English-Thai Dictionary
mow
N โรงนา ที่เก็บ ฟาง หรือ หญ้า แห้ง rong-na
mow
VI ตัด หญ้า ถาง ถาก ออก ดาย หญ้า reap shear sythe tad-ya
mow
VI สังหาร หมู่ ตายเป็นเบือ sang-han-mu
mow
VT ตัด หญ้า ถาง ถาก ออก ดาย หญ้า reap shear sythe tad-ya
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
MOW
n.A heap, mass or pile of hay deposited in a barn. [We never give this name to hay piled in the field or open air. The latter is called a stack or rick. ]
MOW
v.t.To lay hay in a heap or mass in a barn, or to lay it in a suitable manner.
MOW
v.t. pret.mower; pp. mowed or mown. [The L. has meto, and the Gr. to mow or reap. The last radical letter is not ascertained. ] 1. To cut down with a scythe, as grass or other plants. We say, to mow grass.
2. To cut the grass from; as, to mow a meadow.
3. To cut down with speed; to cut down indiscriminately, or in great numbers or quantity. We say, a discharge of grape shot mows down whole ranks of men. Hence Saturn or Time is represented with a scythe, an emblem of the general and indiscriminate destruction of the human race by death.
MOW
v.i.To cut grass; to practice mowing; to use the scythe. Does the man mow well? 1. To perform the business of mowing; to cut and make grass into hay; to gather the crop of grass, or other crop.
[In America, mow is not applied to the cutting of wheat or rye. When these are cut with a scythe, they are said to be cradled. Oats and barley are sometimes mowed.]
MOW
n.[from mouth. ] A wry face.
MOW
v.i.To make mouths.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
MOW
MOW Mow, n. [Written also moe and mowe. ] Etym: [F. moue pouting, a wry face; cf. OD. mouwe the protruded lip. ]
Defn: A wry face. "Make mows at him. " Shak.
MOW
MOW Mow, v. i.
Defn: To make mouths. Nodding, becking, and mowing. Tyndale.
MOW
MOW Mow, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: Same as Mew, a gull.
MOW
Mow, v. [pres. sing. Mow, pl. Mowe, Mowen, Moun. ] Etym: [AS. magan.See May, v.]
Defn: May; can. "Thou mow now escapen." [Obs. ] Chaucer. Our walles mowe not make hem resistence. Chaucer.
MOW
Mow, v. t. [imp. Mowed; p. p. Mowed or Mown (; p. pr. & vb. n.Mowing. ] Etym: [OE. mowen, mawen, AS. mawan; akin to D. maaijen, G. mähen, OHG. majan, Dan. meie, L. metere to reap, mow, Gr. Math, Mead a meadow, Meadow. ]
1. To cut down, as grass, with a scythe or machine.
2. To cut the grass from; as, to mow a meadow.
3. To cut down; to cause to fall in rows or masses, as in mowing grass; -- with down; as, a discharge of grapeshot mows down whole ranks of men.
MOW
MOW Mow, v. i.
Defn: To cut grass, etc. , with a scythe, or with a machine; to cut grass for hay.
MOW
Mow, n. Etym: [OE. mowe, AS. m.]
1. A heap or mass of hay or of sheaves of grain stowed in a barn.
2. The place in a barn where hay or grain in the sheaf is stowed.
MOW
MOW Mow, v. t.
Defn: To lay, as hay or sheaves of grain, in a heap or mass in a barn; to pile and stow away.
New American Oxford Dictionary
mow
mow 1 |mō moʊ | ▶verb ( past participle mowed or mown |mōn | ) [ with obj. ] cut down (an area of grass ) with a machine: Roger mowed the lawn | (as adj. mown ) : the smell of newly mown grass. • chiefly historical cut down (grass or a cereal crop ) with a scythe or a sickle. PHRASAL VERBS mow someone down kill someone with a fusillade of bullets or other missiles. • recklessly knock someone down with a car or other vehicle. DERIVATIVES mow er noun ORIGIN Old English māwan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch maaien, German mähen ‘mow, ’ also to mead 2 .
mow
mow 2 |mou moʊ | ▶noun [ often with modifier ] a stack of hay, grain, or other similar crop: the hay mow. • a place in a barn where such a stack is put. ORIGIN Old English mūga; of unknown ultimate origin; compare with Swedish and Norwegian muga ‘heap. ’
Oxford Dictionary
mow
mow 1 |məʊ | ▶verb ( past participle mowed or mown ) [ with obj. ] cut down (grass ) with a machine: Roger mowed the lawn | (as adj. mown ) : the delicious smell of newly mown grass. • chiefly historical cut down (grass or a cereal crop ) with a scythe. PHRASAL VERBS mow someone down kill someone with a fusillade of bullets or other missiles: he was mown down in a hail of machine-gun bullets. • recklessly knock down someone with a car or other vehicle: a father-of-four was mown down and killed as he cycled home from work. DERIVATIVES mower noun ORIGIN Old English māwan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch maaien, German mähen ‘mow ’, also to mead 2 .
mow
mow 2 |məʊ | ▶noun N. Amer. or dialect a stack of hay, corn, or other crop. • a place in a barn where a stack of hay, corn, etc. is put. ORIGIN Old English mūga; of unknown ultimate origin; compare with Swedish and Norwegian muga ‘heap ’.
American Oxford Thesaurus
mow
mow verb she had mown the lawn: cut (down ), trim; crop, clip, prune, manicure. PHRASES mow down they were ordered to mow down the student protestors: kill, run down, gun down, shoot down, cut down, cut to pieces, butcher, slaughter, massacre, annihilate, wipe out; informal blow away.
Oxford Thesaurus
mow
mow verb someone had mown the grass: cut, cut down, scythe, shear, trim; crop, clip. PHRASES mow someone /something down they were mown down by government troops: kill, gun down, shoot down, cut down, cut to pieces, butcher, slaughter, massacre, decimate, annihilate, exterminate, liquidate, wipe out, destroy; informal blow away; N. Amer. informal smoke; literary slay.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
mow
mow 1 /moʊ /動詞 ~s ; ~ed ; ~ed, ~n /moʊn /; ~ing 他動詞 1 〈草 作物 芝など 〉を (大鎌 機械などで )刈る, 刈り取る .2 【砲火 機関銃などで 】…をなぎ倒す, やっつける (down ) «by » ▸ mow down the enemy 敵を掃射する 自動詞 草 [作物 ]を刈る .
mow
mow 2 /maʊ /名詞 C 1 (納屋の中の )干し草 [穀物 ]置き場 .2 干し草 [穀物 ]の山 .