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English-Thai Dictionary

drown

VI จมน้ำ  จม  sink dip dive surface emerge jom-nam

 

drown

VT จมน้ำ  จม  sink dip dive jom-nam

 

drown

VT ท่วมท้น  tuam-ton

 

drown in

PHRV ทำให้ จม อยู่ ใน  แช่ อยู่ ใน  tham-hai-jom-yu-nai

 

drown one's sorrows

IDM ดื่มเหล้า ดับทุกข์  duem-laol-dab-tuk

 

drown out

PHRV ทำให้ ไม่ได้ ยิน เสียง  tham-hai-mai-dai-yin-siang

 

drown out

PHRV ไร้ ที่อยู่ เพราะ น้ำท่วม  rai-ti-yu-prow-nam-tuam

 

drown out

VT กลบ (เสียง (มัก ใช้ รูป  passive voice ทำให้เกิด เสียงดัง (จน ไม่ได้ ยิน เสียง อื่น  kob

 

drowned

ADJ ซึ่ง จม น้ำตาย  sueng-jom-nam-tai

 

drowned

ADJ ซึ่ง เปียกชุ่ม  sueng-peak-chum

 

drowning

ADJ ซึ่ง จมน้ำ  sueng-jom-nam

 

drowse

N สภาวะ ง่วง ซึม  สภาวะ ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น  half-sleep sa-pa-wa-nguang-suem

 

drowse

VI ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น  สัปหงก  หลับๆ  ตื่นๆ  ง่วง ซึม  sleep catnap doze awaken kreng-lab-kreng-tuen

 

drowsihead

N อาการ ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น  somnolence drowsiness ar-kan-kueng-lab-kueng-tuen

 

drowsily

ADV ด้วย ความ งัวเงีย  อย่าง ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น  อย่าง สะลึมสะลือ  duai-kwam-ngua-ngia

 

drowsiness

N อาการ ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น  อาการ สัปหงก  สภาวะ เกือบจะ หลับ  somnolence nodding ar-kan-kreng-lab-kreng-tuen

 

drowsy

ADJ เซื่องซึม  เกือบจะ หลับ  ง่วง ซึม  ซึมเซา  sleepy somnolent sluggish wakeful alert sueang-suem

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

DROWN

v.t. 1. Literally, to overwhelm in water; an appropriately, to extinguish life by immersion in water or other fluid; applied to animals; also, to suspend animation by submersion.
2. To overwhelm in water; as, to drown weeds.
3. To overflow; to deluge; to inundate; as, to drown land.
4. To immerse; to plunge and lose; to overwhelm; as, to drown ones self in sensual pleasure.
5. To overwhelm; to overpower.
My private voice is drowned amid the senate.

 

DROWN

v.i.To be suffocated in water or other fluid; to perish in water. Methought what pain it was to drown.

 

DROWNED

pp. Deprived of life by immersion in a fluid; overflowed; inundated; overwhelmed.

 

DROWNER

n.He or that which drowns.

 

DROWNING

ppr. Destroying life by submersion in a liquid; overflowing; overwhelming.

 

DROWSE

v.i.drowz. 1. To sleep imperfectly or unsoundly; to slumber; to be heavy with sleepiness.
2. To look heavy; to be heavy or dull.

 

DROWSE

v.t.To make heavy with sleep; to make dull or stupid.

 

DROWSIHED

n.Sleepiness.

 

DROWSILY

adv. 1. Sleepily; heavily; in a dull sleepy manner.
2. Sluggishly; idly; slothfully; lazily.

 

DROWSINESS

n. 1. Sleepiness; heaviness with sleep; disposition to sleep.
2. Sluggishness; sloth; idleness; inactivity.

 

DROWSY

a. 1. Inclined to sleep; sleepy; heavy with sleepiness; lethargic; comatose.
2. Dull; sluggish; stupid.
3. Disposing to sleep; lulling; as a drowsy couch.

 

DROWSY-HEADED

a.Heavy; having a sluggish disposition.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

DROW

DROW Drow, imp.

 

Defn: of Draw. [Obs. ] Chaucer.

 

DROWN

Drown, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Drowned; p. pr. & vb. n. Drowning. ] Etym: [OE. drunen, drounen, earlier drunknen, druncnien, AS. druncnian to be drowned, sink, become drunk, fr. druncen drunken. See Drunken, Drink. ]

 

Defn: To be suffocated in water or other fluid; to perish in water. Methought, what pain it was to drown. Shak.

 

DROWN

DROWN Drown, v. t.

 

1. To overwhelm in water; to submerge; to inundate. "They drown the land. " Dryden.

 

2. To deprive of life by immersion in water or other liquid.

 

3. To overpower; to overcome; to extinguish; -- said especially of sound. Most men being in sensual pleasures drowned. Sir J. Davies. My private voice is drowned amid the senate. Addison. To drown up, to swallow up. [Obs. ] Holland.

 

DROWNAGE

DROWNAGE Drown "age, n.

 

Defn: The act of drowning. [R.]

 

DROWNER

DROWNER Drown "er, n.

 

Defn: One who, or that which, drowns.

 

DROWSE

Drowse, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Drowsed; p. pr. & vb. n. Drowsing.] Etym: [AS. dr, dr, to sink, become slow or inactive; cf. OD. droosen to be sleepy, fall asleep, LG. dr, druusken, to slumber, fall down with a noise; prob, akin to AS. dreósan to fall. See Dreary. ]

 

Defn: To sleep imperfectly or unsoundly; to slumber; to be heavy with sleepiness; to doze. "He drowsed upon his couch. " South. In the pool drowsed the cattle up to their knees. Lowell.

 

DROWSE

DROWSE Drowse, v. t.

 

Defn: To make heavy with sleepiness or imperfect sleep; to make dull or stupid. Milton.

 

DROWSE

DROWSE Drowse, n.

 

Defn: A slight or imperfect sleep; a doze. But smiled on in a drowse of ecstasy. Mrs. Browning.

 

DROWSIHEAD

DROWSIHEAD Drow "si *head, n.

 

Defn: Drowsiness. Thomson.

 

DROWSIHED

DROWSIHED Drow "si *hed, n.

 

Defn: Drowsihead. [Obs. ] Spenser.

 

DROWSILY

DROWSILY Drow "si *ly, adv.

 

Defn: In a drowsy manner.

 

DROWSINESS

DROWSINESS Drow "si *ness, n.

 

Defn: State of being drowsy. Milton.

 

DROWSY

Drow "sy, a. [Compar. Drowsier; superl. Drowsiest.]

 

1. Inclined to drowse; heavy with sleepiness; lethargic; dozy. "When I am drowsy. " Shak. Dapples the drowsy east with spots of gray. Shak. To our age's drowsy blood Still shouts the inspiring sea. Lowell.

 

2. Disposing to sleep; lulling; soporific. The drowsy hours, dispensers of all good. Tennyson.

 

3. Dull; stupid. " Drowsy reasoning. " Atterbury.

 

Syn. -- Sleepy; lethargic; dozy; somnolent; comatose; dull heavy; stupid.

 

DROWTH

DROWTH Drowth, n.

 

Defn: See Drought. Bacon.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

drown

drown |droun draʊn | verb [ no obj. ] die through submersion in and inhalation of water: she drowned in the pond | (be drowned ) : two fishermen were drowned when their motorboat capsized. [ with obj. ] deliberately kill (a person or animal ) in this way: he killed his wife then drowned himself in a fit of despair. [ with obj. ] submerge or flood (an area ): when the ice melted, the valleys were drowned. [ with obj. ] (of a sound ) make (another sound ) inaudible by being much louder: his voice was drowned out by the approaching engine noise. [ no obj. ] (be drowning in ) be overwhelmed by a large amount of something: both business and household sectors are drowning in debt | art dealers are still drowning in a sea of paperwork. [ with obj. ] (drown something in ) cover or immerse food in: good pizza is not eight inches thick and drowned in tomato sauce. PHRASES drown one's sorrows forget one's problems by getting drunk. like a drowned rat extremely wet and bedraggled: she arrived at the church looking like a drowned rat. ORIGIN Middle English (originally northern ): related to Old Norse drukkna to be drowned, also to drink .

 

drowned valley

drowned val ¦ley noun a valley partly or wholly submerged by a rise in sea level.

 

drowse

drowse |drouz ˈdraʊz | verb [ no obj. ] be half asleep; doze intermittently: he was beginning to drowse in his chair. [ with obj. ] archaic make sleepy. archaic be sluggish or inactive: let not your prudence drowse. noun [ in sing. ] a light sleep; a condition of being half asleep. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: back-formation from drowsy .

 

drowsiness

drow si ness |ˈdrouzēnis | noun a feeling of being sleepy and lethargic; sleepiness: this drug can cause drowsiness.

 

drowsy

drow sy |ˈdrouzē ˈdraʊzi | adjective ( drowsier, drowsiest ) sleepy and lethargic; half asleep: the wine had made her drowsy. causing sleepiness: the drowsy heat of the meadows. (esp. of a place ) very peaceful and quiet: a drowsy suburb. DERIVATIVES drow si ly |-zəlē |adverb ORIGIN late 15th cent.: probably from the stem of Old English drūsian be languid or slow, of Germanic origin; related to dreary .

 

Oxford Dictionary

drown

drown |draʊn | verb [ no obj. ] die through submersion in and inhalation of water: a motorist drowned when her car plunged off the edge of a quay | (be drowned ) : two fishermen were drowned when their motor boat capsized. [ with obj. ] deliberately kill (a person or animal ) by drowning: he immediately drowned four of the dogs. [ with obj. ] submerge or flood (an area ): when the ice melted the valleys were drowned. [ with obj. ] (of a sound ) make (another sound ) inaudible by being much louder: his voice was drowned out by the approaching engine noise. [ no obj. ] (be drowning in ) be overwhelmed by a large amount of something: both business and household sectors are drowning in debt | art dealers are still drowning in a sea of paperwork. [ with obj. ] (drown something in ) cover or immerse food in: good pizza is not eight inches thick and drowned in tomato sauce. PHRASES drown one's sorrows forget one's problems by getting drunk. like a drowned rat extremely wet and bedraggled. ORIGIN Middle English (originally northern ): related to Old Norse drukkna to be drowned , also to drink .

 

drowned valley

drowned val ¦ley noun a valley partly or wholly submerged by a rise in sea level.

 

drowse

drowse |draʊz | verb [ no obj. ] be half asleep; doze intermittently: he was beginning to drowse in his chair. [ with obj. ] archaic make sleepy. archaic be sluggish or inactive. noun [ in sing. ] a light sleep; a condition of being half asleep. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: back-formation from drowsy .

 

drowsiness

drow ¦si |ness |ˈdraʊzɪnɪs | noun [ mass noun ] a feeling of being sleepy and lethargic; sleepiness: this drug can cause drowsiness.

 

drowsy

drowsy |ˈdraʊzi | adjective ( drowsier, drowsiest ) sleepy and lethargic; half asleep: the wine had made her drowsy. causing sleepiness: the drowsy heat of the meadows. (of a place ) peaceful and quiet: a drowsy suburb called Surrey Hills. DERIVATIVES drowsily adverb ORIGIN late 15th cent.: probably from the stem of Old English drūsian be languid or slow , of Germanic origin; related to dreary .

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

drown

drown verb 1 he nearly drowned: suffocate in water, inhale water; go to a watery grave. 2 the valleys were drowned: flood, submerge, immerse, inundate, deluge, swamp, engulf. 3 his voice was drowned out by the music: make inaudible, overpower, overwhelm, override; muffle, deaden, stifle, extinguish.

 

drowse

drowse verb they like to drowse in the sun: doze, nap, catnap, rest; informal snooze, get forty winks, get some shut-eye, catch some Zs. noun she had been woken from her drowse: doze, light sleep, nap, catnap, rest, siesta; informal snooze, forty winks, shut-eye.

 

drowsy

drowsy adjective 1 the pills made her drowsy: sleepy, dozy, groggy, somnolent; tired, weary, fatigued, exhausted, yawning, nodding; lethargic, sluggish, torpid, listless, languid; informal snoozy, dopey, yawny, dead beat, all in, dog-tired, bone-weary. ANTONYMS alert. 2 a drowsy afternoon: soporific, sleep-inducing, sleepy, somniferous; narcotic, sedative, tranquilizing; lulling, soothing. ANTONYMS invigorating.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

drown

drown verb 1 he was shipwrecked, and very nearly drowned: suffocate in water, inhale water; go under; go to a watery grave; informal go to Davy Jones's locker. 2 when the ice melted, the valleys were drowned: flood, submerge, immerse, inundate, deluge, swamp, engulf, drench, soak, cover, saturate. ANTONYMS drain. 3 his voice was drowned by the clatter of footsteps: make inaudible, drown out, be louder than, overpower, overwhelm, overcome, override, engulf, swallow up, devour, bury; muffle, deaden, stifle, wipe out, extinguish, silence. ANTONYMS augment. 4 she had spent every waking hour working, trying to drown her private pain: suppress, deaden, stifle, restrain, smother, bottle up, hold back, keep back, check, keep in check, curb, contain, bridle, put a lid on; extinguish, quash, quench, obliterate, wipe out, get rid of.

 

drowse

drowse verb they were content to drowse in the sun: doze, sleep (lightly ), nap, take a nap, catnap, take a siesta, rest; informal snooze, have a snooze, snatch /get forty winks, get some shut-eye; Brit. informal kip, have a kip, get some kip; N. Amer. informal catch some Zs, catch a few Zs; literary slumber. ANTONYMS be awake. noun she had been alerted from her drowse: doze, light sleep, nap, catnap, siesta, lie-down, rest; informal snooze, forty winks, shut-eye; Brit. informal kip, zizz; literary slumber. ANTONYMS wakefulness.

 

drowsiness

drowsiness noun these tablets often cause drowsiness: sleepiness, somnolence, tiredness, fatigue, weariness, exhaustion; sluggishness, lethargy, listlessness, torpor, enervation, lifelessness, laziness, indolence, inertia, lassitude, apathy, debility; informal doziness, dopiness, grogginess. ANTONYMS wakefulness; energy.

 

drowsy

drowsy adjective 1 the stove warmed the tent up and we became drowsy: sleepy, half asleep, dozy, dozing, heavy, heavy-eyed, yawning, nodding, groggy, somnolent, ready for bed, hardly able to keep one's eyes open; tired, weary, fatigued, exhausted; lethargic, sluggish, torpid, lifeless, listless, languid, languorous, comatose, dazed, drugged; informal snoozy, dopey, yawny, dead beat, all in, done in, dog-tired; Brit. informal knackered; literary slumberous. ANTONYMS wakeful, alert. 2 a warm, drowsy afternoon: soporific, sleep-inducing, sleepy, somniferous, narcotic, sedative, calmative, tranquillizing; lulling, soothing; dreamy; rare somnific. ANTONYMS invigorating.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

drown

drown /draʊn / (! -ow-は //) 〖語源は 「水を飲む 」〗動詞 s /-z /; ed /-d /; ing 自動詞 1 〈人 動物が 〉おぼれ死ぬ , 溺死 できし する ▸ A woman was drowning in the river .女性が川でおぼれていた He almost [nearly ] drowned . ≒ He was about to drown .彼はあやうくおぼれ死ぬところだった (!過去形のdrownedだけでは 「おぼれ死んだ 」ことを表す; 必ずしも死ぬことを表さない日本語の 「おぼれた 」との違いに注意 ) ▸ A drowning man will clutch at a straw .ことわざ おぼれる者はわらをもつかむ 2 ⦅くだけて ⦆be ing 〈人が 〉 (処理しきれないほどの ) «…を » かかえている «in » We are drowning in information .我々は情報に埋もれている 他動詞 1 〈人など 〉を溺死させる ;be ed 〈人などが 〉溺死する (!事故死の場合, 現在では自動詞用法の方が好まれる; 自動詞 1 ) drown oneself in the lake 湖に身を投げる 2 «…で » …をびしょぬれにさせる «in » ; «…に » (たっぷりと )〈食品など 〉を浸す, つける «in, with » His eyes were drowned in tears .彼の目は涙でいっぱいだった The meat was drowned in the sauce .肉には浸るほどソースがかかっていた .3 〈大きな音などが 〉〈音 声など 〉をかき消す (out )His speech was drowned by jeers .彼の演説はやじで聞こえなかった .4 ⦅しばしばおどけて ⦆〈人が 〉【酒で 】苦労 心配など 〉を忘れる, まぎらせる «in » He tried to drown his sorrows [loneliness, fear ] in drink .彼は悲しみ [孤独, 不安 ]を酒にまぎらせようとした 5 【酒 仕事などに 】〈人 〉をおぼれさせる, 熱中させる «in » .dr wn A ut [ut A ]1 他動詞 3 .2 〈洪水などが 〉A 〈家など 〉を押し流す .dr wn ing 名詞

 

drowse

drowse /draʊz /動詞 自動詞 1 うとうとする, 居眠りする (off ).2 (状況などが )ぼんやりしている, 活気がない .他動詞 〈人 〉を眠くさせる, 〈時間 〉をうとうとして過ごす (away ).名詞 〖a 居眠り, うたた寝 .

 

drowsy

drow sy /dráʊzi / (! -ow-は //) 形容詞 -sier ; -siest 1 〈人が 〉眠い, 眠たい, うとうとする feel drowsy 眠気を感じる ▸ a drowsy driver うとうとしている運転手 2 〈時 場所が 〉 (人を )眠くさせる, 眠気を催す ; 活気のない, のどかな ▸ a drowsy spring afternoon 眠気を催す春の午後 .3 無気力な .dr ws i ly 副詞 眠そうに .dr ws i ness 名詞