English-Thai Dictionary
extract
N ข้อความ ที่ คัดเลือก มาจาก หนังสือ หนัง ละคร ส่วน ที่ ตัดตอน มา citation excerpt passage kor-kwam-ti-kad-lueak-ma-jak-nang-sue nang la-kon
extract
VT คัดลอก หรือ ตัดทอน (ข้อความ คัด ตัดทอน cite excerpt quote kad-lok-rue-tad-ton
extract
VT ถอน ออก ดึง ออก pull out ton-ook
extract
VT สกัด ออกมา sa-kad-ook-ma
extract from
PHRV เอา มาจาก สกัด มาจาก ดึง มาจาก ถอน มาจาก excerpt from aol-ma-jak
extracting the urine
SL ฉี่ ถ่ายปัสสาวะ che
extraction
N การ ถอน การ ดึง ออก kan-ton
extraction
N การ แยก สสาร ออกจาก สารผสม หรือ สารละลาย kan yaek-sa-san-ook-jak-san-pa-som-rue-san-la-lai
extraction
N เชื้อสาย ชาติพันธุ์ ancestry descent chuea-sai
extractive
A เกี่ยวกับ การสกัด
extractor
N ผู้ สกัด เครื่อง ปั่น ให้ แห้ง
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
EXTRACT
v.t.[L. extractus, from extraho; ex and traho, to draw. ] 1. To draw out; as, to extract a tooth.
2. To draw out, as the juices or essence of a substance, by distillation, solution or other means; as, to extract spirit from the juice of the cane; to extract salts from ashes.
3. To take out; to take from.
Woman is her name, of man
Extracted.
4. To take out or select a part; to take a passage or passages from a book or writing.
I have extracted from the pamphlet a few notorious falsehoods.
5. In a general sense, to draw from by any means or operation.
EXTRACT
n.That which is extracted or drawn from something. 1. In literature, a passage taken from a book or writing.
2. In pharmacy, any thing drawn from a substance, as essences, tinctures, etc. ; or a solution of the purer parts of a mixed body inspissated by distillation or evaporation, nearly to the consistence of honey.
Any substance obtained by digesting vegetable substances in water, and evaporating them to a solid consistence.
3. In chimistry, a peculiar principle, supposed to form the basis of all vegetable extracts; called also the extractive principle.
4. Extraction; descent. [Not now used. ]
EXTRACTED
pp. Drawn or taken out.
EXTRACTING
ppr. Drawing or taking out.
EXTRACTION
n.[L. extractio.] The act of drawing out; as the extraction of a tooth; the extraction of a bone or an arrow from the body; the extraction of a fetus or child in midwifery. 1. Descent; lineage; birth; derivation of persons from a stock or family. Hence, the stock or family from which one has descended. We say, a man is of a noble extraction.
2. In pharmacy, the operation of drawing essences, tinctures, etc. from a substance.
3. In arithmetic and algebra, the extraction of roots is the operation of finding the root of a given number of quantity; also, the method or rule by which the operation is performed.
EXTRACTIVE
a.That may be extracted.
EXTRACTIVE
n.The proximate principle of vegetable extracts.
EXTRACTOR
n.In midwifery, a forceps or instrument for extracting children.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
EXTRACT
Ex *tract ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Extracted; p. pr. & vb. n.Extracting. ] Etym: [L. extractus, p. p. of extrahere to extract; ex out + trahere to draw. See Trace, and cf. Estreat. ]
1. To draw out or forth; to pull out; to remove forcibly from a fixed position, as by traction or suction, etc. ; as, to extract a tooth from its socket, a stump from the earth, a splinter from the finger. The bee Sits on the bloom extracting liquid sweet. Milton.
2. To withdraw by expression, distillation, or other mechanical or chemical process; as, to extract an essence. Cf. Abstract, v. t., 6. Sunbeams may be extracted from cucumbers, but the process is tedious.
3. To take by selection; to choose out; to cite or quote, as a passage from a book. I have extracted out of that pamphlet a few notorious falsehoods. Swift. To extract the root (Math. ), to ascertain the root of a number or quantity.
EXTRACT
EXTRACT Ex "tract `, n.
1. That which is extracted or drawn out.
2. A portion of a book or document, separately transcribed; a citation; a quotation.
3. A decoction, solution, or infusion made by drawing out from any substance that which gives it its essential and characteristic virtue; essence; as, extract of beef; extract of dandelion; also, any substance so extracted, and characteristic of that from which it is obtained; as, quinine is the most important extract of Peruvian bark.
4. (Med. )
Defn: A solid preparation obtained by evaporating a solution of a drug, etc. , or the fresh juice of a plant; -- distinguished from an abstract. See Abstract, n., 4.
5. (Old Chem. )
Defn: A peculiar principle once erroneously supposed to form the basis of all vegetable extracts; -- called also the extractive principle. [Obs. ]
6. Extraction; descent. [Obs. ] South.
7. (Scots Law )
Defn: A draught or copy of writing; certified copy of the proceedings in an action and the judgement therein, with an order for execution. Tomlins. Fluid extract (Med. ), a concentrated liquid preparation, containing a definite proportion of the active principles of a medicinal substance. At present a fluid gram of extract should represent a gram of the crude drug.
EXTRACTABLE; EXTRACTIBLE
EXTRACTABLE; EXTRACTIBLE Ex *tract "a *ble, Ex *tract "i *ble, a.
Defn: Capable of being extracted.
EXTRACTIFORM
EXTRACTIFORM Ex *tract "i *form, a. (Chem. )
Defn: Having the form, appearance, or nature, of an extract.
EXTRACTION
Ex *trac "tion, n. Etym: [Cf. F. extraction. ]
1. The act of extracting, or drawing out; as, the extraction of a tooth, of a bone or an arrow from the body, of a stump from earth, of a passage from a book, of an essence or tincture.
2. Derivation from a stock or family; lineage; descent; birth; the stock from which one has descended. "A family of ancient extraction. " Clarendon.
3. That which is extracted; extract; essence. They [books ] do preserve as in a vial the purest efficacy and extraction of that living intellect that bred them. Milton. The extraction of roots. (Math. ) (a ) The operation of finding the root of a given number or quantity. (b ) The method or rule by which the operation is performed; evolution.
EXTRACTIVE
Ex *tract "ive, a. Etym: [Cf. F. extractif.]
1. Capable of being extracted. "Thirty grains of extractive matter. " Kirwan.
2. Tending or serving to extract or draw out. Certain branches of industry are conveniently designated extractive: e.g., agriculture, pastoral and mining pursuits, cutting of lumber, etc. Cairnes.
EXTRACTIVE
EXTRACTIVE Ex *tract "ive, n.
1. Anything extracted; an extract. Extractives, of which the most constant are urea, kreatin, and grape sugar. H. N. Martin.
2. (Chem. ) (a ) A chemical principle once supposed to exist in all extracts. [Obs. ] (b ) Any one of a large class of substances obtained by extraction, and consisting largely of nitrogenous hydrocarbons, such as xanthin, hypoxanthin, and creatin extractives from muscle tissue.
EXTRACTOR
EXTRACTOR Ex *tract "or, n.
Defn: One who, or that which, extracts; as: (a ) (Surg.) A forceps or instrument for extracting substances. (b ) (Breech-loading Firearms ) A device for withdrawing a cartridge or spent cartridge shell from the chamber of the barrel.
New American Oxford Dictionary
extract
ex tract ▶verb |ikˈstrakt ɪkˈstrækt | [ with obj. ] remove or take out, esp. by effort or force: the decayed tooth will have to be extracted. • obtain (something such as money or an admission ) from someone in the face of initial unwillingness: I won't let you go without trying to extract a promise from you. • obtain (a substance or resource ) from something by a special method: lead was extracted from the copper. • select (a passage from a piece of writing, music, or film ) for quotation, performance, or reproduction: the table is extracted from the report. • derive (an idea or the evidence for it ) from a body of information: the desire to extract meaningful lessons from a few experiments. • Mathematics calculate (a root of a number ). ▶noun |ˈekˌstrakt ˈɛkˌstrækt | 1 a short passage taken from a piece of writing, music, or film: an extract from a historical film. 2 a preparation containing the active ingredient of a substance in concentrated form: vanilla extract | extract of chamomile. DERIVATIVES ex tract a bil i ty |ikˌstraktəˈbilitē |noun, ex tract a ble adjective ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin extract- ‘drawn out, ’ from the verb extrahere, from ex- ‘out ’ + trahere ‘draw. ’
extraction
ex trac tion |ikˈstrakSHən ɪkˈstrækʃən | ▶noun 1 the action of taking out something, esp. using effort or force: mineral extraction | a dental extraction. 2 [ with adj. ] the ethnic origin of someone's family: a worker of Polish extraction. ORIGIN late Middle English: via Old French from late Latin extractio (n- ), from Latin extrahere ‘draw out ’ (see extract ).
extractive
ex trac tive |ikˈstraktiv ɪkˈstræktɪv ɛkˈstræktɪv | ▶adjective of or involving extraction, esp. the extensive extraction of natural resources without provision for their renewal: extractive industry.
extractor
ex trac tor |ikˈstraktər ɪkˈstræktər | ▶noun [ often with modifier ] a machine or device used to extract something: a juice extractor. • [ as modifier ] denoting a device used to ventilate and remove bad smells from an area: the engine room's extractor fans.
Oxford Dictionary
extract
ex |tract ▶verb |ɪkˈstrakt, ɛk- | [ with obj. ] 1 remove or take out, especially by effort or force: the fossils are extracted from the chalk. • obtain (a substance or resource ) from something by a special method: lead was extracted from the copper. • obtain (something such as money or information ) from someone unwilling to give it: I won't let you go without trying to extract a promise from you. • select (a passage from a text, film, or piece of music ) for quotation, performance, or reproduction: the table is extracted from the report. • derive (an idea ) from a body of information: there are few attempts to extract generalities about the nature of the disciplines. 2 Mathematics calculate (a root of a number ). ▶noun |ˈɛkstrakt | 1 a short passage taken from a text, film, or piece of music: an extract from a historical film. 2 a preparation containing the active ingredient of a substance in concentrated form: natural plant extracts | [ mass noun ] : a shampoo with extract of camomile. DERIVATIVES extractability |-ˈbɪlɪti |noun, extractable adjective ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin extract- ‘drawn out ’, from the verb extrahere, from ex- ‘out ’ + trahere ‘draw ’.
extraction
ex |trac ¦tion |ɪkˈstrakʃ (ə )n, ɛk- | ▶noun [ mass noun ] 1 the action of extracting something, especially using effort or force: mineral extraction | [ count noun ] : a dental extraction. 2 [ with adj. ] the ethnic origin of someone's family: a worker of Polish extraction. ORIGIN late Middle English: via Old French from late Latin extractio (n- ), from Latin extrahere ‘draw out ’ (see extract ).
extractive
ex ¦tract |ive |ɪkˈstraktɪv, ɛk- | ▶adjective of or involving extraction, especially the extensive extraction of natural resources without provision for their renewal: extractive industry.
extractor
ex |tract ¦or |ɪkˈstraktə, ɛk- | ▶noun [ often with modifier ] a machine or device used to extract something: a juice extractor. • [ as modifier ] denoting a device used to extract odours and stale air from an area: the engine room's extractor fans.
American Oxford Thesaurus
extract
extract verb 1 he extracted the videocassette: take out, draw out, pull out, remove, withdraw; free, release, extricate. ANTONYMS insert. 2 extracting money: wrest, exact, wring, screw, squeeze, obtain by force, obtain by threat (s ), extort, blackmail someone for; informal put the bite on someone for. 3 the roots are crushed to extract the juice: squeeze out, express, press out, obtain. ANTONYMS add, infuse. 4 the figures are extracted from the report: excerpt, select, reproduce, copy, take. ANTONYMS insert. 5 ideas extracted from a variety of theories: derive, develop, evolve, deduce, infer, obtain; formal educe. ▶noun 1 an extract from his article: excerpt, passage, citation, quotation; (excerpts ) analects. 2 an extract of the ginseng root: decoction, distillation, distillate, abstraction, concentrate, essence, juice.
extraction
extraction noun 1 the extraction of gallstones: removal, taking out, drawing out, pulling out, withdrawal; freeing, release, extrication. ANTONYMS insertion. 2 the extraction of grape juice: squeezing, expressing, pressing, obtaining. 3 a man of Irish extraction: descent, ancestry, parentage, ancestors, family, antecedents; lineage, line, origin, derivation, birth; genealogy, heredity, stock, pedigree, blood, bloodline; roots, origins; rare filiation, stirps.
Oxford Thesaurus
extract
extract verb |(stress on the second syllable ) | 1 he switched off the recorder and extracted the cassette: take out, draw out, bring out, pull out, remove, withdraw, pluck out, fish out, prize out, extricate; wrench out, tear out, uproot, unsheathe; produce; free, release; rare deracinate. ANTONYMS insert. 2 the Crown was adept at extracting money from its subjects: wrest, exact, wring, screw, squeeze, milk, force, coerce, obtain by force, obtain by threat (s ), extort, blackmail someone for, worm something out of someone; N. Amer. & Austral. informal put the bite on someone for; archaic rack. 3 the roots are crushed to extract the sugary juice: squeeze out, express, separate, press out, obtain, distil. ANTONYMS add. 4 the table is extracted from the report: excerpt, select, choose, reproduce, repeat, copy, quote, cite, cull, take, abstract. ANTONYMS insert. 5 the following ideas are extracted from a variety of theories: derive, develop, evolve, deduce, infer, conclude, gather, elicit, obtain, get, take, gain, acquire, procure, attain, glean; formal educe. ▶noun |(stress on the first syllable ) | 1 an extract from his article: excerpt, passage, abstract, citation, selection, quotation, cutting, clipping, snippet, fragment, piece; (excerpts ) rare analects. 2 an extract of the ginseng root: decoction, distillation, distillate, abstraction, concentrate, essence, juice, solution, tincture, elixir, quintessence; rare decocture, apozem.
extraction
extraction noun 1 the extraction of gall bladder stones: removal, taking out, drawing out, pulling out, extrication, wrenching out, tearing out, uprooting, withdrawal, unsheathing; production; freeing, release; rare deracination. ANTONYMS insertion. 2 the extraction of rights has been a constant struggle: exaction, exacting, wresting, coercion, extortion. ANTONYMS relinquishment. 3 the extraction of grape juice: squeezing, expressing, separation, pressing, obtaining, distillation. 4 a man of Irish extraction: descent, ancestry, parentage, ancestors, family; lineage, line, line of descent; race, origin, derivation, birth; genealogy, heredity, succession; stock, pedigree, blood, bloodline, strain; roots, origins, forefathers, antecedents; rare filiation, stirps.
French Dictionary
extracteur
extracteur n. m. nom masculin Appareil servant à l ’extraction d ’un corps. FORME FAUTIVE extracteur (de jus ). Impropriété au sens de centrifugeuse.
Spanish Dictionary
extractar
extractar verbo transitivo Reducir a extracto un escrito :la dirección del periódico se reserva el derecho de extractar las cartas cuando lo considere oportuno .
extractivo, -va
extractivo, -va adjetivo De la extracción o relacionado con ella :industria extractiva .
extracto
extracto nombre masculino 1 Escrito o composición musical breve que contiene lo sustancial de otro escrito o composición más extensa .2 Sustancia muy concentrada que se obtiene de una planta, semilla u otra cosa por diversos procedimientos :extracto de camomila .extracto tebaico Extracto del opio .3 Relación o resumen de los movimientos (ingresos, pagos, etc. ) efectuados en una cuenta corriente durante un determinado período de tiempo :recibirá un extracto donde quedan reflejadas todas las operaciones realizadas con la tarjeta, detallando producto, cantidad, fecha, importe y estación de servicio en la que ha realizado sus compras .4 der Resumen de un expediente o pleito contencioso administrativo .
extractor, -ra
extractor, -ra adjetivo /nombre masculino 1 Que extrae o sirve para extraer una cosa :un centro extractor de cobre; la industria extractora de petróleo; la región extractora de carbón más importante del país; una campana extractora de humos; los extractores de turba; el Estado es uno de los extractores más importantes de la India .2 nombre masculino Aparato o pieza para extraer una cosa :un extractor de humos .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
extract
ex tract /ɪkstrǽkt, eks- , ⦅米 ⦆4 でまた ékstrækt /〖ex (外へ )tract (引き出す )〗動詞 ~s /-ts /; ~ed /-ɪd /; ~ing 他動詞 1 ⦅かたく ⦆ «…から » 〈物 〉を取り除く ; …を引き抜く , 抜き出す «from » ▸ I had my tooth extracted [⦅よりくだけて ⦆pulled out ].私は抜歯してもらった ▸ extract the cork from a bottle びんからコルク栓を抜き取る 2 【別の物質から 】〈ある物質 〉を抽出する , 採取する ; …を絞り取る «from » ▸ extract juice from fruit 果物から果汁を絞り取る ▸ extract an essence エキスを抽出する 3 【人から 】(無理に )〈情報 金など 〉を引き出す , 聞き出す ; «…から » 〈楽しみなど 〉をなんとか見出す «from » ; 〖~ oneself 〗【心地よい場所から 】しぶしぶ立ち去る «from » ▸ extract useful information from A A 〈人 〉から有用な情報を聞き出す 4 【本などから 】〈句など 〉を引用する , 抜き出す , 抜粋する «from » ▸ extract passages from a book 本から数節を抜き出す 名詞 /ékstrækt /1 C 【本 楽曲からの 】抜粋 , 引用章句 (excerpt ) «from » .2 C U 精 , エキス , 抽出物 (essence )▸ vanilla extract バニラエッセンス
extraction
ex tr á c tion 名詞 1 U C 引き抜く [かれる ]こと, 引き出す [される ]こと ; 抜歯 ; (成分などの )抽出, 浸出 .2 C 抜き出したもの, 抜粋 .3 U ⦅かたく ⦆生まれ, 血統, 素性 ▸ be of French extraction フランス系である
extractor
ex trac tor /ɪkstrǽktə r /名詞 C 1 換気扇 (extractor fan ).2 (果汁 )絞り器, 抽出器, 摘出器 ; 鉗子 (かんし )(forceps ).3 抽出者, 抜粋者 .