English-Thai Dictionary
pound
N ที่ ขัง สัตว์ กรงขัง สุนัขจรจัด cage coop doghouse ti-kang-sad
pound
N หน่วย วัด น้ำหนัก pint sixteen ounces nuai-wad-nam-nak
pound
N หน่วยเงินตรา ของ อังกฤษ ปอนด์ ปอนด์ สเตอ ลิงก์ nuai-ngen-tra-kong-ang-krid
pound
N เครื่อง ตำ เครื่อง บด krueng-tam
pound
VI ตี กระหน่ำ hammer pulsate te-kra-nam
pound
VI วิ่ง ด้วย การ ก้าว หนักๆ wing-duai-kan-kao-nak-nak
pound
VI เต้น อย่างหนัก กระเพื่อม มาก สั่น มาก ten-yang-nak
pound
VT ตำ บด ทุบ โขลก crush tam
pound
VT ตี กระหน่ำ hammer pulsate te-kra-nam
pound
VT พร่ำสอน pram-son
pound
VT โจมตี ต่อเนื่อง jom-te-tor-nuang
pound a beat
IDM เดิน ตรวจ เส้นทาง doen-trued-sen-tang
pound along
PHRV เคลื่อน ไป อย่างเร็ว kluan-pai-yang-reo
pound at
PHRV(ปืน ยิง ไป ที่ ying-pai-ti
pound at
PHRV ตี ต่อย กระหน่ำ ที่ เคาะ อย่างแรง และ เร็ว knock at te
pound down / up
PHRV บด (ของแข็ง จน ป่น เป็นผง bod-jon-pon-pen-pong
pound for pound
IDM เปรียบเทียบ กัน ด้วย ตัวเงิน คำนึงถึง เงิน คำนึงถึง ค่าใช้จ่าย ที่ ต้อง เสีย ไป priab-tiab-kan-duai-ngen-tra
pound in
PHRV ตอก ตอก เข้าไป drive in hammer in tok
pound in
PHRV สอน แบบ บังคับ ตอกย้ำ hammer in son-beab-bang-kab
pound into
PHRV(สอน ตอกย้ำ hammer into tok-yam
pound into
PHRV ตอก ใส่ tok-sai
pound into
PHRV บด เป็นผง beat into hammer into bod-pen-pong
pound on
PHRV ทุบ ตอก tub
pound out
PHRV ทุบ ให้ แบน tub-hai-bean
pound out
PHRV เคาะ เป็น เพลง ดีด เป็น เพลง kor-pen-plang
pound sterling
N ธนบัตร และ หน่วยเงินตรา ของ อังกฤษ pound ta-na-bud-lea-nuai-ngen-kong-ang-krid
pound the streets
IDM มองหา งาน mong-ha-ngan
poundage
N ค่าเงิน ปอนด์ ka-ngen-pon
poundal
N หน่วย แรง ที่ มีค่า เท่ากับ แรง ที่ ทำให้เกิด ความเร่ง หนึ่ง
pounder
N คน ตี หรือ บด kon-te-rue-bod
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
POUND
n.[L. pondo, pondus, weight, a pound; pendo, to weigh, to bend. ] 1. A standard weight consisting of twelve ounces troy or sixteen ounces avoirdupois.
2. A money of account consisting of twenty shillings, the value of which is different in different countries. The pound sterling is equivalent to $4.44.44 cts. money of the United States. In New England and Virginia, the pound is equal to $3 1 /3; in New York to $2 1 /2.
POUND
n.An inclosure erected by authority, in which cattle or other beasts are confined when taken in trespassing, or going at large in violation of law; a pin-fold.
POUND
v.t.To confine in a public pound.
POUND
v.t. 1. To beat; to strike with some heavy instrument, and with repeated blows, so as to make an impression.
With cruel blows she pounds her blubber'd cheeks.
2. To comminute and pulverize by beating; to bruise or break into fine parts by a heavy instrument; as, to pound spice or salt.
Loud strokes with pounding spice the fabric rend.
POUNDAGE
n.[from pound. ] A sum deducted from a pound, or a certain sum paid for each pound. 1. In England, a subsidy of 12d. in the pound, granted to the crown on all goods exported or imported, and if by aliens, more.
POUNDBREACH
n.The breaking of a public pound for releasing beasts confined in it.
POUNDED
pp. Beaten or bruised with a heavy instrument; pulverized or broken by pounding. 1. Confined in a pound; impounded.
POUNDER
n.A postle; the instrument of pounding. 1. A person or thing denominated from a certain number of pounds; as a cannon is called a twelve-pounder; a person of ten pounds annual income is called a ten-pounder; a note or bill is called a ten-pounder.
2. A large pear.
Pound foolish. The phrase, penny wise and pound foolish, signified negligent in the care of large sums, but careful to save small sums.
POUNDING
ppr. Beating; bruising; pulverizing; impounding.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
POUND
Pound, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Pounded; p. pr. & vb. n. Pounding. ] Etym: [OE. pounen, AS. punian to bruise. Cf. Pun a play on words. ]
1. To strike repeatedly with some heavy instrument; to beat. With cruel blows she pounds her blubbered cheeks. Dryden.
2. To comminute and pulverize by beating; to bruise or break into fine particles with a pestle or other heavy instrument; as, to pound spice or salt.
POUND
POUND Pound, v. i.
1. To strike heavy blows; to beat.
2. (Mach. )
Defn: To make a jarring noise, as in running; as, the engine pounds.
POUND
Pound, n. Etym: [AS. pund an inclosure: cf. forpyndan to turn away, or to repress, also Icel. pynda to extort, torment, Ir. pont, pond, pound. Cf. Pinder, Pinfold, Pin to inclose, Pond. ]
1. An inclosure, maintained by public authority, in which cattle or other animals are confined when taken in trespassing, or when going at large in violation of law; a pinfold. Shak.
2. A level stretch in a canal between locks.
3. (Fishing )
Defn: A kind of net, having a large inclosure with a narrow entrance into which fish are directed by wings spreading outward. Pound covert, a pound that is close or covered over, as a shed. -- Pound overt, a pound that is open overhead.
POUND
POUND Pound, v. t.
Defn: To confine in, or as in, a pound; to impound. Milton.
POUND
Pound, n; pl. Pounds, collectively Pound pr Pounds. Etym: [AS. pund,fr. L. pondo, akin to pondus a weight, pendere top weigh. See Pendant. ]
1. A certain specified weight; especially, a legal standard consisting of an established number of ounces.
Note: The pound in general use in the United States and in England is the pound avoirdupois, which is divided into sixteen ounces, and contains 7, grains. The pound troy is divided into twelve ounces, and contains 5,76 grains. 144 pounds avoirdupois are equal to 175 pounds troy weight. See Avoirdupois, and Troy.
2. A British denomination of money of account, equivalent to twenty shillings sterling, and equal in value to about $4.86. There is no coin known by this name, but the gold sovereign is of the same value.
Note: The pound sterling was in Saxon times, about A. D. 671, a pound troy of silver, and a shilling was its twentieth part; consequently the latter was three times as large as it is at present. Peacham.
POUNDAGE
POUNDAGE Pound "age, n.
1. A sum deducted from a pound, or a certain sum paid for each pound; a commission.
2. A subsidy of twelve pence in the pound, formerly granted to the crown on all goods exported or imported, and if by aliens, more. [Eng. ] Blackstone.
3. (Law )
Defn: The sum allowed to a sheriff or other officer upon the amount realized by an execution; -- estimated in England, and formerly in the United States, at so much of the pound. Burrill. Bouvier.
POUNDAGE
POUNDAGE Pound "age, v. t.
Defn: To collect, as poundage; to assess, or rate, by poundage. [R.]
POUNDAGE
Pound "age, n. Etym: [See 3d Pound. ]
1. Confinement of cattle, or other animals, in a public pound.
2. A charge paid for the release of impounded cattle.
POUNDAL
Pound "al, n. Etym: [From 5th Pound. ] (Physics & Mech. )
Defn: A unit of force based upon the pound, foot, and second, being the force which, acting on a pound avoirdupois for one second, causes it to acquire by the of that time a velocity of one foot per second. It is about equal to the weight of half an ounce, and is 13,825 dynes.
POUND-BREACH
POUND-BREACH Pound "-breach `, n.
Defn: The breaking of a public pound for releasing impounded animals. Blackstone.
POUNDCAKE
POUNDCAKE Pound "cake `, n.
Defn: A kind of rich, sweet cake; -- so called from the ingredients being used by pounds, or in equal quantities.
POUNDER
POUNDER Pound "er, n.
1. One who, or that which, pounds, as a stamp in an ore mill.
2. An instrument used for pounding; a pestle.
3. A person or thing, so called with reference to a certain number of pounds in value, weight, capacity, etc. ; as, a cannon carrying a twelve-pound ball is called a twelve pounder.
Note: Before the English reform act of 1867, one who was an elector by virtue of paying ten pounds rent was called a ten pounder.
POUNDING
POUNDING Pound "ing, n.
1. The act of beating, bruising, or breaking up; a beating.
2. A pounded or pulverized substance. [R.] "Covered with the poundings of these rocks. " J. S. Blackie.
POUNDKEEPER; POUND-KEEPER
POUNDKEEPER; POUND-KEEPER Pound "keep `er, n.
Defn: The keeper of a pound.
POUNDRATE
POUNDRATE Pound "*rate `, n.
Defn: A rate or proportion estimated at a certain amount for each pound; poundage.
New American Oxford Dictionary
pound
pound 1 |pound paʊnd | ▶noun 1 (abbr.: lb ) a unit of weight in general use equal to 16 oz. avoirdupois (0.4536 kg ). • a unit of weight equal to 12 oz. troy (0.3732 kg ) used for precious metals. 2 (also pound sterling ) ( pl. pounds sterling ) the basic monetary unit of the UK, equal to 100 pence. • another term for punt 4. • the basic monetary unit of several Middle Eastern countries, equal to 100 piastres. • the former basic monetary unit of Cyprus, equal to 100 cents. PHRASES one's pound of flesh something that one is strictly or legally entitled to, but that it is ruthless or inhuman to demand. [with allusion to Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice . ]ORIGIN Old English pund, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch pond and German Pfund, from Latin (libra ) pondo, denoting a Roman ‘(pound ) weight ’ of 12 ounces.
pound
pound 2 |paʊnd pound | ▶verb [ with obj. ] strike or hit heavily and repeatedly: Patrick pounded the couch with his fists | U.S. gunships pounded the capital | [ no obj. ] : pounding on the door, she shouted at the top of her voice. • crush or grind (something ) into a powder or paste by beating it with an instrument such as a pestle: pound the cloves with salt and pepper until smooth. • [ no obj. ] beat, throb, or vibrate with a strong regular rhythm: her heart was pounding. • [ no obj. ] walk or run with heavy steps: I heard him pounding along the gangway. • informal defeat (an opponent ) in a resounding way: the Yankees pounded the Red Sox 22 –1. PHRASES pound the beat (of a police officer ) patrol an assigned route or area. pound the pavement walk the streets in an effort to accomplish something: I will pound the pavement from city to city in order to explain the dangers. • search diligently for something, typically for a job: although the country's current jobless rate is small, the number of people pounding the pavement has become a growing worry. PHRASAL VERBS pound something out type something with heavy keystrokes: an old typewriter on which she pounded out her poems. • produce music by striking an instrument heavily and repeatedly: the women pounded out a ringing tattoo on several oil drums. ORIGIN Old English pūnian; related to Dutch puin, Low German pün ‘rubble. ’
pound
pound 3 |paʊnd pound | ▶noun a place where stray animals, esp. dogs, may be officially taken and kept until claimed by their owners or otherwise disposed of. • a place where illegally parked motor vehicles removed by the police are kept until their owners pay a fine in order to reclaim them. • archaic a place of confinement; a trap or prison. ▶verb [ with obj. ] archaic shut (an animal ) in a pound. ORIGIN late Middle English (earlier in compounds ): of uncertain origin. Early use referred to an enclosure for the detention of stray or trespassing cattle.
Pound, Ezra
Pound, Ezra |pound paʊnd | (1885 –1972 ), US poet and critic, resident in Europe 1908 –45; full name Ezra Weston Loomis Pound. Initially associated with imagism, he later developed a highly eclectic poetic voice, establishing a reputation as a modernist poet. Notable works: Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (1920 ) and Cantos (series, 1917 –70 ).
poundage
pound age |ˈpoundij ˈpaʊndɪʤ | ▶noun 1 weight, esp. when regarded as excessive: reduce excess poundage without risking overexertion. 2 Brit. a payment of a particular amount per pound sterling of the sum involved in a transaction. • a percentage of the total earnings of a business, paid as wages.
poundal
pound al |ˈpoundəl paʊndl | ▶noun Physics a unit of force equal to that required to give a mass of one pound an acceleration of one foot per second per second. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from pound 1 + the suffix -al, perhaps suggested by quintal .
pound cake
pound cake |ˈpaʊn (d ) ˌkeɪk | ▶noun a rich cake containing a pound, or equal weights, of each chief ingredient, typically flour, butter, and sugar.
pound coin
pound coin ▶noun a coin worth one British pound sterling.
pounder
pound er |ˈpoundər ˈpaʊndər | ▶noun [ usu. in combination ] 1 a person or thing weighing a specified number of pounds: Sloan set a blue-shark record with a 184 -pounder. • a gun designed to fire a shell weighing a specified number of pounds. 2 a person or thing that pounds something: he's direct, but not abrasive, not a desk-pounder.
pounding
pound ing |ˈpoundiNG paʊndɪŋ | ▶noun repeated and heavy striking or hitting of someone or something: the pounding of the surf on a sandy beach. • rhythmical beating or throbbing: all she could hear was the pounding of her heart. • informal a resounding defeat: the victory was badly needed after a 16 -7 pounding at the hands of Brooklyn. PHRASES take (or get ) a pounding be repeatedly hit or attacked: the town took a hell of pounding from the Luftwaffe | figurative : technology stocks took a pounding in last week's sharp correction.
pound note
pound note ▶noun a banknote worth one British pound sterling, now replaced by the pound coin in England and Wales.
pound sign
pound sign |paʊnd saɪn | ▶noun 1 the sign (#), representing a pound as a unit of weight or mass, or as represented on a telephone keypad or computer keyboard. 2 the sign (£), representing a British pound sterling.
pound sterling
pound ster ling ▶noun see pound 1 ( sense 2 ).
Oxford Dictionary
pound
pound 1 |paʊnd | ▶noun 1 (abbrev.: lb ) a unit of weight equal to 16 oz. avoirdupois (0.4536 kg ), or 12 oz. troy (0.3732 kg ). 2 (also pound sterling ) ( pl. pounds sterling ) the basic monetary unit of the UK, equal to 100 pence. • another term for punt 4. • the basic monetary unit of several Middle Eastern countries, equal to 100 piastres. • the former basic monetary unit of Cyprus, equal to 100 cents. • the basic monetary unit of Sudan. PHRASES a pound to a penny Brit. informal used to emphasize one's certainty about something: simply think of your budget and a pound to a penny we'll have the car to suit it. one's pound of flesh something one is strictly or legally entitled to, but which it is ruthless or inhuman to demand. [with allusion to Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice . ]ORIGIN Old English pund, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch pond and German Pfund, from Latin ( libra ) pondo, denoting a Roman ‘pound weight ’ of 12 ounces.
pound
pound 2 |paʊnd | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 strike or hit heavily and repeatedly: Patrick pounded the couch with his fists | [ no obj. ] : pounding on the door, she shouted at the top of her voice. • [ no obj. ] beat or throb with a strong regular rhythm: her heart was pounding. • [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] walk or run with heavy steps: I heard him pounding along the gangway. 2 crush or grind (something ) into a powder or paste: pound the cloves with salt and pepper until smooth. • informal defeat (an opponent ) in a resounding way: [ with obj. and complement ] : he pounded the unseeded American 6 –2 7 –5 7 –5. PHRASES pound the beat (of a police officer ) patrol an allocated route or area. PHRASAL VERBS pound something out produce a text or piece of music with heavy strokes on a keyboard or instrument: an old typewriter on which she pounded out her poems. ORIGIN Old English pūnian; related to Dutch puin, Low German pün ‘(building ) rubbish ’.
pound
pound 3 |paʊnd | ▶noun a place where stray animals, especially dogs, may be officially taken and kept until claimed by their owners. • a place where illegally parked motor vehicles removed by the police are kept until their owners pay a fine in order to reclaim them. • archaic a place of confinement; a trap or prison. ▶verb [ with obj. ] archaic shut (an animal ) in a pound. ORIGIN late Middle English (earlier in compounds ): of uncertain origin. Early use referred to an enclosure for the detention of stray or trespassing cattle.
Pound, Ezra
Pound |paʊnd | (1885 –1972 ), American poet and critic, resident in Europe 1908 –45; full name Ezra Weston Loomis Pound. Initially associated with imagism, he later developed a highly eclectic poetic voice, drawing on a vast range of classical and other references and establishing a reputation as a modernist poet. Notable works: Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (1920 ) and Cantos (series, 1917 –70 ).
poundage
pound |age |ˈpaʊndɪdʒ | ▶noun 1 Brit. a payment of a particular amount per pound sterling of the sum involved in a transaction. • a percentage of the total earnings of a business, paid as wages. 2 [ mass noun ] weight, especially when regarded as excessive: reduce excess poundage without risking overexertion.
poundal
poundal |ˈpaʊnd (ə )l | ▶noun Physics a unit of force equal to that required to give a mass of one pound an acceleration of one foot per second per second. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from pound 1 + the suffix -al, perhaps suggested by quintal .
pound cake
pound cake ▶noun N. Amer. a rich cake containing a pound, or equal weights, of each chief ingredient, typically flour, butter, and sugar.
pound coin
pound coin ▶noun a coin worth one pound sterling.
pounder
pound ¦er |ˈpaʊndə | ▶noun [ usu. in combination ] 1 a person or thing weighing a specified number of pounds: Sloan set a blue-shark record with a 184 -pounder. • a gun designed to fire a shell weighing a specified number of pounds. 2 a person or thing that pounds something: he's direct, but not abrasive, not a desk-pounder.
pounding
pound |ing |ˈpaʊndɪŋ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] repeated and heavy striking or hitting of someone or something: the pounding of the surf on a sandy beach. • rhythmical beating or throbbing: all she could hear was the pounding of her heart. PHRASES take (or get ) a pounding be repeatedly hit or attacked: the town took a hell of a pounding from the Luftwaffe | figurative : shares took a pounding this month.
pound lock
pound lock ▶noun fuller term for lock 1 ( sense 2 of the noun ). ORIGIN late 18th cent.: pound from pound 3, in the sense ‘body of still water, pond ’.
pound note
pound note ▶noun a banknote worth one pound sterling, now replaced by the pound coin in England and Wales.
pound sign
pound sign ▶noun 1 the sign ‘£’, representing a pound sterling. 2 North American term for hash 3.
pound sterling
pound ster |ling ▶noun see pound 1 ( sense 2 ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
pound
pound 1 verb 1 the two men pounded him with their fists: beat, strike, hit, batter, thump, pummel, punch, rain blows on, belabor, hammer, thrash, set on, tear into; informal bash, clobber, wallop, beat the living daylights out of, whack, thwack, lay into, pitch into, light into, whale. 2 waves pounded the seafront: beat against, crash against, batter, dash against, lash, buffet. 3 gunships pounded the capital: bombard, bomb, shell, fire on; archaic cannonade. 4 pound the cloves with salt: crush, grind, pulverize, mill, mash, pulp; technical triturate. 5 I heard him pounding along the gangway: walk /run heavily, stomp, lumber, clomp, clump, tramp, tromp, trudge. 6 her heart was pounding: throb, thump, thud, hammer, pulse, race, go pit-a-pat; literary pant, thrill.
pound
pound 2 noun a dog pound: enclosure, compound, pen, yard, corral.
Oxford Thesaurus
pound
pound 1 verb 1 the two bigger men pounded him with their fists: beat, strike, hit, batter, thump, pummel, punch, rain blows on, belabour, hammer, thrash, set on, tear into, weigh into, bang, crack, drub, welt, thwack; informal bash, clobber, wallop, beat the living daylights out of, give someone a (good ) hiding, whack, biff, bop, lay into, pitch into, lace into, let someone have it, knock into the middle of next week, sock, lam, whomp; Brit. informal stick one on, slosh; N. Amer. informal boff, bust, slug, light into, whale; Austral. /NZ informal dong, quilt; literary smite, swinge. 2 40ft waves pounded the seafront: beat against, crash against, batter, dash against, crack into /against, lash, strike, hit, buffet. 3 US gunships pounded the capital: bombard, bomb, shell, blitz, strafe, torpedo, pepper, fire on, attack; archaic cannonade. 4 pound the cloves with salt and pepper until smooth: crush, grind, pulverize, beat, mill, pestle, mash, pulp, bruise, powder, granulate; technical triturate, comminute; archaic bray, levigate; rare kibble. 5 I heard him pounding along the gangway: walk /run heavily, stomp, lumber, clomp, clump, tramp, trudge; thunder; N. Amer. tromp. 6 she leaned weakly against the door, her heart pounding: throb, thump, thud, hammer, pulsate, pulse, pump, palpitate, race, beat heavily, go pit-a-pat, pitter-patter, vibrate, drum; literary pant, thrill; rare quop.
pound
pound 2 noun every Christmas she sent the girls ten pounds each: pound sterling, £; Brit. informal quid, smacker, smackeroo, nicker, oner, oncer; Brit. historical sovereign.
pound
pound 3 noun the dog ended up in the local pound: enclosure, compound, pen, yard; Brit. greenyard; historical pinfold.
Duden Dictionary
Pound
Pound Substantiv, Neutrum , das |paʊnd |das Pound; Genitiv: des Pound, Plural: die Pounds englisch pound, eigentlich = Pfund, < altenglisch pund < lateinisch pondo, Pfund englische Gewichtseinheit 453,60 g Abkürzung: lb. [Singular ], lbs. [Plural ]
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
Pound
Pound /paʊnd /名詞 パウンド 〘Ezra ~, 1885 --1972; 米国の詩人 〙.
pound
pound 1 /paʊnd /〖語源は 「重さ (weight )」〗名詞 複 ~s /-dz /1 C ポンド 〘重さの単位; 常衡は16オンス (約454グラム ), 金衡は12オンス (約373グラム ); ⦅記号 ⦆lb, lb. ; 記号はラテン語libra (重さ )より 〙▸ be sold by the pound 1ポンドいくらで売られる ▸ a pound and a half [one and a half pounds ] of meat 1ポンド半の肉 ▸ How many pounds do you weigh? 君の体重は何ポンドあるの .2 C ポンド 〘英国の通貨単位; =100 pence ; 1971年以前の旧制度では1 pound =20 shillings =240 pence ; ⦅記号 ⦆£, (数字の後で )l.; 記号はラテン語libra (重さ )より 〙; 1ポンド貨幣 (pound sterling )▸ five pounds two (pence )5ポンド2ペンス (!£5.02と書く ) ▸ a ten- pound note 10ポンド紙幣 .3 C ポンド 〘アイルランド イスラエル エジプト スーダンなどの通貨単位 〙.4 〖the ~; 単数扱い 〗〘金融 〙ポンド相場 ; 英国の通貨制度 .5 U ポンド記号 [ボタン ](pound sign [key ]) 〘#またはこの記号のついたプッシュボタン 〙.dem à nd [g è t, h à ve, t à ke, w à nt ] one's p ò und of fl é sh ⦅非難して ⦆(貸した金などを )過酷に取り立てる 〘Shakespeare作 『ベニスの商人 』から 〙.動詞 自動詞 (貨幣の )重さを調べる [検査する ].~́ c à ke ⦅米 ⦆パウンドケーキ 〘もとはバター, 小麦粉, 砂糖1ポンドずつで作った 〙.~́ n ò te ⦅英 ⦆1ポンド紙幣 〘1985年に廃止 〙.
pound
pound 2 /paʊnd /動詞 ~s /-dz /; ~ed /-ɪd /; ~ing 他動詞 1 (繰り返し )…を強くたたく , どんどんと打つ (away )▸ pound the table with one's fists こぶしでテーブルをどんどんとたたく ▸ pound a nail into the wall 壁にくぎを打ちこむ .2 【粉 ペーストになるまで 】…をつき砕く ; …をすりつぶす ; …をペースト状にする (down , up ) «to , into » ▸ pound the herb to a paste ハーブをすりつぶしてペースト状にする .3 〈ピアノ ドラム タイプライターなど 〉を激しくたたく (away ); 【ピアノ ドラムなどで 】〈曲 〉を大音量で演奏する (out ) «on » .4 〈場所 〉を重砲火で攻撃する ; 〈あらしなどが 〉…を襲う .動詞 自動詞 1 «…を » (繰り返し )強く打つ , どんどんとたたく (away )(beat ) «at , against , on » ▸ pound on a computer keyboard コンピュータのキーボードを猛烈な勢いでたたく .2 〖~ +副詞 〗どたどた歩く [走る ] (!副詞 は方向の表現 ) ▸ Paul came pounding down the corridor .ポールは廊下をどたどたと走ってやってきた .3 【興奮などで 】〈心臓が 〉どきんどきん打つ «with » ; 〈太鼓などが 〉どんどんと音を立てる .4 〈音楽が 〉大音量で奏でられる [鳴らされる ](out ).5 «…を » 激しく砲撃 [攻撃 ]する (away ) «at » .6 精力的に仕事をする (away ).
pound
pound 3 名詞 C 1 違法駐車自動車の置き場 .2 (野犬などの )収容所 .3 (迷った家畜を収容した )囲い .
poundage
pound age /páʊndɪdʒ /名詞 U (重さ 金額 )1ポンドに対する手数料 [税金 ].
pounding
p ó und ing 名詞 1 U C どんどん打つこと [音 ].2 C ⦅くだけて ⦆大敗 ; (攻撃などによる )大打撃 ▸ take a pounding ぼろ負けする ; 大打撃を被る .