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English-Thai Dictionary

derivation

N แหล่งที่มา  ต้นกำเนิด  origin source lang-ti-ma

 

derivational

A ที่ ได้ สืบ ราก มา 

 

derivative

ADJ ลอกแบบ มาจาก สิ่ง อื่น  ไม่ใช่ ต้นกำเนิด  imitateed secondhand original lok-baeb-ma-jak-sing-uen

 

derivative

N คำ ที่ สร้าง จาก คำ อื่น (ทาง ภาษาศาสตร์  คำ ที่ กลาย มา  doublet paronym kam-ti-sang-jak-kam-uen

 

derivative

N สิ่ง ที่ พัฒนา มาจาก สิ่ง อื่น  sing-ti-phad-tha-na-ma-jak-sing-uen

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

DERIVATE

n.A word derived from another.

 

DERIVATION

n. 1. The act of deriving, drawing or receiving from a source; as the derivation of an estate from ancestors, or of profits from capital, or of truth or facts from antiquity.
2. In grammar, the drawing or tracing of a word from its root or original; as, derivation is from the L. Derivo, and the latter from rivus, a stream.
3. A drawing from, or turning aside from, a natural course or channel; as the derivation of water from its channel by lateral drains.
4. A drawing of humors from one part of the body to another; as the derivation of humors from the eye, by a blister on the neck.
5. The thing derived or deduced.

 

DERIVATIVE

a. 1. Derived; taken or having proceeded from another or something preceding; secondary; as a derivative perfection; a derivative conveyance, as a release.
2. A derivative chord, in music, is one derived from a fundamental chord.

 

DERIVATIVE

n. 1. That which is derived; a word which takes its origin in another word, or is formed from it. Thus, depravity is a derivative from the L. Deravo, and acknowledge, from knowledge, and this from know, the primitive word.
2. In music, a chord not fundamental.

 

DERIVATIVELY

adv. In a derivative manner; by derivation.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

DERIVATE

Der "i *vate, a. Etym: [L. derivatus, p. p. of derivare. See Derive. ]

 

Defn: Derived; derivative. [R.] H. Taylor. -- n.

 

Defn: A thing derived; a derivative. [R.]

 

DERIVATE

DERIVATE Der "i *vate, v. t.

 

Defn: To derive. [Obs. ] Huloet.

 

DERIVATION

Der `i *va "tion, n. Etym: [L. derivatio: cf. F. dérivation. See Derive. ]

 

1. A leading or drawing off of water from a stream or source. [Obs. ] T. Burnet.

 

2. The act of receiving anything from a source; the act of procuring an effect from a cause, means, or condition, as profits from capital, conclusions or opinions from evidence. As touching traditional communication, ... I do not doubt but many of those truths have had the help of that derivation. Sir M. Hale.

 

3. The act of tracing origin or descent, as in grammar or genealogy; as, the derivation of a word from an Aryan root.

 

4. The state or method of being derived; the relation of origin when established or asserted.

 

5. That from which a thing is derived.

 

6. That which is derived; a derivative; a deduction. From the Euphrates into an artificial derivation of that river. Gibbon.

 

7. (Math. )

 

Defn: The operation of deducing one function from another according to some fixed law, called the law of derivation, as the of differentiation or of integration.

 

8. (Med. )

 

Defn: A drawing of humors or fluids from one part of the body to another, to relieve or lessen a morbid process.

 

DERIVATIONAL

DERIVATIONAL Der `i *va "tion *al, a.

 

Defn: Relating to derivation. Earle.

 

DERIVATIVE

De *riv "a *tive, a. Etym: [L. derivativus: cf. F. dérivatif. ]

 

Defn: Obtained by derivation; derived; not radical, original, or fundamental; originating, deduced, or formed from something else; secondary; as, a derivative conveyance; a derivative word. Derivative circulation, a modification of the circulation found in some parts of the body, in which the arteries empty directly into the veins without the interposition of capillaries. Flint. -- De *riv "a *tive *ly, adv. -- De *riv "a *tive *ness, n.

 

DERIVATIVE

DERIVATIVE De *riv "a *tive, n.

 

1. That which is derived; anything obtained or deduced from another.

 

2. (Gram. )

 

Defn: A word formed from another word, by a prefix or suffix, an internal modification, or some other change; a word which takes its origin from a root.

 

3. (Mus. )

 

Defn: A chord, not fundamental, but obtained from another by inversion; or, vice versa, a ground tone or root implied in its harmonics in an actual chord.

 

4. (Med. )

 

Defn: An agent which is adapted to produce a derivation (in the medical sense ).

 

5. (Math. )

 

Defn: A derived function; a function obtained from a given function by a certain algebraic process.

 

Note: Except in the mode of derivation the derivative is the same as the differential coefficient. See Differential coefficient, under Differential.

 

6. (Chem. )

 

Defn: A substance so related to another substance by modification or partial substitution as to be regarded as derived from it; thus, the amido compounds are derivatives of ammonia, and the hydrocarbons are derivatives of methane, benzene, etc.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

derivate

der i vate |ˈderəvit ˈdɛrəvɪt | noun something derived, esp. a product obtained chemically from a raw material. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin derivat- derived, from the verb derivare (see derive ).

 

derivation

der i va tion |ˌderəˈvāSHən ˌdɛrəˈveɪʃən | noun 1 the obtaining or developing of something from a source or origin: the derivation of scientific laws from observation. the formation of a word from another word or from a root in the same or another language. origin; extraction: music of primarily Turkish derivation. something derived; a derivative. the derivation sheepish has six definitions. 2 Linguistics in generative grammar, the set of stages that link the abstract underlying structure of an expression to its surface form. 3 Mathematics the process of deducing a new formula, theorem, etc. , from previously accepted statements. a sequence of statements showing that a formula, theorem, etc. , is a consequence of previously accepted statements. DERIVATIVES der i va tion al |-SHənl |adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting the drawing of a fluid, specifically the drawing of pus or blood; also in the sense formation of a word from another word ): from Latin derivatio (n- ), from the verb derivare (see derive ).

 

derivative

de riv a tive |diˈrivətiv dəˈrɪvədɪv | adjective (typically of an artist or work of art ) imitative of the work of another person, and usually disapproved of for that reason: an artist who is not in the slightest bit derivative. originating from, based on, or influenced by: Darwin's work is derivative of the moral philosophers. [ attrib. ] (of a financial product ) having a value deriving from an underlying variable asset: equity-based derivative products. noun something that is based on another source: a derivative of the system was chosen for the Marine Corps ’ V-22 tilt rotor aircraft. (often derivatives ) an arrangement or instrument (such as a future, option, or warrant ) whose value derives from and is dependent on the value of an underlying asset: [ as modifier ] : the derivatives market. a word derived from another or from a root in the same or another language. a substance that is derived chemically from a specified compound: crack is a highly addictive cocaine derivative. Mathematics an expression representing the rate of change of a function with respect to an independent variable. DERIVATIVES de riv a tive ly adverb ORIGIN late Middle English (in the adjective sense having the power to draw off, and in the noun sense a word derived from another ): from French dérivatif, -ive, from Latin derivativus, from derivare (see derive ).

 

Oxford Dictionary

derivate

derivate |ˈdɛrɪvət, -eɪt | noun something derived, especially a product obtained chemically from a raw material. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin derivat- derived , from the verb derivare (see derive ).

 

derivation

der ¦iv |ation |dɛrɪˈveɪʃ (ə )n | noun [ mass noun ] 1 the action of obtaining something from a source or origin: the derivation of scientific laws from observation. the formation of a word from another word or from a root in the same or another language. origin; extraction: music of primarily Turkish derivation. [ count noun ] something derived; a derivative. a good dictionary includes derivations. 2 Linguistics the set of stages that link a sentence in a natural language to its underlying logical form. 3 Mathematics the process of deducing a new formula, theorem, etc. , from previously accepted statements. [ count noun ] a sequence of statements showing that a formula, theorem, etc. , is a consequence of previously accepted statements. DERIVATIVES derivational adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting the drawing of a fluid, especially pus or blood; also in the sense formation of a word from another word ): from Latin derivatio (n- ), from the verb derivare (see derive ).

 

derivative

derivative |dɪˈrɪvətɪv | adjective 1 imitative of the work of another artist, writer, etc. , and usually disapproved of for that reason: an artist who is not in the slightest bit derivative. originating from, based on, or influenced by: Darwin's work is derivative of the moral philosophers. 2 [ attrib. ] (of a financial product ) having a value deriving from an underlying variable asset: equity-based derivative products. noun 1 something which is based on another source: the aircraft is a derivative of the Falcon 20G. a word derived from another or from a root in the same or another language. a substance that is derived chemically from a specified compound: crack is a highly addictive cocaine derivative. 2 (often derivatives ) a financial product (such as a future, option, or warrant ) whose value derives from and is dependent on the value of an underlying asset. 3 Mathematics an expression representing the rate of change of a function with respect to an independent variable. DERIVATIVES derivatively adverb ORIGIN late Middle English (in the adjective sense having the power to draw off , and in the noun sense a word derived from another ): from French dérivatif, -ive, from Latin derivativus, from derivare (see derive ).

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

derivation

derivation noun 1 the derivation of theories from empirical observation: deriving, induction, deduction, inference; extraction, eliciting. 2 the derivation of a word: origin, etymology, root, etymon, provenance, source; origination, beginning, foundation, basis, cause; development, evolution.

 

derivative

derivative adjective her poetry was derivative: imitative, unoriginal, uninventive, unimaginative, uninspired; copied, plagiarized, plagiaristic, secondhand; trite, hackneyed, clichéd, stale, stock, banal; informal copycat, cribbed, old hat. ANTONYMS original. noun a derivative of opium: by-product, subsidiary product; spin-off.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

derivation

derivation noun 1 the derivation of universal laws from empirical observation: deriving, induction, deduction, deducing, inferring, inference, gathering, gleaning, drawing out, extraction, eliciting; rare eduction. 2 the derivation of the word toff : origin, etymology; source, root, etymon, provenance; fountainhead, wellspring, origination, beginning, foundation, basis, cause; ancestry, descent, genealogy, development, evolution, extraction.

 

derivative

derivative adjective her poetry was mannered and derivative: imitative, unoriginal, uninventive, non-innovative, unimaginative, uninspired; copied, plagiarized, plagiaristic, second-hand, secondary, echoic; trite, hackneyed, clichéd, stale, tired, worn out, flat, rehashed, warmed-up, stock, banal; informal copycat, cribbed, old hat. ANTONYMS original. noun 1 laudanum is a derivative of opium: by-product, spin-off, offshoot, subsidiary product. 2 the word samurai is a derivative of a verb meaning to serve : derived word, descendant.

 

Duden Dictionary

Derivat

De ri vat Substantiv, Neutrum , das |Deriv a t |das Derivat; Genitiv: des Derivat [e ]s, Plural: die Derivate zu lateinisch derivatum, 2. Partizip von: derivare, derivieren 1 Sprachwissenschaft abgeleitetes Wort z. B. »Schönheit « von »schön « 2 Chemie chemische Verbindung, die aus einer anderen entstanden ist 3 Biologie Organ, das sich auf ein entwicklungsgeschichtlich älteres zurückführen lässt 4 eigentlich = Vertrag, der sich aus einem anderen ableitet Bankwesen finanzwirtschaftlicher Vertrag über die Rechte beim Kauf oder Verkauf im Rahmen bestimmter Finanzgeschäfte der Einsatz von Derivaten zur Absicherung gegen Marktrisiken

 

Derivation

De ri va ti on Substantiv, feminin , die |Derivati o n |1 lateinisch derivatio Sprachwissenschaft Bildung neuer Wörter aus einem Ursprungswort, Ableitung 2 Militär seitliche Abweichung eines Geschosses von der Visierlinie

 

Derivationswinkel

De ri va ti ons win kel Substantiv, maskulin , der |Derivati o nswinkel |der Derivationswinkel; Genitiv: des Derivationswinkels, Plural: die Derivationswinkel 1 Schifffahrt Winkel der Kiellinie eines drehenden Schiffes mit der an den Drehkreis gelegten Tangente 2 Artillerie Winkel zwischen Seelenachse (d. i. eine gedachte Längsachse im Hohlraum eines Gewehrlaufs oder Geschützes ) und Visierlinie

 

derivativ

de ri va tiv Adjektiv Sprachwissenschaft |derivat i v |spätlateinisch derivativus durch Ableitung entstanden

 

Derivativ

De ri va tiv Substantiv, Neutrum Sprachwissenschaft , das |Derivat i v |das Derivativ; Genitiv: des Derivativs, Plural: die Derivative Derivat 1

 

Derivator

De ri va tor Substantiv, maskulin Mathematik , der |Deriv a tor |der Derivator; Genitiv: des Derivators, Plural: die Derivatoren lateinisch-neulateinisch Gerät zur Bestimmung der Tangente oder zum Zeichnen der Differenzialkurven einer gezeichnet vorliegenden Kurve

 

French Dictionary

dérivatif

dérivatif , ive adj. et n. m. adjectif grammaire Qui sert à la formation de dérivés. : Un préfixe dérivatif. nom masculin Distraction. : Le sport est un bon dérivatif au travail intellectuel.

 

dérivation

dérivation n. f. nom féminin 1 Action de détourner un cours d ’eau, des fluides, etc. : La dérivation de cette rivière où viennent les saumons inquiète les Amérindiens. Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec le nom déviation, route qui contourne un obstacle temporaire. 2 linguistique Procédé de formation de mots nouveaux par l ’ajout d ’un préfixe ou d ’un suffixe à un radical. : Le nom déroulement a été formé par dérivation du verbe dérouler.

 

Spanish Dictionary

derivativo, -va

derivativo, -va adjetivo 1 Que implica o denota derivación :significación derivativa .2 ling [elemento lingüístico ] Que deriva u origina otro :sufijo derivativo . VÉASE morfema derivativo .

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

derivation

der i va tion /dèrɪvéɪʃ (ə )n /名詞 1 U C 由来, 起源 ; 語源 (研究 ).2 U 〘言 〙(語の )派生 ; C 借用語 .3 U (根元からの )誘導, 引き出し .

 

derivative

de riv a tive /dɪrɪ́vətɪv /〖原義は 2 名詞 C 1 〘経 〙通例 s 〗デリバティブ 債券 株式などから派生した金融商品 〙.2 «…からの » 派生物 ; 派生語 «of » (╳fromは用いない ).3 〘化 〙誘導体 .4 〘数 〙導関数 .形容詞 1 〘通例けなして 〙〈作品などが 〉独創性のない .2 «…から » 派生した, 二次的な «from, of » .ly 副詞