English-Thai Dictionary
commune
N คนที่ อยู่ร่วม กัน เป็น สังคม เดียวกัน kon-ti-yu-ruam-kan-pen-sang-khom-diao-kan
commune
VI คุย กัน อย่างสนิทสนม kui-kan-yang-sa-nid-sa-nom
commune together
PHRV พูดคุย หรือ แลก เปลี่ยนความคิด กัน อย่างสนิทสนม พูดคุย กัน อย่างใกล้ชิด pud-kui-rue-laek-pian-kwam-kid-kan-yang-sa-nid-sa-nom
commune with
PHRV พูด หรือ คิด อย่างสนิทสนม กับ phud-rue-kid-yang-sa-nid-sa-nom-kab
commune with
PHRV ใคร่ครวญ ไตร่ตรอง คิด พิจารณา kai-krun
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
COMMUNE
v.i. 1. To converse; to talk together familiarly; to impart sentiments mutually, in private or familiar discourse; followed by with before the person.
And there will I meet and commune with thee. Exodus 25:22.
2. To have intercourse in contemplation or meditation.
Commune with your own heart on your bed. Psalm 4:4.
3. To partake of the sacrament or Lords supper; to receive the communion; a common use of the word in America, as it is in the Welsh.
COMMUNE
n.A small territorial district in France--one of the subordinate divisions of the country introduced in the late revolution. Communibus annis, one year with another; on an average.
Communibus locis, one place with another; on a medium.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
COMMUNE
Com *mune ", v. i. [imp. & p. p. Communed; p. pr. & vb. n. Communing. ]Etym: [OF. communier, fr. L. communicare to communicate, fr. communis common. See Common, and cf. Communicate. ]
1. To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. I would commune with you of such things That want no ear but yours. Shak.
2. To receive the communion; to partake of the eucharist or Lord's supper. To commune under both kinds. Bp. Burnet. To commune with one's self or one's heart, to think; to reflect; to meditate.
COMMUNE
COMMUNE Com "mune, n.
Defn: Communion; sympathetic intercourse or conversation between friends. For days of happy commune dead. Tennyson.
COMMUNE
Com "mune, n. Etym: [F., fr. commun. See Common. ]
1. The commonalty; the common people. [Obs. ] Chaucer. In this struggle -- to use the technical words of the time -- of the "commune ", the general mass of the inhabitants, against the "prudhommes " or "wiser " few. J. R. Green.
2. A small terrotorial district in France under the government of a mayor and municipal council; also, the inhabitants, or the government, of such a district. See Arrondissement.
3. Absolute municipal self-government. The Commune of Paris, or The Commune (a ) The government established in Paris (1792 -94 ) by a usurpation of supreme power on the part of representatives chosen by the communes; the period of its continuance is known as the "Reign of Terror. " (b ) The revolutionary government, modeled on the commune of 1792, which the communists, so called, attempted to establish in 1871.
New American Oxford Dictionary
commune
com mune 1 |ˈkämˌyo͞on ˈkɑˌmjun | ▶noun 1 a group of people living together and sharing possessions and responsibilities. • a communal settlement in a communist country. 2 the smallest French territorial division for administrative purposes. • a similar division elsewhere. 3 (the Commune ) the group that seized the municipal government of Paris in the French Revolution and played a leading part in the Reign of Terror until suppressed in 1794. • (also the Paris Commune ) the municipal government organized on communalistic principles elected in Paris in 1871. It was soon brutally suppressed by government troops. ORIGIN late 17th cent. ( sense 2 ): from French, from medieval Latin communia, neuter plural of Latin communis (see common ).
commune
com mune 2 |kəˈmyo͞on kəˈmjun | ▶verb [ no obj. ] 1 (commune with ) share one's intimate thoughts or feelings with (someone or something ), esp. when the exchange is on a spiritual level: the purpose of praying is to commune with God. • feel in close spiritual contact with: he spent an hour communing with nature on the bank of a stream. 2 receive Holy Communion. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French comuner ‘to share, ’ from comun (see common ).
Oxford Dictionary
commune
commune 1 |ˈkɒmjuːn | ▶noun 1 a group of people living together and sharing possessions and responsibilities. • a communal settlement in a communist country. 2 the smallest French territorial division for administrative purposes. • a territorial division similar to a French commune in other countries. 3 (the Commune ) the group which seized the municipal government of Paris in the French Revolution and played a leading part in the Reign of Terror until suppressed in 1794. • (also the Paris Commune ) the municipal government organized on communalistic principles that was elected in Paris in 1871. It was soon brutally suppressed by government troops. ORIGIN late 17th cent. (in sense 2 ): from French, from medieval Latin communia, neuter plural of Latin communis (see common ).
commune
commune 2 |kəˈmjuːn | ▶verb [ no obj. ] (commune with ) share one's intimate thoughts or feelings with (someone ), especially on a spiritual level: the purpose of praying is to commune with God. • feel in close spiritual contact with: he spent an hour communing with nature on the bank of a stream. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French comuner ‘to share ’, from comun (see common ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
commune
commune noun she lives in a commune: collective, cooperative, communal settlement, kibbutz. ▶verb 1 a desire to commune with family and friends: communicate, speak, talk, converse, interface. 2 she likes to commune with nature: empathize with, identify with, have a rapport with, feel at one with; relate to, feel close to.
Oxford Thesaurus
commune
commune noun |(stress on the first syllable ) |she was brought up in a commune in Vancouver: collective, cooperative, co-op, community, communal settlement, kibbutz, fellowship. ▶verb |(stress on the second syllable ) | 1 the purpose of praying is to commune with God: communicate, speak, talk, converse, have a tête -à-tête, confer; be in touch, be in contact, interface. 2 spare half an hour each day to commune with nature: empathize, have a rapport, feel in close touch; feel at one, feel togetherness, identify, relate to, relate spiritually to, feel close to.
Duden Dictionary
Commune Sanctorum
Com mu ne Sanc to rum Substantiv, Neutrum , das |Comm u ne Sanct o rum |das Commune Sanctorum; Genitiv: des Commune Sanctorum lateinisch ; »das den Heiligen Gemeinsame «Sammlung von Mess- und Breviergebeten in der katholischen Liturgie für die Heiligenfeste, die keine [vollständigen ] Texte besitzen
French Dictionary
commune
commune n. f. nom féminin 1 En France, subdivision administrative d ’une municipalité. 2 Terrain utilisé en commun pour le pâturage, la culture ou d ’autres usages (GDT ). Note Technique Selon le GDT, la commune a été instituée sous le régime seigneurial et il en subsiste encore quelques-unes au Québec. LOCUTION Chambre des communes. Assemblée nationale, dans un régime parlementaire britannique. FORME FAUTIVE commune. Anglicisme au sens de communauté.
communément
communément adv. adverbe Habituellement. : Cet outil, communément nommé marteau. SYNONYME couramment ; généralement .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
commune
com mune 1 /kəmjúːn /動詞 自動詞 1 ⦅かたく ⦆ «…と » (精神的に )親しく語る [交わる ] «with » ▸ commune with nature 自然と親しむ ▸ commune with the dead 死者と話す 2 ⦅米 ⦆〘キリスト教 〙聖餐 (せいさん )にあずかる, 聖体を拝領する .名詞 =communion .
commune
com mune 2 /kɑ́mjuːn |kɔ́m -/名詞 C 1 (ヒッピー 宗教団体などの )コミューン, 共同生活の場 .2 コミューン 〘フランス ベルギーなどの最小行政区である自治体 〙.3 (共産主義的 )共同体 ; (中国などの )人民公社 .4 〖the C- 〗パリコミューン (the Commune of Paris , the Paris Commune ) 〘1792 --94年のパリの革命政府; 1871年3 --5月パリを支配した共産主義的革命政府 〙.