English-Thai Dictionary
nick
N รอยบาก รอย ร่อง cut gash incision roi-bak
nick
SL คุก ซัง เต the nick kuk
nick
SL สถานีตำรวจ the nick sa-ta-ne-tam-rued
nick up
PHRV ตัด เบา ๆ ทำให้ เป็น รอย tad-bao-bao
nicked
SL ถูกจับ โดน จับกุม tuk-jab
nickel
N เงิน เหรียญ อเมริ กัน มีค่า1 ใน 20 ส่วน ของ หนึ่ง ดอลลาร์ นิก เคิล ngen-rian-ar-me-ri-kan-me-ka
nickel-and-dime
ADJ ซึ่ง ไม่สำคัญ ซึ่ง มีเงิน ไม่ มาก sueng-mai-sam-kan
nickelic
A ที่ ประกอบด้วย นิ เกิล
nickelodeon
N โรงภาพยนตร์ ที่เก็บ ค่าผ่านประตู 5 เซน ต์ ตู้เพลง หยอด เหรียญ 5 เซน ต์
nickelous
A ที่ ประกอบด้วย นิ เกิล
nicker
N คนที่ ทำ ช่อง หรือ ร่อง เงิน หนึ่ง ปอนด์ สเตอ ลิง
nicknack
N ของ น่ารัก ของ เล็กๆ น้อยๆ kong-na-rak
nickname
N ชื่อเล่น สมญานาม สมญา appellation cognomen name chue-lean
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
NICK
n.In the northern mythology, an evil spirit of the saters; hence the modern vulgar phrase, Old Nick, the evil one.
NICK
n.[G. The nape; a continual nodding. The word seems to signify a point, from shooting forward. ] 1. The exact point of time required by necessity or convenience; the critical time.
2. [G. knick, a flaw. ] A notch or score for keeping an account; a reckoning.
3. A winning throw.
NICK
v.t. 1. To hit; to touch luckily; to perform by a slight artifice used at the lucky time.
The just reason of doing things must be nicked, and all accidents improved.
2. To cut in nicks or notches. [See Notch. ]
3. To suit, as lattices cut in nicks.
4. To defeat or cozen, as at dice; to disappoint by some trick or unexpected turn.
NICK
v.t.[G. knicken, to flaw. ] To notch or make an incision in a horses tail, to make him carry it higher.
NICKAR-TREE
n.A tree of the genus Guilandina, which grows in the western parts of the United States, and bears a nut of the size of a pignut.
NICKEL
n.A metal of a white or reddish white color, of great hardness, very difficult to be purified, always magnetic, and when perfectly pure, malleable. It is generally obtained from its sulphuret.
NICKELIC
a.The nickelic acid is a saturated combination of nickel and oxygen.
NICKER
n.One who watches for opportunities to pilfer or practice knavery.
NICKNAME
n.[G. To banter. Signifies to surname, to call by a name of reproach. ] A name given in contempt, derision or reproach; an opprobrious appellation.
NICKNAME
v.t.To give a name of reproach; to call by an opprobrious appellation. You nickname virtue vice.
NICKNAMED
pp. Named in derision.
NICKNAMING
ppr. Calling by a name in contempt or derision.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
NICK
Nick (, n. Etym: [AS. nicor a marine monster; akin to D. nikker a water spite, Icel. nykr, ONG. nihhus a crocodile, G. nix a water sprite; cf. Gr. nij. Cf. Nix. ] (Northern Myth. )
Defn: An evil spirit of the waters. Old Nick, the evil one; the devil. [Colloq. ]
NICK
Nick, n. Etym: [Akin to Nock. ]
1. A notch cut into something; as: (a ) A score for keeping an account; a reckoning. [Obs. ] (b ) (Print. ) A notch cut crosswise in the shank of a type, to assist a compositor in placing it properly in the stick, and in distribution. W. Savage. (c ) A broken or indented place in any edge or surface; nicks in china.
2. A particular point or place considered as marked by a nick; the exact point or critical moment. To cut it off in the very nick. Howell. This nick of time is the critical occasion for the gainger of a point. L'Estrange.
NICK
Nick, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Nicked; p. pr. & vb. n. Nicking. ]
1. To make a nick or nicks in; to notch; to keep count of or upon by nicks; as, to nick a stick, tally, etc.
2. To mar; to deface; to make ragged, as by cutting nicks or notches in. And thence proceed to nicking sashes. Prior. The itch of his affection should not then Have nicked his captainship. Shak.
3. To suit or fit into, as by a correspondence of nicks; to tally with. Words nicking and resembling one another are applicable to different significations. Camden.
4. To hit at, or in, the nick; to touch rightly; to strike at the precise point or time. The just season of doing things must be nicked, and all accidents improved. L'Estrange.
5. To make a cross cut or cuts on the under side of (the tail of a horse, in order to make him carry ir higher ).
NICK
NICK Nick, v. t.
Defn: To nickname; to style. [Obs. ] For Warbeck, as you nick him, came to me. Ford.
NICKAR NUT; NICKAR TREE
NICKAR NUT; NICKAR TREE Nick "ar nut `, Nick "ar tree `. (Bot. )
Defn: Same as Nicker nut, Nicker tree.
NICKEL
Nick "el, n. Etym: [G., fr. Sw. nickel, abbrev. from Sw. kopparnickel copper-nickel, a name given in derision, as it was thought to be a base ore of copper. The origin of the second part of the word is uncertain. Cf. Kupfer-nickel, Copper-nickel. ]
1. (Chem. )
Defn: A bright silver-white metallic element. It is of the iron group, and is hard, malleable, and ductile. It occurs combined with sulphur in millerite, with arsenic in the mineral niccolite, and with arsenic and sulphur in nickel glance. Symbol Ni. Atomic weight 58.6.
Note: On account of its permanence in air and inertness to oxidation, it is used in the smaller coins, for plating iron, brass, etc. , for chemical apparatus, and in certain alloys, as german silver. It is magnetic, and is very frequently accompanied by cobalt, both being found in meteoric iron.
2. A small coin made of or containing nickel; esp. , a five-cent piece. [Colloq. U.S.] Nickel silver, an alloy of nickel, copper, and zinc; -- usually called german silver; called also argentan.
NICKELIC
NICKELIC Nick *el "ic, a. (Chem. )
Defn: Pertaining to, or containing, nickel; specifically, designating compounds in which, as contrasted with the nickelous compounds, the metal has a higher valence; as nickelic oxide.
NICKELIFEROUS
Nick `el *if "er *ous, a. Etym: [Nickel + -ferous. ]
Defn: Containing nickel; as, nickelferous iron.
NICKELINE
NICKELINE Nick "el *ine ( or ), n.
1. (Chem. )
Defn: An alloy of nickel, a variety of German silver.
2. (Min. )
Defn: Niccolite.
NICKELODEON
NICKELODEON Nick `el *o "de *on, n. [Nickel + odeon. ]
Defn: A place of entertainment, as for moving picture exhibition, charging a fee or admission price of five cents. [U. S.]
NICKELOUS
NICKELOUS Nick "el *ous, a. (Chem. )
Defn: Of, pertaining to, or designating, those compounds of nickel in which, as contrasted with the nickelic compounds, the metal has a lower valence; as, nickelous oxide. Frankland.
NICKEL STEEL
NICKEL STEEL Nickel steel.
Defn: A kind of cast steel containing nickel, which greatly increases its strength. It is used for armor plate, bicycle tubing, propeller shafts, etc.
NICKER
Nick "er, n. Etym: [From Nick, v.t.]
1. One of the night brawlers of London formerly noted for breaking windows with half-pence. [Cant ] Arbuthnot.
2. The cutting lip which projects downward at the edge of a boring bit and cuts a circular groove in the wood to limit the size of the hole that is bored.
NICKER NUT
NICKER NUT Nick "er nut `.
Defn: A rounded seed, rather smaller than a nutmeg, having a hard smooth shell, and a yellowish or bluish color. The seeds grow in the prickly pods of tropical, woody climbers of the genus Cæsalpinia. C. Bonduc has yellowish seeds; C.Bonducella, bluish gray. [Spelt also neckar nut, nickar nut. ]
NICKER TREE
NICKER TREE Nick "er tree `. (Bot. )
Defn: The plant producing nicker nuts. [Written also neckar tree and nickar tree. ]
NICKING
Nick "ing, n. Etym: [From Nick, v. t.] (Coal Mining )(a ) The cutting made by the hewer at the side of the face. (b ) pl.
Defn: Small coal produced in making the nicking.
NICKLE
NICKLE Nic "kle, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The European woodpecker, or yaffle; -- called also nicker pecker.
NICKNACK
NICKNACK Nick "nack `, n.
Defn: See Knickknack.
NICKNACKERY
NICKNACKERY Nick "nack `er *y, n.
Defn: See Knickknackery.
NICKNAME
Nick "name `, n. Etym: [OE. ekename surname, hence, a nickname, an ekename being understood as a nekename, influenced also by E. nick, v. See Eke, and Name. ]
Defn: A name given in contempt, derision, or sportive familiarity; a familiar or an opprobrious appellation.
NICKNAME
Nick "name `, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Nicknamed; p. pr. & vb. n.Nicknaming. ]
Defn: To give a nickname to; to call by a nickname. You nickname virtue; vice you should have spoke. Shak. I altogether disclaim what has been nicknamed the doctrine of finality. Macaulay.
New American Oxford Dictionary
nick
nick |nik nɪk | ▶noun 1 a small cut or notch. 2 (the nick ) Brit. informal prison. • a police station. 3 the junction between the floor and sidewalls in a court for playing tennis or squash. ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 make a nick or nicks in: he had nicked himself while shaving. 2 (nick someone for ) informal cheat someone of (something, typically a sum of money ): he nicked me for fifteen hundred dollars. 3 Brit. informal steal: he'd had his car nicked by joyriders. • arrest or apprehend (someone ): I got nicked for burglary. PHRASES in the nick of time only just in time. ORIGIN late Middle English: of unknown origin.
nick
nick 2 |nɪk | ▶verb [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] Austral. /NZ informal go quickly or surreptitiously: they nicked across the road. • (nick off ) depart; go away. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: probably a figurative use of nick 1 in the sense ‘to steal ’.
nickel
nick el |ˈnikəl ˈnɪkəl | ▶noun 1 a silvery-white metal, the chemical element of atomic number 28. (Symbol: Ni ) Nickel occurs naturally in various minerals, and the earth's core is believed to consist largely of metallic iron and nickel. The chief use of nickel is in alloys, esp. with iron, to which it imparts strength and resistance to corrosion, and with copper for coinage. 2 informal a five-cent coin; five cents. ▶verb ( nickels, nickeling, nickeled; Brit. nickels, nickelling, nickelled ) [ with obj. ] coat with nickel. ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: shortening of German Kupfernickel, the copper-colored ore from which nickel was first obtained, from Kupfer ‘copper ’ + Nickel ‘demon ’ (with reference to the ore's failure to yield copper ).
nickel-and-dime
nick el-and-dime |ˌnɪkəl ən ˈdaɪm | ▶verb [ with obj. ] put a financial strain on (someone ) by charging small amounts for many minor services: we don't nickel-and-dime our customers like some vendors that charge extra for every little utility. ▶adjective [ attrib. ] of little importance; petty: the only games this weekend are nickel-and-dime stuff. ORIGIN 1970s: originally designating a store selling articles costing five or ten cents.
nickel brass
nick el brass ▶noun an alloy of copper, zinc, and a small amount of nickel.
nickel-cadmium battery
nick el-cad mi um bat ter y ▶noun a storage battery with a negative electrode made of cadmium, a positive electrode of nickel oxide, and a solution of potassium hydroxide as the electrolyte. Nickel-cadmium batteries have the advantage of an airtight battery container, which prevents the corrosive electrolyte from leaking.
nickelodeon
nick el o de on |ˌnikəˈlōdēən ˌnɪkəˈloʊdiən | ▶noun 1 informal, dated a jukebox, originally one operated by the insertion of a nickel coin. 2 historical a movie theater with an admission fee of one nickel. ORIGIN early 20th cent.: from nickel in the sense ‘five-cent coin ’ + a shortened form of melodeon .
nickel silver
nick el sil ver ▶noun another term for German silver.
nickel steel
nick el steel ▶noun a type of stainless steel containing chromium and nickel.
nicker
nick er 1 |ˈnikər ˈnɪkər | ▶verb [ no obj. ] (of a horse ) give a soft, low whinny. ▶noun a sound of this kind. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: imitative.
nicker
nick er 2 |ˈnɪkər ˈnikər | ▶noun ( pl. same ) Brit. informal a pound sterling. ORIGIN early 20th cent.: of unknown origin.
Nicklaus, Jack William
Nick laus, Jack William |ˈnikləs ˈnɪkləs | (1940 –), US golfer. He won more than 80 tournaments during his professional career, including the Masters (1963, 1965, 1966, 1972, 1975, 1986 ), the PGA (1963, 1971, 1973, 1975, 1980 ), the US Open (1962, 1967, 1972, 1980 ), and the British Open (1966, 1970, 1978 ).
nicknack
nick nack |ˈnikˌnak ˈnɪkˌnæk | ▶noun variant spelling of knickknack.
nickname
nick name |ˈnikˌnām ˈnɪkˌneɪm | ▶noun a familiar or humorous name given to a person or thing instead of or as well as the real name. ▶verb [ with obj. and complement ] give a nickname to; call by a nickname: his fraternity brothers nicknamed him “The Bird ” because of his skydiving skills. ORIGIN late Middle English: from an eke-name ( eke meaning ‘addition ’: see eke 2 ), misinterpreted, by wrong division, as a neke name .
Oxford Dictionary
nick
nick 1 |nɪk | ▶noun 1 a small cut or notch. 2 (the nick ) Brit. informal prison. • a police station: he was being fingerprinted in the nick. 3 the junction between the floor and side walls in a squash court or real tennis court. ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 make a nick or nicks in: he had nicked himself while shaving. 2 Brit. informal steal: she nicked fivers from the till. • (nick someone for ) N. Amer. informal cheat someone of (a sum of money ): banks will be nicked for an extra $40 million. 3 Brit. informal arrest (someone ): Stuart and Dan got nicked for burglary. PHRASES in —— nick Brit. informal in a specified condition: you've kept the car in good nick . in the nick of time only just in time. ORIGIN late Middle English: of unknown origin.
nick
nick 2 |nɪk | ▶verb [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] Austral. /NZ informal go quickly or surreptitiously: they nicked across the road. • (nick off ) depart; go away. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: probably a figurative use of nick 1 in the sense ‘to steal ’.
nickel
nickel |ˈnɪk (ə )l | ▶noun 1 [ mass noun ] a silvery-white metal, the chemical element of atomic number 28. (Symbol: Ni ) Nickel occurs naturally in various minerals and the earth's core is believed to consist largely of metallic iron and nickel. Its chief use is in alloys, especially with iron, to which it imparts strength and resistance to corrosion, and with copper for coinage. 2 N. Amer. a five-cent coin; five cents. ▶verb ( nickels, nickelling, nickelled; US nickels, nickeling, nickeled ) [ with obj. ] (usu. as adj. nickelled ) coat with nickel. DERIVATIVES nickelic adjective, nickelous adjective ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: shortening of German Kupfernickel, the copper-coloured ore from which nickel was first obtained, from Kupfer ‘copper ’ + Nickel ‘demon ’ (with reference to the ore's failure to yield copper ).
nickel-and-dime
nickel-and-dime N. Amer. informal ▶verb [ with obj. ] harass (someone ) by charging for many trivial items or services. ▶adjective [ attrib. ] of little importance: the only games this weekend are nickel-and-dime stuff. ORIGIN 1930s: originally denoting a shop selling articles costing five or ten cents.
nickel brass
nickel brass ▶noun [ mass noun ] an alloy of copper, zinc, and a small amount of nickel.
nickel-cadmium battery
nick el-cad mi um bat ter y ▶noun a storage battery with a negative electrode made of cadmium, a positive electrode of nickel oxide, and a solution of potassium hydroxide as the electrolyte. Nickel-cadmium batteries have the advantage of an airtight battery container, which prevents the corrosive electrolyte from leaking.
nickelodeon
nickelodeon |ˌnɪkəˈləʊdɪən | ▶noun N. Amer. 1 informal, dated a jukebox, originally one operated by the insertion of a nickel coin. 2 historical a cinema with an admission fee of one nickel. ORIGIN early 20th cent.: from nickel + a shortened form of melodeon .
nickel silver
nickel sil ¦ver ▶noun another term for German silver.
nickel steel
nickel steel ▶noun [ mass noun ] a type of stainless steel containing chromium and nickel.
nicker
nicker 1 |ˈnɪkə (r )| ▶verb [ no obj. ] (of a horse ) give a soft breathy whinny. ▶noun a nickering sound. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: imitative.
nicker
nicker 2 |ˈnɪkə | ▶noun ( pl. same ) Brit. informal a pound sterling. ORIGIN early 20th cent.: of unknown origin.
Nicklaus, Jack William
Nicklaus, Jack William |ˈnɪklaʊs, -ləs | (b.1940 ), American golfer. He won more than eighty tournaments during his professional career.
nick-nack
nick-nack ▶noun variant spelling of knick-knack.
nickname
nick |name |ˈnɪkneɪm | ▶noun a familiar or humorous name given to a person or thing instead of or as well as the real name. ▶verb [ with obj. and complement ] give a nickname to: an area nicknamed Sniper's Alley. ORIGIN late Middle English: from an eke-name ( eke meaning ‘addition ’: see eke 2 ), misinterpreted, by wrong division, as a neke name .
American Oxford Thesaurus
nick
nick verb 1 I nicked my toe: cut, scratch, incise, gouge, gash, score. 2 Brit. informal she nicked his wallet. See steal (sense 1 of the verb ) & steal (sense 2 of the verb ). ▶noun a slight nick in the surface: cut, scratch, incision, notch, chip, gouge, gash; dent, indentation. PHRASES in the nick of time as usual, the Lone Ranger arrived in the nick of time: just in time, not a moment too soon, at the critical moment, at the last second; informal at the buzzer, just under the wire.
nickname
nickname noun 'Bambi' is the nickname my sister gave me when I was a baby: sobriquet, byname, tag, label, epithet, cognomen; pet name, diminutive, endearment; informal moniker; formal appellation.
Oxford Thesaurus
nick
nick noun 1 there was a slight nick half way up the blade: cut, scratch, abrasion, incision, snick, scrape; notch, chip, score, gouge, gash; dent, indentation; flaw, mark, blemish, defect. 2 Brit. informal you'll end up in the nick. See prison. 3 Brit. informal she was down at Lewisham nick, helping police with their enquiries: police station, station; N. Amer. precinct, station house, substation; Indian kotwali, thana; informal cop shop. 4 Brit. informal the car's in fairly good nick: condition, repair, shape, state, state of health, order, working order, form, fettle, trim. PHRASES in the nick of time they arrived in the nick of time: just in time, not a moment too soon, almost too late, at the critical moment; N. Amer. informal under the wire; archaic in the Godspeed, in the very nick. ▶verb 1 I didn't nick my skin even though I shaved quickly: cut, scratch, abrade, incise, snick, scrape; notch, chip, gouge, gash, score. 2 Brit. informal he says you nicked his wallet. See steal. 3 Brit. informal Steve's been nicked. See arrest.
nickname
nickname noun sobriquet, byname, tag, label, familiar name, epithet; pet name, diminutive, term of endearment, endearment, affectionate name; informal moniker; formal appellation, cognomen; archaic byword, agnomen, eke-name, to-name.
Duden Dictionary
Nick
Nick Substantiv, maskulin , der |N i ck |der Nick; Genitiv: des Nicks, Plural: die Nicks Kurzwort für: Nickname
Nickel
Ni ckel Substantiv, maskulin landschaftlich , der |N i ckel |der Nickel; Genitiv: des Nickels, Plural: die Nickel boshaftes Kind
Nickel
Ni ckel Substantiv, Neutrum , das |N i ckel |das Nickel; Genitiv: des Nickels schwedisch nickel, gekürzt aus: kopparnickel = Kupfernickel (= Rotnickelkies ), da das Metall in diesem Erz am häufigsten vorkam; ursprünglich glaubte man, das Erz sei wertlos und ein »Nickel « (= ältere Bezeichnung für Kobold ) habe es unter die wertvolleren Erze gemischt silberweiß glänzendes Schwermetall chemisches Element Ni
Nickel
Ni ckel Substantiv, maskulin , der |N i ckel |der Nickel; Genitiv: des Nickels, Plural: die Nickel früheres Zehnpfennigstück
Nickelallergie
Ni ckel al l er gie , Ni ckel al ler gie Substantiv, feminin , die |N i ckelallergie |die Nickelallergie; Genitiv: der Nickelallergie Allergie, die durch Nickel hervorgerufen wird
Nickelbrille
Ni ckel bril le Substantiv, feminin , die |N i ckelbrille |Brille mit dünnem Metallgestell
Nickelerz
Ni ckel erz Substantiv, Neutrum , das |N i ckelerz | Nickel enthaltendes Erz
Nickelhochzeit
Ni ckel hoch zeit Substantiv, feminin , die |N i ckelhochzeit |nach zwölfeinhalbjähriger Ehe
nickelig
ni cke lig Adjektiv nicklig |n i ckelig | Nickel 1 Sportjargon auf giftige 4 Art unfair 2 landschaftlich frech; mutwillig
Nickeligkeit
Ni cke lig keit Substantiv, feminin , die Nickligkeit |N i ckeligkeit |
Nickelmünze
Ni ckel mün ze Substantiv, feminin , die |N i ckelmünze |Münze aus Nickel
Nickelstahl
Ni ckel stahl Substantiv, maskulin , der |N i ckelstahl |Legierung aus Eisen und Nickel
nicken
ni cken schwaches Verb |n i cken |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « mittelhochdeutsch nicken, althochdeutsch nicchen, Intensiv-Iterativ-Bildung zu neigen 1 a (zum Zeichen der Bejahung, Zustimmung, des Beifalls, Verstehens o. Ä. oder als Gruß ) den Kopf [mehrmals ] kurz senken und wieder heben alle Köpfe nickten zustimmend | eine nickende Kopfbewegung | substantiviert ein stummes Nicken | figurativ dichterisch die reifen Ähren nicken im Wind b gehoben durch Nicken 1a zum Ausdruck bringen jemandem Beifall nicken c Fußballjargon (den Ball ) mit einem Nicken des Kopfes irgendwohin köpfen 2a 2 mittelhochdeutsch nücken, eigentlich = nicken; stutzen; an nicken 1 angelehnt, nach den Kopfbewegungen familiär [im Sitzen zwischendurch ] kurze Zeit leicht schlafen
Nicker
Ni cker Substantiv, maskulin , der |N i cker |1 umgangssprachlich einmaliges Kopfnicken 2 familiär selten Nickerchen
Nickerchen
Ni cker chen Substantiv, Neutrum familiär , das |N i ckerchen |das Nickerchen; Genitiv: des Nickerchens, Plural: die Nickerchen leichter, kurzer Schlaf [im Sitzen ] ein [kleines ] Nickerchen machen, halten
Nickfänger
Nick fän ger Substantiv, maskulin Jägersprache , der |N i ckfänger |Genickfänger
Nickhaut
Nick haut Substantiv, feminin , die |N i ckhaut |drittes Augenlid vieler Wirbeltiere
Nicki
Ni cki Substantiv, maskulin , der |N i cki |nach der Kurzform des männlichen Vornamens Nikolaus Pullover aus plüschartigem [Baumwoll ]material
Nickipullover
Ni cki pul lo ver Substantiv, maskulin , der |N i ckipullover |
Nickituch
Ni cki tuch Substantiv, Neutrum , das |N i ckituch |das Nickituch < Plural: Nickitücher > kleines quadratisches Halstuch sie hatte sich die Haare mit einem Nickituch zurückgebunden
nicklig
nick lig Adjektiv nickelig |n i cklig | zu Nickel 1 Sportjargon auf giftige 4 Art unfair 2 landschaftlich frech; mutwillig
Nickligkeit
Nick lig keit Substantiv, feminin , die Nickeligkeit |N i ckligkeit |
Nickname
Nick na me Substantiv, maskulin EDV , der |N i ckname auch ˈnɪkneɪm |der Nickname; Genitiv: des Nicknamens, Plural: die Nicknamen und (bei englischer Aussprache: ) Nickname [s ], Nicknames englisch nickname = Spitzname < mittelenglisch nekename, fälschlich gebildet aus: an eke name = ein zusätzlicher Name selbst gewähltes Pseudonym, unter dem jemand im Internet (z. B. in Chatrooms oder Newsgroups ) auftritt Kurzform: Nick sich einen Nickname ausdenken
French Dictionary
nickel
nickel n. m. nom masculin Symbole Ni (s ’écrit sans point ). Métal brillant inoxydable. : Les pièces de cinq cents sont en nickel. Note Orthographique ni ck el.
nickelage
nickelage n. m. nom masculin Action de nickeler. : Le nickelage d ’un ancien pare-chocs. Note Orthographique ni ck e l age.
nickeler
nickeler v. tr. verbe transitif Recouvrir un métal d ’une couche de nickel pour le rendre inoxydable. LOCUTION Avoir les pieds nickelés. figuré Se montrer indolent, refuser d ’agir. appeler Conjugaison Redoublement du l devant un e muet. Je nickelle, je nickellerai, mais je nickelais.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
nick
nick /nɪk /名詞 複 ~s /-s /1 C (体の )小さな切り傷; (数えたり目じるしのための )切り込み, 刻み目 , 欠け目 .2 U ⦅英 くだけて ⦆(人 物の )状態, 調子 ▸ be in good [bad ] nick 調子が良くて [悪くて ]3 C ⦅英俗 ⦆〖通例the ~〗刑務所 (prison ); 警察署 (police station ).in the n ì ck of t í me ⦅くだけて ⦆ぎりぎりのきわどい時に, 間一髪で .動詞 他動詞 1 (通例誤って )…に小さな切り傷 [かすり傷 ]をつける ; …に刻み目を入れる [つけて記録する ].2 ⦅英 くだけて ⦆ «…から » …を盗む «from , off » ; «…した罪で » 〈人 〉を逮捕する «for do ing » .3 ⦅米 くだけて ⦆〈人 〉をだます ,【金を 】〈人 〉から だまし取る «for » .4 …をずばり言い当てる ; … にちょうど間に合う .自動詞 1 ⦅豪俗 ⦆ずらかる (off, in ).2 (陸上競技で人を追い越して )内側走路を奪う (in ).
nickel
nick el /nɪ́k (ə )l /〖<スウェーデン; 銅の悪魔 〗名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 U 〘化 〙ニッケル 〘金属元素; ⦅記号 ⦆Ni 〙.2 C ⦅くだけて ⦆(米国 カナダの )5セント硬貨 (→dime ).動詞 ~s ; ~ed , ⦅英 ⦆~led ; ~ing , ⦅英 ⦆~ling 他動詞 …にニッケルめっきをする .~́ b à g ⦅米俗 ⦆5ドル分の麻薬の包み [パック ].~́ br à ss ニッケル黄銅 〘銅 亜鉛 ニッケルの合金 〙.~́ pl à te ニッケルめっき .~̀ s í lver 洋銀 (German silver ).~̀ st é el ニッケル鋼 .
nickel-and-dime
n í ckel-and-d ì me 形容詞 ⦅米 くだけて ⦆〖名詞 の前で 〗わずかなお金の ; 取るに足らない .動詞 他動詞 〈人 〉にちまちまとお金を払わせる [せがむ ].
nicker
nick er /nɪ́kə r /名詞 C 1 ⦅英 くだけて ⦆1ポンド貨幣 .2 ⦅主に英 ⦆(馬の )いななく声 (neigh ).動詞 自動詞 〈特に馬が 〉いななく (neigh ).
nicknack
nick nack /nɪ́knæ̀k /名詞 =knickknack .
nickname
nick name /nɪ́knèɪm /〖語源は 「付け加えた名 」〗名詞 複 ~s /-z /C 1 «…に対する /…という » ニックネーム , あだ名 «for /of » (!人以外に物 場所にも用いる ) ▸ earn the nickname A Aというあだ名がつけられる 2 «…に対する /…という » 愛称 «for /of » (!first nameの変形による親しみを込めた呼称; →name 事情 ) ▸ Jim is a nickname for James .ジムはジェイムズの愛称である 動詞 他動詞 1 〖通例be ~d C 〗〈人 物などが 〉 «…にちなんで » Cとあだ名をつけられる ; Cという愛称で呼ばれる «for » ▸ The thief was nicknamed “Spiderman ” for his wall-climbing skills .その泥棒は巧みに壁をよじ登ることから 「スパイダーマン 」というあだ名がついた 2 ⦅古 ⦆…を間違った [不適切な ]名で呼ぶ, 誤称する .