English-Thai Dictionary
dole
N เงิน ที่ รัฐบาล แจก ให้ คนว่างงาน ทุกๆ เดือน เงิน อาหาร ที่ ให้ เพื่อ การกุศล ของ บริจาค ngen-ti-rad-ta-ban-jaek-hai-kon-wang-ngan-tuk-tuk-duean
dole
VT บริจาค เพื่อ การกุศล bo-ri-jak-puea-kan-ku-son
dole out
PHRV ให้ทาน บริจาค ให้ hai-tan
doleful
ADJ เสียใจ มาก เศร้าโศก คร่ำครวญ sad mournful sia-jai-mak
dolefully
ADV อย่าง เสียใจ มาก อย่าง เศร้าโศก yang-sia-jai-mak
dolefulness
N ความเศร้า ใจ ความเสียใจ ความเศร้า โศก kwam-sao-jai
dolerite
N หิน ภูเขาไฟ
dolesome
A ที่ เศร้า เสียใจ
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DOLE
n.[See Deal. ] 1. The act of dealing or distributing; as the power of dole and donative. [Not in use. ]
2. That which is dealt or distributed; a part, share or portion.
3. That which is given in charity; gratuity.
4. Blows dealt out.
5. Boundary. [Not in use. ]
6. A void space left in tillage. [Local. ]
DOLE
n.[L., pain, grief. ] Grief; sorrow.
DOLE
v.t.To deal; to distribute. [Not used. ]
DOLEFUL
a.[dole and full. ] 1. Sorrowful; expressing grief; as a doleful whine; a doleful cry.
2. Melancholy; sad; afflicted; as a doleful sire.
3. Dismal; impressing sorrow; gloomy; as doleful shades.
DOLEFULLY
adv. In a doleful manner; sorrowfully; dismally; sadly.
DOLEFULNESS
n.Sorrow; melancholy; querulousness; gloominess; dismalness.
DOLENT
a.[L.] Sorrowful. [Not in use. ]
DOLESOME
a.Gloomy; dismal; sorrowful; doleful. The dolesome passage to th infernal sky.
DOLESOMENESS
n.Gloom; dismalness.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DOLE
Dole, n. Etym: [OE. deol, doel, dol, OF. doel, fr. doloir to suffer, fr. L. dolere; perh. akin to dolare to hew. ]
Defn: grief; sorrow; lamentation. [Archaic ] And she died. So that day there was dole in Astolat. Tennyson.
DOLE
Dole, n. Etym: [L. dolus: cf. F. dol. ] (Scots Law )
Defn: See Dolus.
DOLE
Dole, n. Etym: [AS. dal portion; same word as d. See Deal. ]
1. Distribution; dealing; apportionment. At her general dole, Each receives his ancient soul. Cleveland.
2. That which is dealt out; a part, share, or portion also, a scanty share or allowance.
3. Alms; charitable gratuity or portion. So sure the dole, so ready at their call, They stood prepared to see the manna fall. Dryden. Heaven has in store a precious dole. Keble.
4. A boundary; a landmark. Halliwell.
5. A void space left in tillage. [Prov. Eng. ] Dole beer, beer bestowed as alms. [Obs. ] -- Dole bread, bread bestowed as alms. [Obs. ] -- Dole meadow, a meadow in which several persons have a common right or share.
DOLE
Dole, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Doled; p. pr. & vb. n. Doling.]
Defn: To deal out in small portions; to distribute, as a dole; to deal out scantily or grudgingly. The supercilious condescension with which even his reputed friends doled out their praises to him. De Quincey.
DOLEFUL
DOLEFUL Dole "ful, a.
Defn: Full of dole or grief; expressing or exciting sorrow; sorrowful; sad; dismal. With screwed face and doleful whine. South. Regions of sorrow, doleful shades. Milton.
Syn. -- Piteous; rueful; sorrowful; woeful; melancholy; sad gloomy; dismal; dolorous; woe-begone. - Dole "ful *ly, adv. -- Dole "ful *ness, n.
DOLENT
Do "lent, a. Etym: [L. dolens, p. pr. of dolere: cf. F. dolent. See Dole sorrow. ]
Defn: Sorrowful. [Obs. ] Ford.
DOLENTE
Do *len "te, a. & adv. Etym: [It. ] (Mus. )
Defn: Plaintively. See Doloroso.
DOLERITE
Dol "er *ite, n. Etym: [Gr. (Geol. & Min. )
Defn: A dark-colored, basic, igneous rock, composed essentially of pyroxene and a triclinic feldspar with magnetic iron. By many authors it is considered equivalent to a coarse-grained basalt.
DOLERITIC
DOLERITIC Dol `er *it "ic, a.
Defn: Of the nature of dolerite; as, much lava is doleritic lava. Dana.
DOLESOME
DOLESOME Dole "some, a.
Defn: Doleful; dismal; gloomy; sorrowful. -- Dole "some *ly, adv. -- Dole "some *ness, n.
New American Oxford Dictionary
Dole
Dole |dōl doʊl | the name of a family of US politicians. • Bob (1923 –); full name Robert Joseph Dole. He was a US senator from Kansas 1968 –96 and became leader of the Republican Party in 1992. He was defeated by Bill Clinton in the 1996 presidential election. • Elizabeth Hanford (1936 –), Bob's wife; North Carolina's first female US senator 2003 –09. She served as US secretary of transportation 1983 –87 and US secretary of labor 1989 –90 before heading the American Red Cross 1990 –99. In 1999, she made an unsuccessful bid for the 2000 Republican presidential nomination.
dole
dole 1 |dōl doʊl | ▶noun 1 (usu. the dole ) Brit. informal benefit paid by the government to the unemployed: she is drawing on the dole. • dated a charitable gift of food, clothes, or money. 2 literary a person's lot or destiny. ▶verb [ with obj. ] (dole something out ) distribute shares of something: the scanty portions of food doled out to them. PHRASES on the dole informal registered as unemployed and receiving benefit from the government. ORIGIN Old English dāl ‘division, portion, or share, ’ of Germanic origin; related to deal 1. The sense ‘distribution of charitable gifts ’ dates from Middle English; the sense ‘unemployment benefit ’ dates from the early 20th cent.
dole
dole 2 |dōl doʊl | ▶noun archaic or literary sorrow; mourning. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French doel ‘mourning, ’ from popular Latin dolus, from Latin dolere ‘grieve. ’
dole-bludger
dole-bludger ▶noun Austral. /NZ informal a person who chooses to receive unemployment benefit rather than work.
doleful
dole ful |ˈdōlfəl ˈdoʊlfəl | ▶adjective expressing sorrow; mournful: a doleful look. • causing grief or misfortune: doleful consequences. DERIVATIVES dole ful ly adverb, dole ful ness noun
dolerite
dol er ite |ˈdäləˌrīt ˈdɑləraɪt | ▶noun Geology a dark, medium-grained igneous rock, typically with ophitic texture, containing plagioclase, pyroxene, and olivine. It typically occurs in dikes and sills. Also called diabase. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from French dolérite, from Greek doleros ‘deceptive ’ (because it is difficult to distinguish from diorite ).
Oxford Dictionary
Dole
Dole |dōl doʊl | the name of a family of US politicians. • Bob (1923 –); full name Robert Joseph Dole. He was a US senator from Kansas 1968 –96 and became leader of the Republican Party in 1992. He was defeated by Bill Clinton in the 1996 presidential election. • Elizabeth Hanford (1936 –), Bob's wife; North Carolina's first female US senator 2003 –09. She served as US secretary of transportation 1983 –87 and US secretary of labor 1989 –90 before heading the American Red Cross 1990 –99. In 1999, she made an unsuccessful bid for the 2000 Republican presidential nomination.
dole
dole 1 |dəʊl | ▶noun 1 [ mass noun ] (usu. the dole ) Brit. informal benefit paid by the state to the unemployed: I was on the dole for three years | [ as modifier ] : my next dole cheque. • [ count noun ] dated a charitable gift of food, clothes, or money. 2 literary a person's lot or destiny. ▶verb [ with obj. ] (dole something out ) distribute shares of something: the scanty portions of food doled out to them. ORIGIN Old English dāl ‘division, portion, or share ’, of Germanic origin; related to deal 1. The sense ‘distribution of charitable gifts ’ dates from Middle English; the sense ‘unemployment benefit ’ dates from the early 20th cent.
dole
dole 2 |dəʊl | ▶noun [ mass noun ] archaic or literary sorrow; mourning. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French doel ‘mourning ’, from popular Latin dolus, from Latin dolere ‘grieve ’.
dole-bludger
dole-bludger ▶noun Austral. /NZ informal a person who chooses to receive unemployment benefit rather than work.
doleful
dole |ful |ˈdəʊlfʊl, -f (ə )l | ▶adjective expressing sorrow; mournful: a doleful look. • causing grief or misfortune: he could be struck off, with doleful consequences. DERIVATIVES dolefully adverb, dolefulness noun
dolerite
dolerite |ˈdɒlərʌɪt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Geology a dark, medium-grained igneous rock, typically with ophitic texture, containing plagioclase, pyroxene, and olivine. It typically occurs in dykes and sills. Also called diabase. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from French dolérite, from Greek doleros ‘deceptive ’ (because it is difficult to distinguish from diorite ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
dole
dole verb we dole out fresh soup and bread every afternoon: deal out, share out, divide up, allocate, allot, distribute, dispense, hand out, give out, dish out /up, divvy up.
doleful
doleful adjective her doleful eyes: mournful, woeful, sorrowful, sad, unhappy, depressed, gloomy, morose, melancholy, miserable, forlorn, wretched, woebegone, despondent, dejected, disconsolate, downcast, crestfallen, downhearted; informal blue, down in /at the mouth, down in the dumps; literary dolorous, heartsick. ANTONYMS cheerful.
Oxford Thesaurus
dole
dole noun (the dole ) Brit. informal he was out of work and on the dole: unemployment benefit, state benefit, government benefit, benefit, benefit payments, social security, social security payments, public assistance allowance, allowance, welfare, insurance money, grant; financial assistance; Scottish the buroo, the broo. ▶verb PHRASES dole something out Dad began to dole out the porridge: deal out, share out, mete out, divide up, allocate, allot, apportion, assign, distribute, dispense, hand out, give out, pass out, pass round, issue, disburse; informal dish out, dish up, divvy up.
doleful
doleful adjective she regarded him with doleful eyes: mournful, woeful, sorrowful, sad, unhappy, depressed, dismal, gloomy, morose, melancholy, miserable, forlorn, wretched, woebegone, despondent, dejected, disconsolate, downcast, crestfallen, downhearted, heartbroken, heavy-hearted, despairing, desolate, grief-stricken; tearful, teary, lachrymose; informal blue, down, down in the mouth, down in the dumps, weepy; literary dolorous; archaic heartsick, heartsore. ANTONYMS cheerful.
Duden Dictionary
Dole
Do le Substantiv, feminin , die |D o le |die Dole; Genitiv: der Dole, Plural: die Dolen spätmittelhochdeutsch dol = Mine, althochdeutsch dola = (Erd )röhre 1 überdeckter Abzugsgraben 2 westmitteldeutsch, schweizerisch Sinkkasten
Dôle
Dôle Substantiv, maskulin , der |doːl |der Dôle; Genitiv: des Dôles, Plural: die Dôles französisch ein Rotwein aus dem Schweizer Wallis
dolendo
do len do Adverb dolente |dol e ndo | doloroso
dolente
do len te Adverb dolendo |dol e nte | doloroso
Dolerit
Do le rit Substantiv, maskulin , der |Doler i t auch …ˈrɪt |griechisch-neulateinisch grobkörnige Basaltart
French Dictionary
doléance
doléance n. f. nom féminin Réclamation. : Présenter ses doléances. SYNONYME grief . Note Technique Ce nom s ’emploie généralement au pluriel.
dolent
dolent , ente adj. adjectif Triste, plaintif. : Un ton dolent.
Spanish Dictionary
dolencia
dolencia nombre femenino Enfermedad o alteración de la salud :dolencia cardíaca; dolencia pulmonar; dolencia hepática .SINÓNIMO padecimiento .
doler
doler verbo intransitivo 1 Producir dolor [una parte del cuerpo ]:doler una muela; me duele la cabeza .2 Causar [una cosa ] pena, tristeza o lástima :me duele verte llorar de esa manera; lo que más me dolió fue que me dijeran que yo no tenía alma ni espíritu para ser la jefa .3 dolerse verbo pronominal Lamentarse o quejarse de algo que causa pesar :se duele de que no cuentes con él para ir al teatro . VÉASE no doler prendas . Conjugación [32 ] como mover .
dolerita
dolerita nombre femenino Roca ígnea compuesta esencialmente de feldespato y anfibolita :los egipcios usaron herramientas de dolerita para tallar la piedra en las pirámides .SINÓNIMO diabasa .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
dole
dole /doʊl /名詞 U ⦅英 くだけて ⦆〖通例the ~〗失業手当 (⦅米 ⦆welfare )▸ be [go ] on the dole 失業手当を受けている [受ける ]動詞 他動詞 ⦅くだけて ⦆【人に 】〈金 食物など 〉を (少しずつ )分け与える [支給する ](out ) «to » .~́ qu è ue 〖the ~〗失業者たちの列 ; 失業者数 .
doleful
dole ful /dóʊlf (ə )l /形容詞 ⦅書 ⦆〈表情 態度 声などが 〉物悲しい, 悲痛な .~ly 副詞 ~ness 名詞