Logo The Wordsmith Dictionary
Exact matches only Allow stemming Match all embedded
English-Thai Dictionary

cite

VT อ้าง  อ้างอิง  กล่าวอ้าง  refer mention quote ang

 

cite for

PHRV ได้รับ คำชมเชย (ปกติ ใช้ รูป  passive voice ได้รับ การสดุดี  dai-rab-kam-chom-chei

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

CITE

v.t. 1. To call upon officially, or authoritatively; to summon; to give legal or official notice, as to a defendant to appear in court, to answer or defend.
2. To enjoin; to direct; to summon; to order or urge.
3. To quote; to name or repeat, as a passage or the words of another, either from a book or from verbal communication; as, to cite a passage from scripture, or to cite the very words a man utters.
4. To call or name, in support, proof or confirmation; as, to cite an authority to prove a point in law.

 

CITER

n. 1. One who cites or summons into court.
2. One who quotes a passage or the words of another.

 

CITESS

n.[See Cit. ] A city woman.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

CITE

Cite, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Cited; p. pr. & vb. n. Citing ] Etym: [F.citer, fr. L. citare, intens. of cire, ciere, to put in motion, to excite; akin to Gr.

 

1. To call upon officially or authoritatively to appear, as before a court; to summon. The cited dead, Of all past ages, to the general doom Shall hasten. Milton. Cited by finger of God. De Quincey.

 

2. To urge; to enjoin. [R.] Shak.

 

3. To quote; to repeat, as a passage from a book, or the words of another. The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose. Shak.

 

4. To refer to or specify, as for support, proof, illustration, or confirmation. The imperfections which you have cited. Shak.

 

5. To bespeak; to indicate. [Obs. ] Aged honor cites a virtuous youth. Shak.

 

6. (Law )

 

Defn: To notify of a proceeding in court. Abbot

 

Syn. -- To quote; mention, name; refer to; adduce; select; call; summon. See Quote.

 

CITER

CITER Cit "er, n.

 

Defn: One who cites.

 

CITESS

Cit "ess, n. Etym: [From Cit. ]

 

Defn: A city woman [R.]

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

cite

cite |sīt saɪt | verb [ with obj. ] 1 quote (a passage, book, or author ) as evidence for or justification of an argument or statement, esp. in a scholarly work. mention as an example: medics have been cited as a key example of a modern breed of technical expert. praise (someone, typically a member of the armed forces ) for a courageous act in an official dispatch. Law adduce a former tried case as a guide to deciding a comparable case or in support of an argument. 2 Law summon (someone ) to appear in a court of law: the summons cited four of the defendants. noun a citation. DERIVATIVES cit a ble adjective ORIGIN late Middle English ( sense 2 of the verb ): from Old French citer, from Latin citare, from ciere, cire to call.

 

CITES

CITES |ˈsītˌēz ˈsaɪtiz | abbreviation Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

 

Oxford Dictionary

cite

cite |sʌɪt | verb [ with obj. ] 1 refer to (a passage, book, or author ) as evidence for or justification of an argument or statement, especially in a scholarly work. mention as an example: medics have been cited as a key example of a modern breed of technical expert. 2 praise (someone, typically a member of the armed forces ) in an official report for a courageous act. 3 summon (someone ) to appear in court. noun US a citation. DERIVATIVES citable adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (in sense 3 of the verb, originally with reference to a court of ecclesiastical law ): from Old French citer, from Latin citare, from ciere, cire to call .

 

CITES

CITES |ˈsʌɪtiːz | abbreviation Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

cite

cite verb 1 cite the passage in full: quote, reproduce. 2 the Plaintiffs have properly cited the case law in response to this motion: refer to, make reference to, mention, allude to, adduce, instance; specify, name. 3 he has been cited many times: commend, pay tribute to, praise. 4 Law the writ cited four of the signatories: summon, summons, serve with a summons, serve with a writ, subpoena.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

cite

cite verb 1 I have cited the passage in full: quote, reproduce. 2 he cited the case of Leigh v. Gladstone: refer to, make reference to, mention, allude to, adduce, instance, give as an example, point to; specify, name; bring up, advance, invoke, draw attention to. 3 he has been cited many times for his contributions in this area: commend, pay tribute to, praise, recognize, give recognition to. 4 the writ cited only four of the signatories of the petition: summon, summons, serve with a summons, subpoena, serve with a writ, call.

 

French Dictionary

cité

cité n. f. nom féminin 1 Partie la plus ancienne de certaines villes. : La Cité de Londres. L ’île de la Cité. Note Typographique En ce sens, le nom s ’écrit avec une majuscule. 2 Ensemble d ’immeubles ayant une même vocation. : La cité universitaire de Paris. Note Typographique En ce sens, le nom s ’écrit avec une minuscule. LOCUTIONS Avoir droit de cité. figuré Être admis dans un groupe. Les cités. Les banlieues difficiles. : La langue des cités est peu compréhensible. FORME FAUTIVE cité. Impropriété au sens de ville, agglomération urbaine.

 

citer

citer v. tr. , pronom. verbe transitif 1 droit Appeler à comparaître. : Citer un expert. 2 Rapporter. : Citer un passage d ’un texte. Elle a cité ses sources. 3 Signaler, attirer l ’attention sur quelqu ’un, quelque chose. : Son dévouement a été cité en exemple. SYNONYME donner en exemple ; évoquer . Rapporter ses propres paroles ou écrits. : Un auteur qui n ’hésite pas à se citer. Note Grammaticale À la forme pronominale, le participe passé de ce verbe s ’accorde toujours en genre et en nombre avec son sujet. Ces chercheurs se sont cités eux-mêmes. aimer

 

citerne

citerne n. f. nom féminin Réservoir d ’eau de pluie, d ’un liquide. : La citerne est à sec: il n ’a pas plu depuis 40 jours. Note Technique Le mot citerne s ’appose parfois à un nom. Les deux éléments prennent la marque du pluriel et s ’écrivent avec un trait d ’union. Des avions-citernes. Des camions-citernes.

 

Spanish Dictionary

citerior

citerior adjetivo Que está situado en la parte de acá, en contraposición a lo que está situado en la parte de allá, en especial aplicado al territorio del Imperio romano que de los dos en que se dividían algunas regiones era el más próximo a Roma :la Hispania citerior .ANTÓNIMO ulterior .

 

Sanseido Dictionary

CITES

CITES サイテス Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora ワシントン条約 (じようやく )

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

cite

cite /saɪt / (! sight, siteと同音 ) 〖原義は 2 動詞 s /-ts /; d /-ɪd /; citing 他動詞 1 かたく (証拠として )…を引用する (quote 他動詞 1 ); 【例 理由などとして 】…を挙げる , 引証する , 引き合いに出す «as » (!asの後は 名詞 まれに 形容詞 ) Smoking is frequently cited as a (major ) cause of lung cancer .喫煙はよく肺癌 がん の (主な )原因に挙げられる .2 〘法 〙 «…の件で » 〈人 〉を召喚する , …に出頭を命じる «for » ; (法廷で )…の名前を挙げる .3 かたく 【勇敢さなどをたたえて 】〈人 〉を表彰 [顕彰 ]する «for » .

 

CITES

CITES Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (of Wild Fauna and Flora ) (絶滅のおそれのある動植物の国際取引に関する条約 ) 〘ワシントン条約 (the Washington Convention )の正称 〙.