English-Thai Dictionary
curl
N ผม เป็น ลอน pom-pen-lon
curl
N ลาย ปี ใน เนื้อไม้ lai-pe-nai-nuea-mai
curl
N สิ่ง ที่ ม้วน หรือ เป็น วง spiral coil ringlet sing-ti-muan-rue-pen-wong
curl
VI ดัดผม dad-pom
curl
VI เคลื่อนที่ เป็น วง เกลียว kluean-ti-pen-wong-kliao
curl
VI เป็นข ดวง pen-kod-wong
curl
VT ดัดผม roll up pin up dad-pom
curl
VT ทำให้ เป็น วง spiral loop tam-hai-pen-wong
curl up
PHRV ทำให้ โค้ง ดัด ให้ โค้ง ทำให้ เป็น รูป โค้ง shrivel up tam-hai-kong
curl up
PHRV ลอย สูง เป็น รูป โค้ง ลอย เป็น วง loi-sung-pen-rub-kong
curl up
PHRV หมดหวัง (คำ ไม่เป็นทางการ ทำให้ หมดหวัง crumple up mod-wang
curl up
PHRV อด หัวเราะ ไม่ได้ หัวเราะ ไม่ หยุด double up aod-hua-ror-mai-dai
curl up
PHRV ไม่พอใจ ไม่ ชอบ mai-por-jai
curl up
VI งอ ตัว ม้วนตัว ngo-tua
curler
N โรล ม้วน ผม ron-muan-pom
curlew
N นก พวก Numenius มี ปาก ยาว และ โค้ง พบ ตาม ชายฝั่ง
curlicue
N ผม ลอน หรือ หยิก curlycue
curling
N เกม การกลิ้ง หิน บน น้ำแข็ง kem-kan-kling-hin-bon-nam-kaeng
curly
ADJ ขดงอ kod-ngo
curly
ADJ หยักศก kinky wavy frizzy yak-sok
curlycue
N ผม ลอน หรือ หยิก curlicue
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CURL
v.t. 1. To turn, bend or form into ringlets; to crisp; as the hair.
2. To writhe; to twist; to coil; as a serpent.
3. To dress with curls.
The snaky locks that curled Megaera.
4. To raise in waves or undulations; to ripple.
Seas would be pools, without the brushing air to curl the waves.
CURL
v.i. 1. To bend in contraction; to shrink into ringlets.
2. To rise in waves or undulation; to ripple; and particularly, to roll over at the summit; as a curling wave.
3. To rise in a winding current, and to roll over at the ends; as curling smoke.
4. To writhe; to twist itself.
Then round her slender waist he curled.
5. To shrink; to shrink back; to bend and sink. He curled down into a corner.
CURL
n. 1. A ringlet of hair, or any thing of a like form.
2. Undulation; a waving; sinuosity; flexure.
3. A winding int he grain of wood.
CURLED
pp. Turned or formed into ringlets; crisped; twisted; undulated.
CURLEW
n. 1. An aquatic fowl of the genus Scolopax and the grallic order. It has a long bill; its color is diversified with ash and black; and the largest species spread more than three feet of wing. It frequents the sea shore in winter, and in summer, retires to the mountains.
2. A fowl, larger than a partridge, with longer legs, which frequents the corn-fields in Spain.
CURLINESS
n.A state of being curly.
CURLING
ppr. Bending; twisting; forming into ringlets.
CURLING-IRONS, CURLING-TONGS
n.An instrument for curling the hair.
CURLY
a.Having curls; tending to curl; full of ripples.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CURL
Curl (krl ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Curled (krld ); p. pr. & vb. n.Curling. ] Etym: [Akin to D. krullen, Dan. kr, dial. Sw. krulla to curl, crisp; possibly akin to E. crook. Cf. Curl, n., Cruller. ]
1. To twist or form into ringlets; to crisp, as the hair. But curl their locks with bodkins and with braid. Cascoigne.
2. To twist or make onto coils, as a serpent's body. Of his tortuous train, Curled many a wanton wreath in sight of Eve. Milton.
3. To deck with, or as with, curls; to ornament. Thicker than the snaky locks That curledMegæra. Milton. Curling with metaphors a plain intention. Herbert.
4. To raise in waves or undulations; to ripple. Seas would be pools without the brushing air To curl the waves. Dryden.
5. (Hat Making )
Defn: To shape (the brim ) into a curve.
CURL
CURL Curl, v. i.
1. To contract or bend into curis or ringlets, as hair; to grow in curls or spirals, as a vine; to be crinkled or contorted; to have a curly appearance; as, leaves lie curled on the ground. Thou seest it [hair ] will not curl by nature. Shak.
2. To move in curves, spirals, or undulations; to contract in curving outlines; to bend in a curved form; to make a curl or curls. "Cirling billows." Dryden. Then round her slender waist he curled. Dryden. Curling smokes from village tops are seen. Pope. Gayly curl the waves before each dashing prow. Byron. He smiled a king of sickly smile, and curled up on the floor. Bret Harte.. 358
3. To play at the game called curling. [Scot. ]
CURL
Curl (krl ), n. Etym: [Akin to D. krul, Dan. kr. See Curl, v. ]
1. A ringlet, especially of hair; anything of a spiral or winding form. Under a coronet, his flowing hair In curls on either cheek played. Milton.
2. An undulating or waving line or streak in any substance, as wood, glass, etc. ; flexure; sinuosity. If the glass of the prisms... be without those numberless waves or curls which usually arise from the sand holes. Sir I. Newton.
3. A disease in potatoes, in which the leaves, at their first appearance, seem curled and shrunken. Blue curls. (Bot. ) See under Blue.
CURLED
CURLED Curled (lrld ), a.
Defn: Having curls; curly; sinuous; wavy; as, curled maple (maple having fibers which take a sinnuous course ). Curled hair (Com. ), the hair of the manes and tails of horses, prepared for upholstery purposes. McElrath.
CURLEDNESS
CURLEDNESS Curl "ed *ness, n.
Defn: State of being curled; curliness.
CURLER
CURLER Curl "er (-r ), n.
1. One who, or that which, curls.
2. A player at the game called curling. Burns.
CURLEW
Cur "lew (kr "l ), n. Etym: [F. courlieu, corlieu, courlis; perh. of imitative origin, but cf. OF. corlieus courier; L. currere to run + levis light. ] (Zoöl.)
Defn: A wading bird of the genus Numenius, remarkable for its long, slender, curved bill.
Note: The common European curlew is N. arquatus. The long-billed (N. longirostris ), the Hudsonian (N. Hudsonicus ), and the Eskimo curlew (N. borealis, are American species. The name is said to imitate the note of the European species. Curlew Jack (Zoöl.) the whimbrel or lesser curlew. -- Curlew sandpiper (Zoöl.), a sandpiper (Tringa ferruginea, or subarquata ), common in Europe, rare in America, resembling a curlew in having a long, curved bill. See Illustation in Appendix.
CURLINESS
CURLINESS Curl "i *ness (krl "-ns ), n.
Defn: State of being curly.
CURLING
CURLING Curl "ing, n.
1. The act or state of that which curls; as, the curling of smoke when it rises; the curling of a ringlet; also, the act or process of one who curls something, as hair, or the brim of hats.
2. A scottish game in which heavy weights of stone or iron are propelled by hand over the ice towards a mark. Curling. .. is an amusement of the winter, and played on the ice, by sliding from one mark to another great stones of 4 to 7 pounds weight, of a hemispherical form, with an iron or wooden handle at top. The object of the player is to lay his stone as near to the mark as possible, to guard that of his partner, which has been well laid before, or to strike off that of his antagonist. Pennant (Tour in Scotland. 1772 ). Curling irons, Curling tong, an instrument for curling the hair; -- commonly heated when used.
CURLINGLY
CURLINGLY Curl "ing *ly, adv.
Defn: With a curl, or curls.
CURLY
CURLY Curl "y (krl "), a.
Defn: Curling or tending to curl; having curls; full of ripples; crinkled.
CURLYCUE
Curl "y *cue (krl "-k ), n. Etym: [Cf. F. caracole. ]
Defn: Some thing curled or spiral, , as a flourish made with a pen on paper, or with skates on the ice; a trick; a frolicsome caper. [Sometimes written carlicue.] [ Colloq. U.S.] To cut a curlycue, to make a flourish; to cut a caper. I gave a flourishing about the room and cut a curlycue with my right foot. McClintock.
New American Oxford Dictionary
curl
curl |kərl kərl | ▶verb 1 form or cause to form into a curved or spiral shape: [ no obj. ] : her fingers curled around the microphone | a slice of ham had begun to curl up at the edges | [ with obj. ] : she used to curl her hair with rags. • [ no obj. ] (curl up ) sit or lie with the knees drawn up: she curled up and went to sleep. • move or cause to move in a spiral or curved course: [ no obj. ] : a wisp of smoke curling across the sky. • (with reference to one's mouth or upper lip ) raise or cause to raise slightly on one side as an expression of contempt or disapproval: [ no obj. ] : Maria saw his lip curl sardonically. • (in weight training ) lift (a weight ) using only the hands, wrists, and forearms. 2 [ no obj. ] play at the game of curling. ▶noun 1 something having a spiral or inwardly curved form, esp. a lock of hair: her blond hair was a mass of tangled curls | a curl of blue smoke. • (with reference to a person's hair ) a state or condition of being curled: your hair has a natural curl | large perm rods give volume and control rather than lots of curl. • a curling movement: the sneering curl of his lip. • see leaf curl. • a weightlifting exercise involving movement of only the hands, wrists, and forearms: a dumbbell curl. 2 Mathematics the vector product of the operator del and a given vector. PHRASES make someone's hair curl informal shock or horrify someone. ORIGIN late Middle English: from obsolete crulle ‘curly, ’ from Middle Dutch krul.
curler
curl er |ˈkərlər ˈkərlər | ▶noun 1 (usu. curlers ) a roller or clasp around which a lock of hair is wrapped to curl it. 2 a player in the game of curling.
curlew
cur lew |ˈkərˌlo͞o, ˈkərlˌyo͞o ˈkɜːrljuː | ▶noun ( pl. same or curlews ) a large wading bird of the sandpiper family, with a long down-curved bill, brown streaked plumage, and frequently a distinctive ascending two-note call. See also stone curlew. [Genus Numenius, family Scolopacidae: several species, including the common Eurasian N. arquata and the North American long-billed curlew (N. americanus ).] ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French courlieu, alteration (by association with courliu ‘courier, ’ from courre ‘run ’ + lieu ‘place ’) of imitative courlis.
Curley, James Michael
Cur ley, James Michael |ˈkərlē ˈkərli | (1874 –1958 ), US politician. An urban political boss, he was a member of the US House of Representatives 1911 –14 and 1943 –47, mayor of Boston for four terms between 1914 and 1950, and governor of Massachusetts 1935 –37.
curlicue
curl i cue |ˈkərlēˌkyo͞o ˈkərliˌkju |(also curlycue ) ▶noun a decorative curl or twist in calligraphy or in the design of an object. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from curly + cue 2 (in the sense ‘pigtail ’), or -cue representing the letter q.
curling
curl ing |ˈkərliNG kərlɪŋ | ▶noun a game played on ice, esp. in Scotland and Canada, in which large, round, flat stones are slid across the surface toward a mark. Members of a team use brooms to sweep the surface of the ice in the path of the stone to control its speed and direction.
curling iron
curl ing i ron |kərlɪŋ ˈaɪ (ə )rn | ▶noun a heated rod used for rolling a person's hair into curls.
curling stone
curl ing stone ▶noun a large, polished, circular stone with an iron handle on top, used in the game of curling.
curly
curl y |ˈkərlē ˈkərli | ▶adjective ( curlier, curliest ) made, growing, or arranged in curls or curves: my hair is just naturally thick and curly. DERIVATIVES curl i ness noun
curlycue
cur ly cue ▶noun variant spelling of curlicue.
curly endive
curl y en dive |ˈkərli ˈɛnˌdaɪv | ▶noun see endive.
curly kale
curl y kale ▶noun kale of a variety with dark green, tightly curled leaves.
curly top
cur ly top (also curly top disease ) ▶noun a viral disease affecting plants, esp. beets and members of the gourd family, spread by beetles, particularly the beet leafhopper. Infected plants become dwarfed and have puckered, distorted foliage.
curly-wurly
curl y-wurl y ▶adjective informal twisting and curling. ORIGIN late 18th cent.: reduplication of curly .
Oxford Dictionary
curl
curl |kəːl | ▶verb 1 form or cause to form into a curved or spiral shape: [ no obj. ] : her fingers curled round the microphone | a slice of ham had begun to curl up at the edges | [ with obj. ] : she used to curl her hair with rags. • [ no obj. ] (curl up ) sit or lie with the knees drawn up: she curled up and went to sleep. • move or cause to move in a spiral or curved course: [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] : a wisp of smoke curling across the sky. • (with reference to one's mouth or upper lip ) raise or cause to raise slightly on one side as an expression of contempt or disapproval: [ no obj. ] : Maria saw his lip curl sardonically. 2 (in weight training ) lift (a weight ) using only the hands, wrists, and forearms. 3 [ no obj. ] play at the game of curling. ▶noun 1 something in the shape of a spiral or coil, especially a lock of hair: her blonde hair was a mass of tangled curls | a curl of blue smoke. • a curling movement: the sneering curl of his lip. • (with reference to a person's hair ) a state or condition of being curled: your hair has a natural curl | [ mass noun ] : large perm rods give volume and control rather than lots of curl. • see leaf curl. 2 a weightlifting exercise involving movement of only the hands, wrists, and forearms: a dumb-bell curl. 3 Mathematics a function giving a measure of the rotation of a vector field. PHRASES make someone's hair curl informal shock or horrify someone. ORIGIN late Middle English: from obsolete crulle ‘curly ’, from Middle Dutch krul.
curler
curl ¦er |ˈkəːlə | ▶noun 1 (usu. curlers ) a roller or clasp around which a lock of hair is wrapped to curl it. 2 a player in the game of curling.
curlew
curlew |ˈkəːl (j )uː | ▶noun ( pl. same or curlews ) a large wading bird of the sandpiper family, with a long downcurved bill, brown streaked plumage, and frequently a distinctive ascending two-note call. See also stone curlew. ●Genus Numenius, family Scolopacidae: several species, in particular N. arquata of Eurasia. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French courlieu, alteration (by association with courliu ‘courier ’, from courre ‘run ’ + lieu ‘place ’) of imitative courlis.
Curley, James Michael
Cur ley, James Michael |ˈkərlē ˈkərli | (1874 –1958 ), US politician. An urban political boss, he was a member of the US House of Representatives 1911 –14 and 1943 –47, mayor of Boston for four terms between 1914 and 1950, and governor of Massachusetts 1935 –37.
curlicue
curlicue |ˈkəːlɪkjuː | ▶noun a decorative curl or twist in calligraphy or in the design of an object. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from curly + cue 2 (in the sense ‘pigtail ’), or -cue representing the letter q.
curling
curl |ing |ˈkəːlɪŋ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a game played on ice, especially in Scotland and Canada, in which large round flat stones are slid across the surface towards a mark. Members of a team use brooms to sweep the surface of the ice in the path of the stone to control its speed and direction.
curling stone
curl |ing stone ▶noun a large polished circular stone, with a handle on top, used in the game of curling.
curling tongs
curling tongs (also curling iron or curling pins ) ▶plural noun a device incorporating a heated rod used for rolling a person's hair into curls.
curly
curly |ˈkəːli | ▶adjective ( curlier, curliest ) made, growing, or arranged in curls or curves: my hair is just naturally thick and curly. DERIVATIVES curliness noun
curly bracket
curly bracket ▶noun another term for brace ( sense 4 of the noun ).
curly endive
curly en ¦dive ▶noun see endive.
curly kale
curly kale ▶noun [ mass noun ] kale of a variety with dark green tightly curled leaves.
curly top
cur ly top (also curly top disease ) ▶noun a viral disease affecting plants, esp. beets and members of the gourd family, spread by beetles, particularly the beet leafhopper. Infected plants become dwarfed and have puckered, distorted foliage.
curly-wurly
curly-wurly ▶adjective informal twisting and curling. ORIGIN late 18th cent.: reduplication of curly .
American Oxford Thesaurus
curl
curl verb 1 smoke curled up from his cigarette: spiral, coil, wreathe, twirl, swirl; wind, curve, bend, twist, twist and turn, loop, meander, snake, corkscrew, zigzag. 2 Ruth curled her arms around his neck: wind, twine, entwine, wrap. 3 she washed and curled my hair: crimp, perm, wave. 4 they curled up together on the sofa: nestle, snuggle, cuddle. ▶noun 1 the tangled curls of her hair: ringlet, corkscrew, kink, wave. 2 a curl of smoke: spiral, coil, twirl, swirl, twist, corkscrew, curlicue, helix.
curly
curly adjective thick, curly hair: wavy, curling, curled, ringlety, crimped, permed, frizzy, kinky, corkscrew. ANTONYMS straight.
Oxford Thesaurus
curl
curl verb 1 smoke curled up from his cigarette | the road curls round Sibton Park: spiral, coil, wreathe, twirl, swirl, furl; wind, curve, bend, twist, twist and turn, loop, meander, snake, corkscrew, zigzag. 2 Ruth curled her arms around his neck: wind, twine, entwine, wrap. 3 she washed and curled my hair: crimp, wave, tong; perm. 4 the rain had made his hair curl even more: go curly, go frizzy, frizz out, frizzle, crinkle. 5 they curled up together on the sofa: nestle, snuggle, cuddle; huddle; N. Amer. snug down. PHRASES make someone's hair curl informal I could tell you things about him that would make your hair curl: shock, stun, horrify, appal, scandalize, make someone's blood run cold; informal make someone's hair stand on end. ▶noun 1 her blonde hair was a mass of tangled curls: ringlet, corkscrew, coil, kink, wave; kiss-curl. 2 a curl of smoke: spiral, coil, wreath, twirl, swirl, furl, twist, corkscrew, curlicue, whorl, helix, gyre.
curly
curly adjective thick, curly hair: wavy, curling, curled, crimped, permed, frizzy, frizzed, kinked, kinky, crinkly, fuzzy, corkscrew; wiry; rare ringletty, ringletted. ANTONYMS straight.
Duden Dictionary
Curling
Cur ling Substantiv, Neutrum Sport , das |ˈkəːlɪŋ |das Curling; Genitiv: des Curlings englisch curling, zu: to curl = (sich ) winden, drehen aus Schottland stammendes Spiel auf dem Eis, das dem Eisschießen sehr ähnlich ist
French Dictionary
curling
curling n. m. nom masculin Sport anglais qui consiste à faire glisser un palet sur la glace. Prononciation Ce mot se prononce à l ’anglaise, [kœrliɳ ]
Spanish Dictionary
curling
curling nombre masculino dep Deporte que se practica en una pista de hielo entre dos equipos de cuatro jugadores y que consiste en hacer deslizar unos bloques de piedra o metal de modo que queden lo más próximos posible a un blanco formado por tres circunferencias concéntricas; para conseguir el máximo de precisión, los compañeros del lanzador utilizan cepillos o escobas para pulir el hielo que el bloque recorrerá en su trayectoria; cada jugador lanza dos bloques en cada una de las diez mangas de que consta un partido .Se pronuncia aproximadamente ‘curlin ’.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
curl
curl /kəː r l /名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 U C カール , 巻き毛 ; C 〖通例 ~s 〗カールした髪 ; U カールすること , 巻くこと .2 C カール状 [うず巻き状 , らせん状 ]のもの ▸ a curl of smoke うず巻き状の煙 3 C (口 唇などの )ねじれた [よじれた ]もの ▸ a curl of one's lip [mouth ](非難 軽蔑を表すために )唇 [口 ]をゆがめること 4 U 〘植 〙萎縮 (いしゆく )病 , 葉巻病 .5 C 〘数 〙(ベクトルの )回転 .動詞 他動詞 1 〈人が 〉〈髪 〉をカールさせる, 巻き毛にする ▸ curl one's hair 髪をカールする 2 〈人が 〉…をらせん状にする [飛ばす ] (up ); «…の回りに » …を巻き付ける «around , round » ▸ Tammy curled her arm around Bill .タミーはビル (の体 )に抱きついた .3 〖通例be ~ed 〗体を丸くする , 丸まって寝る (up )▸ The cat is curled up on her lap .ネコが彼女のひざで丸くなっている 4 〈人が 〉〈唇など 〉をゆがめる , ねじ曲げる (up ).自動詞 1 〈髪などが 〉カールする .2 〈煙 (植物の )つるなどが 〉うず巻き状 [らせん状 ]に立ち昇る [なる ](up ); «…の回りを » ぐるぐると巻く «around » .3 〈手足の指 脚などが 〉丸く曲がる .4 〈道路などが 〉曲がりくねる .5 〈球が 〉カーブする .6 〖しばしば ~ into a ballなどの形で 〗〈人 動物が 〉 (ボールのように )丸くなる .7 〈紙 葉などが 〉 (隅の方から )丸まる , 巻く (up ).8 〈口 唇が 〉ゆがむ , ねじれる .9 カーリング (curling )をする .c ù rl ú p 1 ↑自動詞 2 , 7 .2 〈人 動物が 〉 (ひざを曲げて )体を丸くする, 丸まって寝る .3 ⦅くだけて ⦆元気がなくなる, まいる .4 ⦅くだけて ⦆閉口する .5 ⦅くだけて ⦆爆笑する .c ù rl A ú p [ú p A ]1 A 〈体 〉をちぢめて丸くなる [なって寝る ].2 ⦅くだけて ⦆A 〈人 〉を閉口させる, 当惑させる .~́ ì rons [p ì ns, t ò ngs ]ヘアアイロン, カール用こて .
curler
c ú rl er 名詞 C 〖通例 ~s 〗1 (ヘア )カーラー .2 巻く物 .
curlew
cur lew /kə́ː r ljuː /名詞 C 〘鳥 〙ダイシャクシギ 〘水鳥の一種 〙.
curlicue
cur li cue cur ly cue /kə́ː r likjùː /名詞 C 1 うず巻き (模様 [飾り ]).2 ⦅文 ⦆〖通例 ~s 〗(ペン字でうず巻き形の )花文字, 飾り書き .
curling
curl ing /kə́ː r lɪŋ /名詞 U カーリング 〘氷上で平たい円形の石を目標に向けてすべらせるスコットランド発祥のゲーム 〙.
curly
curl y /kə́ː r li /形容詞 -ier ; -iest 1 巻き毛の , カールの , 縮れ毛の ; 巻き毛になりやすい ▸ curly hair 巻き毛, カーリーヘア 2 〈物が 〉うず巻き状の , 曲がった , らせん状 [形 ]の ▸ curly tails くるっと巻いたしっぽ 3 (木目が )うず巻いた , 波模様の .c ú rl i ness 名詞