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English-Thai Dictionary

cess

N การประเมิน  ภาษี  โชคชะตา  ดวง 

 

cessation

N การชะงัก  การ หยุดชะงัก  discontinuance kan-cha-ngak

 

cessation

N การ หยุด  pause kan-yud

 

cession

N การ ยก ให้  ceding kan-yok-hai

 

cession

N สิ่ง ที่ ยก ให้  sing-ti-yok-hai

 

cessionary

A ผู้ ที่ ได้รับ การ ยก ให้  ผู้รับมอบ 

 

cesspit

N บ่อพักน้ำ เสีย  cesspool sink sump bor-pak-nam-sia

 

cesspool

N บ่อพักน้ำ เสีย  cesspit sink sump bor-pak-nam-sia

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

CESS

as a noun, a rate or tax, and as a verb, to rate or lay a tax, is probably a corruption of assess, or from the same root.

 

CESS

v.i.To neglect a legal duty.

 

CESSATION

n. 1. A ceasing; a stop; a rest; the act of discontinuing motion or action of any kind, whether temporary or final.
2. A ceasing or suspension of operation, force or effect; as a cessation of the laws of nature.
A cessation of arms, an armistice or truce, agreed to by the commanders of armies, to give time for a capitulation, or for other purposes.

 

CESSAVIT

n.In law, a writ given by statute, to recover lands, when the tenant or occupier has ceased for two years to perform the service, which constitutes the condition of his tenure, and has not sufficient goods or chattels to be distrained, or the tenant has so inclosed the land that the lord cannot come upon it to distrain.

 

CESSER

n.[See Cess. ] A ceasing; a neglect to perform services or payment for two years. [See Cessavit. ]

 

CESSIBILITY

n.[See Cede and Cession. ] The act of giving way or receding.

 

CESSIBLE

a.[See Cede. ] Giving way; yielding; easy to give way.

 

CESSION

n. 1. The act of giving way; a yielding to force or impulse.
2. A yielding, or surrender, as of property or rights, to another person; particularly, a surrender of conquered territory to its former proprietor or sovereign, by treaty.
3. In the civil law, a voluntary surrender of a persons effects to his creditors, to avoid imprisonment.
4. In ecclesiastical law, the leaving of a benefice without dispensation or being otherwise qualified. When an ecclesiastical person is created a bishop, or when the parson of a parish takes another benefice, without dispensation, the benefices are void by cession, without resignation.

 

CESSIONARY

a.Having surrendered effects; as a cessionary bankrupt.

 

CESSMENT

n.An assessment or tax.

 

CESSOR

n. 1. In law, he that neglects, for two years, to perform the service by which he holds lands, so that he incurs the danger of the writ of cessavit. [See Cessavit. ]
2. An assessor, or taxer.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

CESS

Cess, n. Etym: [For sess, conts. from Assess. ]

 

1. A rate or tax. [Obs. or Prof. Eng. & Scot. ] Spenser.

 

2. Bound; measure. [Obs. ] The poor jade is wrung in the withers out of all cess. Shak.

 

CESS

Cess, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Cessed; p. pr. & vb. n. Cessing.]

 

Defn: To rate; to tax; to assess. Spenser.

 

CESS

Cess, v. i. Etym: [F. cesser. See Cease. ]

 

Defn: To cease; to neglect. [Obs. ] Spenser.

 

CESSANT

Ces "sant a. Etym: [L. cessans, p. pr. of cessare. See Cease. ]

 

Defn: Inactive; dormant [Obs. ] W. Montagu.

 

CESSATION

Ces *sa "tion, n. Etym: [F. cessation, L. cessatio, fr. cessare. See Cease. ]

 

Defn: A ceasing of discontinuance, as of action, whether termporary or final; a stop; as, a cessation of the war. The temporary cessation of the papal iniquities. Motley. The day was yearly observed for a festival by cessation from labor. Sir J. Hayward. Cessation of arms (Mil. ), an armistice, or truce, agreed to by the commanders of armies, to give time for a capitulation, or for other purposes.

 

Syn. -- Stop; rest; stay; pause; discontinuance; intermission; interval; respite; interruption; recess; remission.

 

CESSAVIT

Ces *sa "vit, n. Etym: [L., he has ceased.] [O. Eng. Law ]

 

Defn: A writ given by statute to recover lands when the tenant has for two years failed to perform the conditions of his tenure.

 

CESSER

Ces "ser, n. Etym: [From Cess, v. i.] (Law )

 

Defn: a neglect of a tenant to perform services, or make payment, for two years.

 

CESSIBLE

Ces "si *ble, a. Etym: [Cf. F. cessible. See Cession. ]

 

Defn: Giving way; yielding. [Obs. ] -- Ces `si *bil "i *ty, n. [Obs. ] Sir K. Digby.

 

CESSION

Ces "sion, n. Etym: [L. cessio, fr. cedere to give way: cf. F.Cession. See Cede. ]

 

1. A yielding to physical force. [Obs. ] Bacon.

 

2. Concession; compliance. [Obs. ]

 

3. A yielding, or surrender, as of property or rights, to another person; the act of ceding. A cession of the island of New Orleans. Bancroft.

 

4. (Eccl. Law )

 

Defn: The giving up or vacating a benefice by accepting another without a proper dispensation.

 

5. (Civil Law )

 

Defn: The voluntary surrender of a person's effects to his creditors to avoid imprisonment.

 

CESSIONARY

Ces "sion *a *ry, a. Etym: [LL. cessionarius, from cessionare to cede, fr. L. cessio: cf. F. cessionnaire. See Cession. ]

 

Defn: Having surrendered the effects; as, a cessionary bankrupt. Martin.

 

CESSMENT

Cess "ment, n. Etym: [From Cess, v. t.]

 

Defn: An assessment or tax. [Obs. ] Johnson.

 

CESSOR

Ces "sor, n. Etym: [From Cess, v. i. Cf. Cesser. ] (Law )

 

Defn: One who neglects, for two years, to perform the service by which he holds lands, so that he incurs the danger of the writ of cessavit. See Cessavit. Cowell.

 

CESSOR

Ces "sor, n. Etym: [From Cess, v. t.]

 

Defn: An assessor. [Obs. ]

 

CESSPIPE

CESSPIPE Cess `pipe ", n.

 

Defn: A pipe for carrying off waste water, etc. , from a sink or cesspool. Knight.

 

CESSPOOL

Cess "pool `, n. Etym: [See Sesspol.]

 

Defn: A cistern in the course, or the termination, of a drain, to collect sedimentary or superfluous matter; a privy vault; any receptace of filth. [Written also sesspool. ]

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

cess

cess 1 |ses sɛs |(also sess ) noun (in Scotland, Ireland, and India ) a tax or levy. ORIGIN late 15th cent. (denoting the obligation placed on the Irish to supply the Lord Deputy's household and garrison with provisions at prices “assessed by the government ): shortened from the obsolete noun assess assessment.

 

cess

cess 2 |sɛs ses | noun (in phrase bad cess to ) chiefly Irish a curse on: bad cess to the day I joined that band! ORIGIN mid 19th cent. (originally Anglo-Irish ): perhaps from cess 1 .

 

cessation

ces sa tion |seˈsāSHən sɛˈseɪʃən | noun the fact or process of ending or being brought to an end: the cessation of hostilities | a cessation of animal testing of cosmetics. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin cessatio (n- ), from cessare cease.

 

cesser

ces ser |ˈsesər ˈsɛsər | noun Law termination or cessation, esp. of a period of tenure or legal liability. ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from Old French cesser cease, used as a noun.

 

cession

ces sion |ˈseSHən ˈsɛʃən | noun the formal giving up of rights, property, or territory, esp. by a state: the cession of twenty important towns. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin cession-, from cedere cede.

 

cesspit

cess pit |ˈsesˌpit ˈsɛsˌpɪt | noun a pit for the disposal of liquid waste and sewage. a disgusting or corrupt place or situation: the affair threatened to be a cesspit of scandal. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from cess (the supposed base of cesspool ) + pit 1 .

 

cesspool

cess pool |ˈsesˌpo͞ol ˈsɛsˌpul | noun an underground container for the temporary storage of liquid waste and sewage. a disgusting or corrupt place: they should clean out their own political cesspool. ORIGIN late 17th cent. (denoting a trap under a drain to catch solids ): probably an alteration, influenced by pool 1, of archaic suspiral vent, water pipe, settling tank, from Old French souspirail air hole, based on Latin sub- from below + spirare breathe.

 

Oxford Dictionary

cess

cess 1 |sɛs |(also sess ) noun (in Scotland, Ireland, and India ) a tax or levy. ORIGIN late 15th cent. (denoting the obligation placed on the Irish to supply the Lord Deputy's household and garrison with provisions at prices ‘assessed by the government ): shortened from the obsolete noun assess assessment .

 

cess

cess 2 |sɛs | noun (in phrase bad cess to ) chiefly Irish a curse on: bad cess to the day I joined that band! ORIGIN mid 19th cent. (originally Anglo-Irish ): perhaps from cess 1 .

 

cessation

cessation |sɛˈseɪʃ (ə )n | noun [ mass noun ] the fact or process of ending or being brought to an end: the cessation of hostilities | [ count noun ] : a cessation of animal testing of cosmetics. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin cessatio (n- ), from cessare cease .

 

cesser

cesser |ˈsɛsə | noun [ mass noun ] Law termination or cessation, especially of a period of tenure or legal liability. ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from Old French cesser cease , used as a noun.

 

cession

cession |ˈsɛʃ (ə )n | noun [ mass noun ] the formal giving up of rights, property, or territory by a state: the cession of twenty important towns. ORIGIN late Middle English; from Latin cessio (n- ), from cedere cede .

 

cesspit

cess |pit |ˈsɛspɪt | noun a pit for the disposal of liquid waste and sewage. a disgusting or corrupt place: the affair threatened to be a cesspit of scandal. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from cess (the supposed base of cesspool ) + pit 1 .

 

cesspool

cess |pool |ˈsɛspuːl | noun an underground container for the temporary storage of liquid waste and sewage. a disgusting or corrupt place. ORIGIN late 17th cent. (denoting a trap under a drain to catch solids ): probably an alteration, influenced by pool 1, of archaic suspiral vent, water pipe, settling tank , from Old French souspirail air hole , based on Latin sub- from below + spirare breathe .

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

cessation

cessation noun the cessation of hostilities: end, ending, termination, stopping, halting, ceasing, finish, finishing, stoppage, conclusion, winding up, discontinuation, abandonment, suspension, breaking off, cutting short. ANTONYMS start, resumption.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

cessation

cessation noun the cessation of hostilities: end, ending, termination, stopping, halting, ceasing, finish, finishing, stoppage, closing, closure, close, conclusion, winding up, discontinuation, discontinuance, breaking off, abandonment, interruption, suspension, cutting short; pause, break, respite, let-up. ANTONYMS start; resumption.

 

cession

cession noun the cession of this province to the Kingdom of Italy: surrender, surrendering, ceding, conceding, concession, relinquishment, yielding, giving up, handing over, transfer, transference, transferral, granting, grant, bequest; resignation, abdication, abandonment, forgoing, forsaking, sacrifice, waiving, waiver, renunciation. ANTONYMS gain.

 

French Dictionary

cessant

cessant , ante adj. adjectif Qui cesse. LOCUTION Toute (s ) affaire (s ) cessante (s ). En suspendant tout le reste. : Il est venu toutes affaires cessantes. Note Technique L ’expression s ’écrit au singulier ou au pluriel.

 

cessation

cessation n. f. nom féminin Fin, arrêt. : Cessation d ’emploi. Une indemnité de cessation d ’emploi. Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec le nom cession, action de céder à une personne un bien, un droit, à titre gratuit ou onéreux.

 

cesse

cesse n. f. nom féminin vieux Fin, répit. LOCUTIONS N ’avoir (pas ) de cesse que. Ne pas s ’arrêter avant que. : Elle n ’aura (pas ) de cesse qu ’elle n ’atteigne son but. Note Syntaxique Cette locution verbale se construit avec le subjonctif. Sans cesse Sans arrêt. : Il se plaint sans cesse. SYNONYME constamment ; continuellement .

 

cesser

cesser v. tr. , intr. verbe transitif direct Mettre fin à. : Cesser ses activités. SYNONYME arrêter ; interrompre ; suspendre ; terminer . verbe transitif indirect Arrêter. : Cesse de faire du bruit, tu effraies les oiseaux! Note Syntaxique En ce sens, le verbe se construit avec la préposition de suivie de l ’infinitif. Note Technique Dans une phrase négative, le verbe a le sens de continuer . Il n ’a jamais cessé de rêver à elle. verbe intransitif Prendre fin, arrêter. : Le vent a cessé. SYNONYME finir ; interrompre . Note Syntaxique Dans une phrase négative, le verbe cesser suivi d ’un infinitif se construit avec la seule particule de négation ne. Tu ne cesses de manger. aimer

 

cessez-le-feu

cessez-le-feu n. m. inv. (pl. cessez-le-feu ) nom masculin invariable Arrêt temporaire des combats. : Les soldats ont respecté les cessez-le-feu. SYNONYME trêve . Note Orthographique cesse z- le -feu, le verbe est à l'impératif, donc il s'écrit avec z; le verbe, l'article et le nom sont liés par des traits d'union.

 

cessibilité

cessibilité n. f. nom féminin droit Possibilité de faire l ’objet d ’une cession.

 

cessible

cessible adj. adjectif droit Qui peut être cédé. : Ce titre de propriété est cessible.

 

cession

cession n. f. nom féminin droit Action de céder à une personne un bien, un droit à titre gratuit ou onéreux. : La cession d ’une propriété, d ’un bail. Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec le nom cessation, fin, arrêt.

 

cessionnaire

cessionnaire n. m. et f. nom masculin et féminin droit Personne à qui une cession a été faite. Note Technique La personne qui fait la cession est le cédant ou la cédante.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

cessation

ces sa tion /seséɪʃ (ə )n /名詞 U 〖具体例では 可算 かたく 中止, 終了 ; 中断 smoking cessation 禁煙

 

cession

ces sion /séʃ (ə )n /名詞 U C かたく (条約などによる権力などの )譲渡 ; (領土などの )割譲 ; (領土などの )譲渡物 .

 

cesspool

cess pool cess pit /séspùːl //séspɪ̀t /名詞 C 汚水 [汚物 ]溜め ; 不潔な場所 ; 道徳が乱れた場所 [状況 ].