | n. A South African plant of the genus Othonna having smooth often fleshy leaves and heads of yellow flowers. [ WordNet 1.5 ] | Pleurothotonus | ‖n. [ NL., fr. Gr. pleyro`qen from the side + to`nos a stretching. ] (Med.) A species of tetanus, in which the body is curved laterally. Quain. Dunglison. [ 1913 Webster ] | Pneumatothorax | n. [ Pneumato- + thorax. ] (Med.) See Pneumothorax. [ 1913 Webster ] | Pneumothorax | n. [ Gr. &unr_; air + E. thorax. ] (Med.) A condition in which air or other gas is present in the cavity of the chest; -- called also pneumatothorax. [ 1913 Webster ] | Pothole | n. A circular hole formed in the rocky beds of rivers by the grinding action of stones or gravel whirled round by the water in what was at first a natural depression of the rock. [ 1913 Webster ] | Pothook | n. 1. An S-shaped hook on which pots and kettles are hung over an open fire. [ 1913 Webster ] 2. A written character curved like a pothook; (pl.) a scrawled writing. “I long to be spelling her Arabic scrawls and pothooks.” Dryden. [ 1913 Webster ] | Pothouse | n. An alehouse. T. Warton. [ 1913 Webster ] | Prothonotaryship | n. Office of a prothonotary. [ 1913 Webster ] | Prothoracic | a. (Zool.) Of or pertaining to the prothorax. [ 1913 Webster ] | Prothorax | n. [ Pref. pro- + thorax. ] (Zool.) The first or anterior segment of the thorax in insects. See Illusts. of Butterfly and Coleoptera. [ 1913 Webster ] | Protonotary | { or , n.; pl. -ries [ LL. protonotarius, fr. Gr. prw^tos first + L. notarius a shorthand writer, a scribe: cf. F. protonotaire. ] 1. A chief notary or clerk. “ My private prothonotary.” Herrick. [ 1913 Webster ] 2. Formerly, a chief clerk in the Court of King's Bench and in the Court of Common Pleas, now superseded by the master. [ Eng. ] Wharton. Burrill. [ 1913 Webster ] 3. A register or chief clerk of a court in certain States of the United States. [ 1913 Webster ] 4. (R. C. Ch.) Formerly, one who had the charge of writing the acts of the martyrs, and the circumstances of their death; now, one of twelve persons, constituting a college in the Roman Curia, whose office is to register pontifical acts and to make and preserve the official record of beatifications. [ 1913 Webster ] 5. (Gr. Ch.) The chief secretary of the patriarch of Constantinople. [ 1913 Webster ] Prothonotary warbler (Zool.), a small American warbler (Protonotaria citrea). The general color is golden yellow, the back is olivaceous, the rump and tail are ash-color, several outer tail feathers are partly white. [ 1913 Webster ] Variants: Prothonotary | Pyopneumothorax | n. [ Gr. &unr_; pus + E. pneumothorax. ] (Med.) Accumulation of air, or other gas, and of pus, in the pleural cavity. [ 1913 Webster ] | Pyrothonide | n. [ Pyro- + Gr. &unr_; linen. ] (Med.) A kind of empyreumatic oil produced by the combustion of textures of hemp, linen, or cotton in a copper vessel, -- formerly used as a remedial agent. Dunglison. [ 1913 Webster ] | radiothorium | n. (Chem.) an earlier name for the thorium isotope thorium-228, given by its discoverer Otto Hahn. It is a radioactive substance formed as one of series of products in the chain of radioactive decay of thorium. Its immediate predecessor in the chain is Actinium-228, and it decays by alpha emission to radium-224 with a half-life of 1.91 years. The name radiothorium was given prior to the full understanding of the nature of isotopes of elements. [ PJC ] |
| 立足点 | [lì zú diǎn, ㄌㄧˋ ㄗㄨˊ ㄉㄧㄢˇ, 立 足 点 / 立 足 點] foothold #32,243 [Add to Longdo] | 坑洼 | [kēng wā, ㄎㄥ ㄨㄚ, 坑 洼 / 坑 窪] pothole; bump in road #51,535 [Add to Longdo] | 莱索托 | [Lái suǒ tuō, ㄌㄞˊ ㄙㄨㄛˇ ㄊㄨㄛ, 莱 索 托 / 萊 索 托] Lesotho #70,378 [Add to Longdo] | 马塞卢 | [Mǎ sài lú, ㄇㄚˇ ㄙㄞˋ ㄌㄨˊ, 马 塞 卢 / 馬 塞 盧] Maseru (capital of Lesotho) #234,013 [Add to Longdo] | 操舵室 | [cāo duō shì, ㄘㄠ ㄉㄨㄛ ㄕˋ, 操 舵 室] pilothouse [Add to Longdo] | 莱齐耶三世 | [Lái qí yē Sān shì, ㄌㄞˊ ㄑㄧˊ ㄧㄝ ㄙㄢ ㄕˋ, 莱 齐 耶 三 世 / 萊 齊 耶 三 世] Letsie III of Lesotho [Add to Longdo] |
| | 温室 | [おんしつ, onshitsu] (n) greenhouse; hothouse; conservatory; glasshouse; (P) #18,538 [Add to Longdo] | 鱓 | [うつぼ;ウツボ, utsubo ; utsubo] (n) (uk) moray (eel) (Gymnothorax kidako); muraenid [Add to Longdo] | ウオノエ科;魚の餌科 | [ウオノエか(ウオノエ科);うおのえか(魚の餌科), uonoe ka ( uonoe ka ); uonoeka ( sakana no esa ka )] (n) Cymothoidae (family of isopods) [Add to Longdo] | クロソイド | [kurosoido] (n) clothoid [Add to Longdo] | ケサガケベラ | [kesagakebera] (n) splitlevel hogfish (Bodianus mesothorax); mesothorax hogfish; eclipse pigfish [Add to Longdo] | ゴマウツボ | [gomautsubo] (n) yellow margin moray eel (Gymnothorax flavimarginatus) [Add to Longdo] | ポトス | [potosu] (n) pothos; devil's ivy (species of arum, Epipremnum aureum) [Add to Longdo] | レソト | [resoto] (n) Lesotho [Add to Longdo] | ワカウツボ;ハナビラウツボ | [wakautsubo ; hanabirautsubo] (n) whitemouth moray eel (Gymnothorax meleagris, was Gymnothorax chlorostigma) [Add to Longdo] | 気胸 | [ききょう, kikyou] (n) pneumothorax; artificial pneumothorax [Add to Longdo] | 御姫様;お姫様 | [おひめさま, ohimesama] (n) spoiled girl; hothouse flower; princess [Add to Longdo] | 室咲き | [むろざき, murozaki] (n) hothouse flower cultivation [Add to Longdo] | 節穴;ふし穴 | [ふしあな, fushiana] (n) (1) knothole; peep-hole; (2) bad eyes [Add to Longdo] | 前胸腺 | [ぜんきょうせん, zenkyousen] (n) prothoracic gland [Add to Longdo] | 前胸腺ホルモン | [ぜんきょうせんホルモン, zenkyousen horumon] (n) prothoracic gland hormone [Add to Longdo] | 操舵室 | [そうだしつ, soudashitsu] (n) pilothouse [Add to Longdo] | 足掛かり(P);足掛り;足がかり | [あしがかり, ashigakari] (n) foothold; (P) [Add to Longdo] | 足掛け;足かけ;足掛 | [あしかけ, ashikake] (n) (1) leg trip (in sumo, judo, etc.); (2) foothold; pedal; (n-adv) (3) (See 丸・まる・2) nearly (used to estimate a period of time by rounding up incomplete units) [Add to Longdo] | 足場 | [あしば, ashiba] (n) scaffold; footing; foothold; (P) [Add to Longdo] | 足溜り | [あしだまり, ashidamari] (n) base of operations; foothold [Add to Longdo] | 地歩 | [ちほ, chiho] (n) one's stand; foothold; position [Add to Longdo] | 頭胸部 | [とうきょうぶ, toukyoubu] (n) cephalothorax [Add to Longdo] | 鍋つかみ;鍋掴み | [なべつかみ, nabetsukami] (n) potholder; oven glove [Add to Longdo] | 乳母日傘 | [おんばひがさ;おんばひからかさ, onbahigasa ; onbahikarakasa] (exp) (bringing up a child) with greatest care pampering (him, her) with material comforts of a rich family; (being brought up) in a hothouse atmosphere [Add to Longdo] | 膿胸 | [のうきょう, noukyou] (n, adj-no) pyothorax [Add to Longdo] | 嚏の木 | [はなひりのき;ハナヒリノキ, hanahirinoki ; hanahirinoki] (n) (uk) Leucothoe grayana (species of ericaceous plant) [Add to Longdo] | 甌穴 | [おうけつ;かめあな, ouketsu ; kameana] (n) pothole (circular hole bored deep in a riverbed by stones rotating in an eddy) [Add to Longdo] |
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