English-Thai Dictionary
impact
N การอัด การชน collision crash smash kan-ad
impact
N ผลกระทบ ผลสะท้อน effect influence pon-kra-tob
impact
VI ส่งผลกระทบ มีผลกระทบ affect influence song-pon-kra-tob
impact
VT ส่งผลกระทบ มีผลกระทบ affect influence song-pon-kra-tob
impacted
ADJ ซึ่ง มี อุจจาระ อัด แน่น หรือ อุดตัน (ทางการแพทย์ sueng-me-ud-ja-ra-ad-naen-rue-ud-tan
impacted
ADJ ซึ่ง ไม่ สามารถ ขยับเขยื้อน ได้ sueng-mai-sa-mad-ka-yab-ka-yuean-dai
impaction
N การชน การปะทะ การ กระทบ ผลกระทบ kan-chon
impaction
N การอัด แน่น การ อุดตัน kan-ad-nan
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
IMPACT
v.t.[L. impactus, from impingo; in and pango, to drive. ] To drive close; to press or drive firmly together.
IMPACT
n.Touch; impression.
IMPACTED
pp. Driven hard; made close by driving.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
IMPACT
Im *pact ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Impacted; p. pr. & vb. n. Impacting.]Etym: [L. impactus, p. p. of impingere to push, strike against. See Impinge. ]
Defn: To drive close; to press firmly together: to wedge into a place. Woodward.
IMPACT
IMPACT Im "pact, n.
1. Contact or impression by touch; collision; forcible contact; force communicated. The quarrel, by that impact driven. Southey.
2. (Mech. )
Defn: The single instantaneous stroke of a body in motion against another either in motion or at rest.
IMPACTED
IMPACTED Im *pact "ed, a.
Defn: Driven together or close. Impacted fracture (Surg.), a fracture in which the fragments are driven into each other so as to be immovable.
IMPACTION
Im *pac "tion, n. Etym: [L. impactio a striking: cf. F. impaction. ]
1. (Surg.)
Defn: The driving of one fragment of bone into another so that the fragments are not movable upon each other; as, impaction of the skull or of the hip.
2. An immovable packing; (Med. ), a lodgment of something in a strait or passage of the body; as, impaction of the fetal head in the strait of the pelvis; impaction of food or feces in the intestines of man or beast.
New American Oxford Dictionary
impact
im pact ▶noun |ˈimˌpakt ˈɪmˌpækt |the action of one object coming forcibly into contact with another: there was the sound of a third impact | bullets that expand and cause devastating injury on impact. • the effect or influence of one person, thing, or action, on another: our regional measures have had a significant impact on unemployment. ▶verb |imˈpakt ɪmˈpækt | [ no obj. ] 1 come into forcible contact with another object: the shell impacted twenty yards away. • [ with obj. ] come into forcible contact with: an asteroid impacted the earth some 60 million years ago. • [ with obj. ] press firmly: the animals' feet do not impact and damage the soil as cows' hooves do. 2 (impact on ) have a strong effect on someone or something: high interest rates have impacted on retail spending | [ with obj. ] : the move is not expected to impact the company's employees. ORIGIN early 17th cent. (as a verb in the sense ‘press closely, fix firmly ’): from Latin impact- ‘driven in, ’ from the verb impingere (see impinge ). usage: The phrasal verb impact on, as in when produce is lost, it always impacts on the bottom line, has been in the language since the 1960s. Many people disapprove of it despite its relative frequency, saying that make an impact on or other equivalent wordings should be used instead. New formations of verbs from nouns (as in the case of impact ) are often regarded as somehow inferior.
impact crater
im pact cra ter ▶noun a crater on a planet or moon caused by the impact of a meteorite or other object, typically circular with a raised rim.
impacted
im pact ed |imˈpaktid ɪmˈpæktəd | ▶adjective 1 chiefly Medicine pressed firmly together, in particular: • (of a tooth ) wedged between another tooth and the jaw. • (of a fractured bone ) having the parts crushed together. • (of feces ) lodged in the intestine. 2 strongly affected by something: grandiose planning projects have had deleterious effects on impacted social groups.
impactful
im pact ful |imˈpaktfəl ɪmˈpæktfəl | ▶adjective having a major impact or effect: an eye-catching and impactful design.
impaction
im pac tion |imˈpakSHən ɪmˈpækʃən | ▶noun Medicine the condition of being or process of becoming impacted, esp. of feces in the intestine.
impactive
im pac tive |imˈpaktiv ɪmˈpæktɪv | ▶adjective having a strong effect or influence; making an impression: impactive color radiates from the sculptures.
impactor
im pac tor |imˈpaktər ɪmˈpæktər | ▶noun chiefly Astronomy an object (such as a meteorite ) that collides with another body.
Oxford Dictionary
impact
im ¦pact ▶noun |ˈɪmpakt | 1 the action of one object coming forcibly into contact with another: there was the sound of a third impact | [ mass noun ] : bullets which expand and cause devastating injury on impact. 2 a marked effect or influence: our regional measures have had a significant impact on unemployment. ▶verb |ɪmˈpakt | [ no obj. ] 1 come into forcible contact with another object: the shell impacted twenty yards away. • [ with obj. ] chiefly N. Amer. come into forcible contact with: an asteroid impacted the earth some 60 million years ago. • [ with obj. ] press (something ) firmly: the animals' feet do not impact and damage the soil as cows' hooves do. 2 (impact on ) have a strong effect on someone or something: high interest rates have impacted on retail spending | [ with obj. ] : the move is not expected to impact the company's employees. ORIGIN early 17th cent. (as a verb in the sense ‘press closely, fix firmly ’): from Latin impact- ‘driven in ’, from the verb impingere (see impinge ). usage: The phrasal verb impact on, as in when produce is lost, it always impacts on the bottom line, has been in the language since the 1960s. Many people disapprove of it, saying that make an impact on or other equivalent wordings should be used instead. This may be partly because, in general, new formations of verbs from nouns (as in the case of impact, action, and task ) are regarded as somehow inferior; in addition, since the verbal use of impact is associated with business and commercial writing, it has the unenviable status of ‘jargon ’, which makes it doubly disliked. Compare with usage at enthuse .
impact crater
im ¦pact crater ▶noun a crater on a planet or satellite caused by the impact of a meteorite or other object.
impacted
im |pact ¦ed |ɪmˈpaktɪd | ▶adjective 1 chiefly Medicine pressed firmly together, in particular: • (of a tooth ) wedged between another tooth and the jaw. • (of a fractured bone ) having the parts crushed together. • (of faeces ) lodged in the intestine. 2 strongly affected by something: the planners' lamentable failure to consult with the impacted population.
impactful
impactful |ˈɪmpaktf (ʊ )l | ▶adjective having a major impact or effect: an eye-catching and impactful design.
impaction
im |pac ¦tion |ɪmˈpakʃ (ə )n | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Medicine the condition of being or process of becoming impacted, especially of faeces in the intestine.
impactive
im ¦pact |ive ▶adjective having a strong effect or influence; making an impression: impactive colour radiates from the sculptures.
impactor
im |pact ¦or |ɪmˈpaktə | ▶noun chiefly Astronomy an object (such as a meteorite ) which collides with another body.
American Oxford Thesaurus
impact
impact noun 1 the force of the impact: collision, crash, smash, bump, bang, knock. 2 the job losses will have a major impact: effect, influence, significance, meaning; consequences, repercussions, ramifications, reverberations. ▶verb 1 a comet impacted the earth sixty million years ago: crash into, smash into, collide with, hit, strike, ram, smack into, bang into, slam into. 2 high interest rates have impacted retail spending: affect, influence, have an effect on, make an impression on; hit, touch, change, alter, modify, transform, shape. USAGE impact Impact has traditionally been only a noun. In recent years, however, it has undergone a semantic shift that has allowed it to act as a verb. Such use has become widespread (and also widely condemned by stylists )—e.g.: “The researchers concluded that this low level of intensity may have impacted [read affected ] the results.” ( Tampa Tribune; July 17, 1997.) This use of the word would be perfectly acceptable if impact were performing any function not as ably performed by affect or influence. If affect as a verb is not sufficiently straightforward in context, then the careful writer might use have an impact on, which, though longer, is probably better than the jarring impact of impacted. Reserve impact for noun uses and impacted for wisdom teeth. Interestingly, impact as a verb might have arisen partly in response to widespread diffidence about the spelling of affect (often confused with effect ).Usage notes show additional guidance on finer points of English usage.
Oxford Thesaurus
impact
impact noun |(stress on the first syllable ) | 1 car parts were spread by the impact over a wide region: collision, crash, smash, clash, bump, bang, knock, jolt, thump, whack, thwack, slam, smack; contact. 2 no car can withstand the impact of a train: force, full force, shock, brunt, impetus, pressure, weight. 3 the job losses will have a major impact | the impact of agriculture on wildlife: effect, influence, impression; results, consequences, repercussions, ramifications, reverberations; informal pay-off. ▶verb |(stress on the second syllable ) | 1 N. Amer. a comet impacted the earth sixty million years ago: crash into, smash into, collide with, be in collision with, hit, strike, ram, smack into, slam into, bang into, cannon into, plough into, meet head-on, dash against. 2 high interest rates have impacted on retail spending: affect, influence, have an effect, have an influence, exert influence, make an impression, act, work; strike, hit, touch, change, alter, modify, transform, shape, control, govern, determine, decide, sway, bias.
Duden Dictionary
Impact
Im pact Substantiv, maskulin , der |I mpact …pɛkt |der Impact; Genitiv: des Impacts, Plural: die Impacts englisch impact = Wirkung, Wucht 1 Werbesprache Stärke der von einer Werbemaßnahme ausgehenden Wirkung 2 Golf Moment, in dem der Schläger den Ball trifft
French Dictionary
impact
impact n. m. nom masculin 1 Choc. : La force de l ’impact a été très grande: la voiture a été réduite en miettes. SYNONYME collision ; heurt . 2 figuré Effet, influence. : L ’impact d ’une campagne publicitaire. Note Technique En ce sens, le nom est employé sous l ’influence de l ’anglais et il est critiqué par certains auteurs, mais il est maintenant passé dans l ’usage. On pourra lui préférer les noms conséquence, contrecoup, effet, incidence, influence, portée, répercussion, retombées, selon le cas. LOCUTION Étude d ’impact. Étude qui a pour objet la détermination et l ’évaluation des effets physiques, chimiques, biologiques, esthétiques, sociaux, culturels, etc. , d ’un projet d ’aménagement en vue d ’en connaître et d ’en minimiser les effets négatifs. : Avant d ’entamer la réalisation du projet, il faut procéder à une étude d ’impact. Prononciation Les lettres ct se prononcent, [ɛ̃pakt ]
Spanish Dictionary
impactante
impactante adjetivo Que causa una fuerte impresión :Toral ha practicado un hiperrealismo muy impactante y de gran perfección técnica; las imágenes del noticiero eran realmente impactantes por su gran dramatismo .
impactar
impactar verbo intransitivo 1 Chocar violentamente [una cosa en movimiento ] contra otra; especialmente [un proyectil ] contra un blanco :un meteorito impactó en un campo cercano; una bala impactó en el depósito de combustible del avión .2 Causar una intensa impresión emocional o un gran desconcierto :muchas campañas de publicidad pretenden impactar en la opinión pública para ganar su atención; desde su retirada, ningún gimnasta ha conseguido impactar sobre rivales y crítica .
impacto
impacto nombre masculino 1 Choque violento de una cosa en movimiento contra otra; especialmente de un proyectil contra un blanco :a consecuencia del impacto, la joven salió despedida del auto; un vehículo estacionado delante del bar resultó dañado por los impactos de los perdigones .2 Huella o efecto producidos por este choque :no se encontró dentro de la embajada ningún impacto de bala .3 Impresión emocional intensa que causa un determinado hecho o su difusión :las imágenes de la guerra causaron un fuerte impacto social; con esa película Buñuel logró un auténtico impacto entre el gran público .4 Conjunto de los efectos que un suceso o un hecho producen en su entorno físico o social :se han creado muchas redes viarias sin tener en cuenta el impacto medioambiental que iban a producir; el impacto de la subida de los precios internacionales del crudo ha sido muy importante en la economía mundial .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
impact
im pact /ɪ́mpækt / (! 名詞 と 動詞 で強勢が異なるので注意 ) 〖原義は 「押しつける 」〗名詞 複 ~s /-ts /1 C 〖通例単数形で 〗 «…への » (社会的 精神的 )影響, 衝撃 , 効果 «on, upon » ▸ the social impact of science 科学の社会的影響 ▸ The meeting had [made, ╳caused ] a great impact on the future of the country .その会議はその国の未来に大きな影響を与えた 2 C U «…との » 衝突 , ぶつかること ; «…への » (衝突による )衝撃 «on , against » ▸ an asteroid impact 小惑星の衝突 ▸ at the time of impact 衝突時に on í mpact 衝突したはずみで, ぶつかった瞬間 .動詞 /ɪmpǽkt /他動詞 1 ⦅主に米 ⦆〈人 事態など 〉に (大きな )影響 [衝撃 ]を与える .2 ⦅かたく ⦆…と激突する, …に衝突する ; «…に » …を押しつける, 詰め込む «in , into » .自動詞 1 ⦅主に米 ⦆〈物 事が 〉【人 事態などに 】(大きな )影響 [衝撃 ]を与える «on , upon » .2 ⦅かたく ⦆ «…と » 激突する , «…に » 衝突する «on , upon , with » .
impacted
im p á ct ed /-ɪd /形容詞 1 ぎっしり詰まった .2 〘歯 〙〈歯が 〉歯槽の中に埋伏したままの .3 人口密度が高い .