English-Thai Dictionary
camel
N อูฐ aud
cameleer
N คน ขี่ อูฐ camel driver kon-ki-aud
camelhair
N ผ้า ที่ ทำ จากข นอูฐ มี สีน้ำตาล อ่อน camel's hair pha-ti-tham-jak-kon-aud-me se-nam-tan-oon
camellia
N ไม้พุ่มช นิดหนึ่ง มีด อก สี ขาว สีแดง หรือ สีชมพู mai-phum-cha-nid-nueng-mee-dok-se-khao-se-daeng-rue-se-chom-phu
camelopard
N ยีราฟ giraffe ye-raf
camelot
N สถานที่ ตั้ง ของ พระราชวัง ของ กลุ่ม อัศวิน โต๊ะกลม ของ กษัตริย์ อา เธอ ร์
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CAMEL
n. 1. A large quadruped used in Asia and Africa for carrying burdens, and for riders. As genus, the camel belongs to the order of Pecora. The characteristics are; it has no horns; it has six fore teeth in the under jaw; the canine teeth are wide set, three in the upper and two in the lower jaw; and there is a fissure in the upper lip. The dromedary of Arabian camel, has one bunch on the back, four callous protuberances on the fore legs and two on the hind legs. The Bactrian camel has two bunches on the back. The Llama of South America is a smaller animal, with a smooth back, small head, fine black eyes, and very long neck. The Pacos or sheep of Chili his no bunch. Camels constitute the riches of an Arabian, without which he could neither subsist, carry on trade nor travel over sandy desarts. Their milk is his common food. By the camels power of sustaining abstinence rom drink, for many days, and of subsisting on a few coarse shrubs, he is peculiarly fitted for the parched and barren lands of Asia and Africa.
2. In Holland, Camel, [or Kameel, as Coxe writes it, ] is a machine for lifting ships, and bearing them over the Pampus, at the mouth of the river Y, or over other bars. It is also used in other places, and particularly at the dock in Petersburg, to bear vessels over a bar to Cronstadt.
CAMEL-BACKED
a.Having a back like a camel. Cameleon mineral. [See Chameleon. ] A compound of pure potash and black oxyd of manganese, fused together, whose solution in water, at first green, passes spontaneously through the whole series of colored rays to the red; and by the addition of potash, it returns to its original green.
CAMELOPARD
n.[camelus and pardalis.] The giraff, a species constituting the genus Camelopardalis. This animal has two straight horns, without branches, six inches long, covered with hair, truncated at the end and tufted. On the forehead, is a tubercle, two inches high, resembling another horn. The fore legs are not much longer than the hind ones, but the shoulders are of such a vast length, as to render the fore part of the animal much higher than the hind part. The head is like that of a stag; the neck is slender and elegant, furnished with a short mane. The color of the whole animal is a dirty white marked with large broad rusty spots. This animal is found in the central and eastern parts of Africa. It is timid and not fleet.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CAMEL
Cam "el, n. Etym: [Oe. camel, chamel, OF. camel, chamel, F. chameau L.camelus, fr. Gr. gamal, Ar. jamal. Cf. As. camel, fr. L. camelus.]
1. (Zoöl.)
Defn: A large ruminant used in Asia and Africa for carrying burdens and for riding. The camel is remarkable for its ability to go a long time without drinking. Its hoofs are small, and situated at the extremities of the toes, and the weight of the animal rests on the callous. The dromedary (Camelus dromedarius ) has one bunch on the back, while the Bactrian camel (C. Bactrianus ) has two. The llama, alpaca, and vicuña, of South America, belong to a related genus (Auchenia ).
2. (Naut. )
Defn: A watertight structure (as a large box or boxes ) used to assist a vessel in passing over a shoal or bar or in navigating shallow water. By admitting water, the camel or camels may be sunk and attached beneath or at the sides of a vessel, and when the water is pumped out the vessel is lifted. Camel bird (Zoöl.), the ostrich. -- Camel locust (Zoöl.), the mantis. -- Camel's thorn (Bot. ), a low, leguminous shrub (Alhagi maurorum ) of the Arabian desert, from which exudes a sweetish gum, which is one of the substances called manna.
CAMELBACKED; CAMEL-BACKED
CAMELBACKED; CAMEL-BACKED Cam "el *backed `, a.
Defn: Having a back like a camel; humpbacked. Fuller.
CAMELEON
CAMELEON Ca *me "le *on, n.
Defn: See Chaceleon. [Obs. ]
CAMELLIA
Ca *mel "li *a, n. Etym: [NL. ; -- named after Kamel, a Jesuit who is said to have brought it from the East. ] (Bot. )
Defn: An Asiatic genus of small shrubs, often with shining leaves and showy flowers. Camelia Japonica is much cultivated for ornament, and C. Sassanqua and C. Oleifera are grown in China for the oil which is pressed from their seeds. The tea plant is now referred to this genus under the name of Camellia Thea.
CAMELOPARD
Ca *mel "o *pard, n. Etym: [LL. camelopardus, L. camelopardalus,camelopardalis, fr. Gr. camélopard. The camelopard has a neck and head like a camel, and is spotted like a pard. See Camel, and Pard. ] (Zoöl.)
Defn: An African ruminant; the giraffe. See Giraffe.
CAMELOT
CAMELOT Came "lot, n.
Defn: See Camelet. [Obs. ]
CAMELRY
CAMELRY Cam "el *ry, n.
Defn: Troops that are mounted on camels.
CAMELSHAIR
CAMELSHAIR Cam "els *hair `, a.
Defn: Of camel's hair. Camel's-hair pencil, a small brush used by painters in water colors, made of camel's hair or similar materials. -- Camel's-hair shawl. A name often given to a cashmere shawl. See Cashmere shawl under Cashmere.
New American Oxford Dictionary
camel
cam el |ˈkaməl ˈkæməl | ▶noun 1 a large, long-necked ungulate mammal of arid country, with long slender legs, broad cushioned feet, and either one or two humps on the back. Camels can survive for long periods without food or drink, chiefly by using up the fat reserves in their humps. [Genus Camelus, family Camelidae (the camel family ): two species (see Arabian camel, Bactrian camel ). The camel family also includes the llama and its relatives. ] • a fabric made from camel hair. • a light yellowish-brown color like that of camel hair. 2 an apparatus for raising a sunken ship, consisting of one or more watertight chests to provide buoyancy. • a large floating fender used to keep a vessel off the dock. ORIGIN Old English, from Latin camelus, from Greek kamēlos, of Semitic origin.
camelback
cam el back |ˈkaməlˌbak ˈkæməlbæk | ▶noun a back with a hump-shaped curve on a sofa or other piece of furniture: [ as modifier ] : a camelback sofa.
camel cricket
cam el crick et ▶noun a wingless humpbacked insect related to the grasshoppers, typically living in caves or holes. Also called cave cricket. [Family Raphidophoridae: several genera. ]
cameleer
cam el eer |ˌkaməˈli (ə )r ˌkæməˈlɪər | ▶noun a person who controls or rides a camel.
camel hair
cam el hair |ˈkæməl hɛ (ə )r |(also camel's hair ) ▶noun 1 a fabric made from the hair of a camel: [ as modifier ] : a camel-hair coat. 2 [ usu. as modifier ] fine, soft hair from a squirrel's tail, used in artists' brushes.
camelid
cam e lid |kəˈmēlid, ˈkaməlid ˈkæməlɪd | ▶noun Zoology a mammal of the camel family (Camelidae ). ORIGIN late 20th cent.: from modern Latin Camelidae (plural ), from Latin camelus ‘camel, ’ from Greek kamēlos.
camellia
ca mel lia |kəˈmēlyə kəˈmiljə | ▶noun an evergreen eastern Asian shrub related to the tea plant, grown for its showy flowers and shiny leaves. [Genus Camellia, family Theaceae: several species, in particular the common camellia (C. japonica ), which has numerous cultivars and hybrids. ] ORIGIN modern Latin, named by Linnaeus after Joseph Kamel (Latinized as Camellus ), Moravian botanist (1661 –1706 ), who described the flora of Luzon, an island in the Philippines.
Camellia State
Ca mel lia State a nickname for the state of Alabama.
camelopard
ca mel o pard |kəˈmeləˌpärd kəˈmɛləpɑrd | ▶noun archaic a giraffe. ORIGIN late Middle English: via Latin from Greek kamēlopardalis, from kamēlos ‘camel ’ + pardalis (see pard ).
Camelopardalis
Ca mel o par da lis |kəˌmeləˈpärdl -is kəˌmɛləˈpɑrdələs |Astronomy a large but inconspicuous northern constellation (the Giraffe ), between Polaris and Perseus. • (as genitive Camelopardalis ) used with a preceding letter or numeral to designate a star in this constellation: the star Alpha Camelopardalis. ORIGIN via Latin from Greek kamēlopardalis (see camelopard ).
Camelot
Cam e lot |ˈkaməˌlät ˈkæməlɑt | (in Arthurian legend ) the place where King Arthur held his court. • (as noun a Camelot ) a place associated with glittering romance and optimism.
camel spider
cam el spi der ▶noun another term for sun spider.
camel thorn
camel thorn ▶noun either of two spiny leguminous shrubs occurring in arid country. ●Alhagi camelorum (of the Middle East ) and Acacia giraffae (of southern Africa ), family Leguminosae.
Oxford Dictionary
camel
camel |ˈkam (ə )l | ▶noun 1 a large, long-necked ungulate mammal of arid country, with long slender legs, broad cushioned feet, and either one or two humps on the back. Camels can survive for long periods without food or drink, chiefly by using up the fat reserves in their humps. ●Genus Camelus, family Camelidae (the camel family ): two species (see Arabian camel, Bactrian camel ). The camel family also includes the llama and its relatives. • [ mass noun ] a fabric made from camel hair. • [ mass noun ] a yellowish-fawn colour like that of camel hair. 2 an apparatus for raising a sunken ship, consisting of one or more watertight chests to provide buoyancy. ORIGIN Old English, from Latin camelus, from Greek kamēlos, of Semitic origin.
camelback
camel |back |ˈkam (ə )lbak | ▶noun a back with a hump-shaped curve on a sofa or other piece of furniture: [ as modifier ] : a camelback sofa.
camel cricket
camel cricket ▶noun a humpbacked wingless insect related to the grasshoppers, typically living in caves or holes. Also called cave cricket. ●Family Raphidophoridae: several genera.
cameleer
cameleer |ˌkaməˈlɪə | ▶noun a person who controls or rides a camel.
camel hair
camel hair (also camel's hair ) ▶noun [ mass noun ] 1 a fabric made from the hair of a camel: [ as modifier ] : a camel-hair coat. 2 [ usu. as modifier ] fine, soft hair from a squirrel's tail, used in artists' brushes.
camelid
camelid |kəˈmiːlɪd, ˈkaməlɪd | ▶noun Zoology a mammal of the camel family (Camelidae ). ORIGIN late 20th cent.: from modern Latin Camelidae (plural ), from Latin camelus ‘camel ’, from Greek kamēlos.
camellia
camellia |kəˈmiːlɪə, -ˈmɛlɪə | ▶noun an evergreen East Asian shrub related to the tea plant, grown for its showy flowers and shiny leaves. ●Genus Camellia, family Theaceae: several species, in particular the common camellia (C. japonica ). ORIGIN modern Latin, named by Linnaeus after Joseph Kamel (Latinized as Camellus ), Moravian botanist (1661 –1706 ), who described the flora of Luzon.
camelopard
camelopard |ˈkamɪlə (ʊ )pɑːd, kəˈmɛləpɑːd | ▶noun archaic a giraffe. ORIGIN late Middle English: via Latin from Greek kamēlopardalis, from kamēlos ‘camel ’ + pardalis (see pard ).
Camelopardalis
Camelopardalis |kəˌmɛlə (ʊ )ˈpɑːd (ə )lɪs |Astronomy a large but inconspicuous northern constellation (the Giraffe ), between the Pole Star and Perseus. • (as genitive Camelopardalis |kəmɛləˈpɑːd (ə )lɪs |) used with preceding letter or numeral to designate a star in this constellation: the star Alpha Camelopardalis. ORIGIN via Latin from Greek kamēlopardalis (see camelopard ).
Camelot
Camelot |ˈkamɪlɒt | (in Arthurian legend ) the place where King Arthur held his court. • (as noun a Camelot ) a place associated with glittering romance and optimism.
camel spider
camel spider ▶noun another term for sun spider.
camel thorn
camel thorn ▶noun either of two spiny leguminous shrubs occurring in arid country. ●Alhagi camelorum (of the Middle East ) and Acacia giraffae (of southern Africa ), family Leguminosae.
Duden Dictionary
Camelot
Ca me lot , der Kamelott |Camel o t |
French Dictionary
caméléon
caméléon n. m. nom masculin Reptile qui a la faculté de changer de couleur pour se camoufler.
camélia
camélia n. m. nom masculin Arbrisseau cultivé pour ses fleurs qui rappellent la rose. : Des camélias. Note Technique Attention au genre masculin de ce nom: un camélia.
camelot
camelot n. m. et f. nom masculin et féminin Personne qui livre les journaux à domicile. : Pour se faire un peu d ’argent de poche, Catherine est camelot pendant l ’été. Note Technique Ce nom n ’a pas de forme féminine. L ’Office québécois de la langue française propose d ’employer l ’article féminin: une camelot. Prononciation Le e et le t ne se prononcent pas, [kamlo ] Note Orthographique camelo t.
camelote
camelote n. f. nom féminin familier Article de mauvaise qualité. SYNONYME pacotille . Note Orthographique camelo t e.
Spanish Dictionary
camelar
camelar verbo transitivo 1 coloquial Ganarse la voluntad o el favor de una persona adulándola o aparentando tener ciertas cualidades que en realidad no se tienen :intenta camelar a tus padres para que te lo compren .SINÓNIMO engatusar .2 Tratar de enamorar a una persona tratándola de manera delicada y agradable .SINÓNIMO galantear .
camelia
camelia nombre femenino 1 Árbol de hojas perennes, puntiagudas, con lámina oval de color verde oscuro brillante y fruto en forma de cápsula leñosa; puede alcanzar hasta 12 m de altura :la camelia procede de Japón .2 Flor de este árbol, con cinco sépalos verdes y otros cinco con una gama de colores que varía del blanco al rosa oscuro .ETIMOLOGÍA Derivado (s. xix ) creado por el naturalista sueco Carl von Linneo en homenaje a G. J. Kamel , jesuita moravo y botánico (s. xvii ), que la trajo de Indonesia a Europa .
camélido, -da
camélido, -da adjetivo /nombre masculino y femenino [mamífero rumiante ] Que se caracteriza por no tener cuernos y por estar provisto de caninos superiores y tener unos cascos muy anchos :el camello, el dromedario y la llama son camélidos .
camellero, -ra
camellero, -ra nombre masculino y femenino Persona que tiene por oficio cuidar o conducir camellos .
camello, -lla
camello, -lla nombre masculino y femenino 1 Mamífero rumiante de talla elevada y cuerpo voluminoso, pelaje denso y lanoso de color pardo rojizo, cuello muy largo y arqueado, cabeza pequeña, patas largas y delgadas con dos dedos, y dos jorobas de grasa que le permiten resistir mucho tiempo sin alimento ni agua; es herbívoro y habita en las regiones desérticas de Asia; de él se aprovechan la carne, la leche, la piel y el pelo :la domesticación del camello permitió un activo comercio a través de los desiertos mediante caravanas .2 nombre masculino Esp Persona que vende droga en pequeñas cantidades :se ha atrevido a desafiar a una de las muchas redes de camellos que hay en la zona . VÉASE pelo de camello .
camellón
camellón nombre masculino 1 Colomb, CRica, Guat, Méx Camino, paseo o acera central de una avenida o calle ancha, generalmente adornado con árboles y plantas .2 Guat, Méx Espacio, zanja o pared baja con que se separan los dos sentidos de la circulación en una autopista o autovía para impedir el paso de los vehículos al carril contrario .
camelo
camelo nombre masculino coloquial Cosa, en especial palabras, que se hace para engañar o burlarse, parece buena o verdad pero no lo es :si se creyera todos los camelos que el otro le cuenta, andaría listo .
camelote
camelote nombre masculino Tejido fuerte e impermeable, hecho generalmente con lana :antiguamente el camelote se fabricaba con pelo de camello .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
camel
cam el /kǽm (ə )l /名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 C 〘動 〙ラクダ ▸ a Bactrian camel フタコブラクダ ▸ an Arabian camel ヒトコブラクダ (dromedary )2 U 〖種類では 可算 〗淡い黄褐色, ラクダ色 .3 C (船を浮かせる )浮き箱 .4 U (コート用の )ラクダの毛の織物 ; ラクダ色の毛織物 (camel ('s ) hair ).5 C U ⦅商標 ⦆〖C- 〗キャメル 〘米国製タバコ 〙.
camel-hair
c á mel-h à ir 形容詞 〖名詞 の前で 〗ラクダの毛の [でできた ]〈コートなど 〉.