English-Thai Dictionary
dropsical
A ที่ คล้าย การ บวมน้ำ ti-klai-kan-buam-nam
dropsy
N ภาวะ ของ ร่างกาย ที่ สะสม น้ำ เกิน ปกติ par-wa-khong-rang-kai-ti-sa-som-nam-kern-pok-ti
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DROPS
v.t.[G.] 1. To pour or let fall in small portions or globules, as a fluid; to distill.
The heavens shall drop down dew. Deuteronomy 33:28.
2. To let fall as any substance; as, to drop the anchor; to drop a stone.
3. To let go; to dismiss; to lay aside; to quit; to leave; to permit to subside; as, to drop an affair; to drop a controversy; to drop a pursuit.
4. To utter slightly, briefly or casually; as, to drop a word in favor of a friend.
5. To insert indirectly, incidentally, or by way of digression; as, to drop a word of instruction in a letter
6. To lay aside; to dismiss from possession; as, to drop these frail bodies.
7. To leave; as, to drop a letter at the post office.
8. To set down and leave; as, the coach dropped a passenger at the inn.
9. To quit; to suffer to cease; as, to drop an acquaintance.
1 . To let go; to dismiss from association; as, to drop a companion.
11. To suffer to end or come to nothing; as, to drop a fashion.
12. To bedrop; to speckle; to variegate, as if by sprinkling with drops; as a coat dropped with gold.
13. To lower; as, to drop the muzzle of a gun.
DROPSICAL
a.[See Dropsy. ] 1. Diseased with dropsy; hydropical; inclined to the dropsy; applied to persons.
2. Partaking of the nature of the dropsy; applied to disease.
DROPSIED
a.Diseased with dropsy.
DROPSY
n.[L, Gr. , water; the face. Formerly written hydropisy; whence by contraction, dropsy. ] In medicine, an unnatural collection of water, in an part of the body, proceeding from a greater effusion of serum by the exhalant arteries, than the absorbents take up. It occurs most frequently in persons of lax habits, or in bodies debilitated by disease. The dropsy takes different names, according to the part affected; as ascites, or dropsy of the abdomen; hydrocephalus, or water in the head; anasarca, or a watery swelling over the whole body; etc.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DROPSICAL
Drop "si *cal, a. Etym: [From Dropsy. ]
1. Diseased with dropsy; hydropical; tending to dropsy; as, a dropsical patient.
2. Of or pertaining to dropsy.
DROPSICALNESS
DROPSICALNESS Drop "si *cal *ness, n.
Defn: State of being dropsical.
DROPSIED
DROPSIED Drop "sied, a.
Defn: Diseased with drops. Shak.
DROPSY
Drop "sy, n.; pl. Dropsies. Etym: [OE. dropsie, dropesie, OF. idropisie, F. hydropisie, L. hydropisis, fr. Gr. Water, and cf. Hydropsy. ] (Med. )
Defn: An unnatural collection of serous fluid in any serous cavity of the body, or in the subcutaneous cellular tissue. Dunglison.
New American Oxford Dictionary
dropseed
drop seed |ˈdräpˌsēd ˈdrɑpsid | ▶noun a grass that readily drops its seeds. [Genus Sporobolus, family Gramineae: several species, including the widespread North American sand dropseed (S. cryptandrus ), which has a high yield of edible grain. ]
dropsical
drop si cal |ˈdräpsikəl ˈdrɑpsəkəl | ▶adjective affected with or characteristic of dropsy; edematous. ORIGIN late 17th cent.: from dropsy, replacing earlier hydropic (al ), via Latin from Greek hudrōps ‘dropsy. ’
dropside
drop side |ˈdräpˌsīd ˈdrɑpsaɪd | ▶adjective [ attrib. ] (of a crib or a hospital bed ) having a side that drops down to open. ▶noun a side that drops down in this way.
dropsy
drop sy |ˈdräpsē ˈdrɑpsi | ▶noun ( pl. dropsies ) old-fashioned or less technical term for edema. [Middle English: shortening of idropesie, earlier form of obsolete hydropsy, via Old French and Latin from Greek hudrōps ‘dropsy, ’ from hudōr ‘water. ’]
dropsy
dropsy 2 |ˈdrɒpsi | ▶noun ( pl. dropsies ) Brit. informal a tip or bribe: McCloy's little dropsy for services rendered. ORIGIN 1930s: slang, elaborated form of slang drop ‘a bribe ’.
Oxford Dictionary
dropseed
drop |seed |ˈdrɒpsiːd | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a grass that readily drops its seeds. ●Genus Sporobolus, family Gramineae: several species, including the widespread North American sand dropseed (S. cryptandrus ), which has a high yield of edible grain.
dropsical
dropsical |ˈdrɒpsɪk (ə )l | ▶adjective affected with or characteristic of dropsy; oedematous. ORIGIN late 17th cent.: from dropsy 1, replacing earlier hydropic (al ), via Latin from Greek hudrōps ‘dropsy ’.
dropside
drop |side |ˈdrɒpsʌɪd | ▶adjective (of a cot or a truck ) having a side that drops down to open. ▶noun a side of a cot or truck that drops down to open.
dropsy
dropsy 1 |ˈdrɒpsi | ▶noun ( pl. dropsies ) old-fashioned or less technical term for oedema. ORIGIN Middle English: shortening of idropesie, earlier form of obsolete hydropsy, via Old French and Latin from Greek hudrōps ‘dropsy ’, from hudōr ‘water ’.
dropsy
dropsy 2 |ˈdrɒpsi | ▶noun ( pl. dropsies ) Brit. informal a tip or bribe: McCloy's little dropsy for services rendered. ORIGIN 1930s: slang, elaborated form of slang drop ‘a bribe ’.
Duden Dictionary
Drops
Drops Substantiv, maskulin oder Substantiv, Neutrum , der oder das |Dr o ps |der, auch, österreichisch, bayrisch nur: das Drops; Genitiv: des Drops, Plural: die Drops meist im Plural englisch drops, Plural von: drop = Tropfen säuerlich schmeckender, flacher, runder Bonbon
Dropshot
Drop shot Substantiv, maskulin , der |Dr o pshot …ʃɔt |der Dropshot; Genitiv: des Dropshot [s ], Plural: die Dropshots englisch in Netznähe ausgeführter Schlag beim [Tisch ]tennis, bei dem sich der Schläger leicht rückwärtsbewegt, sodass der Ball kurz hinter dem Netz fast senkrecht herunterkommt
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
dropsy
drop sy /drɑ́psi |drɔ́p -/名詞 U 〘医 〙水腫 (すいしゆ ).