English-Thai Dictionary
rot
SL เรื่องไร้สาระ ruang-rai-sa-ra
rot
VI ทำให้ เน่าเปื่อย decompose tam-hai-nao-puai
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
ROT
v.i. To lose the natural cohesion and organization of parts, as animal and vegetable substances; to be decomposed and resolved into its original component parts by the natural process, or the gradual operation of heat and air; to putrefy.
ROT
v.t.To make putrid; to cause to be decomposed by the natural operation of air and heat; to bring to corruption.
ROT
n. 1. A fatal distemper incident to sheep, usually supposed to be owing to wet seasons and moist pastures. The immediate cause of the mortality of sheep, in this disease, is found to be a great number of small animals, called flukes, (Fascida,) found in the liver, and supposed to be produced from eggs swallowed with their food.
2. Putrefaction; putrid decay.
3. Dry rot, in timber, the decay of the wood without the access of water.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
ROT
Rot, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Rotted; p. pr. & vb. n. Rotting.] Etym: [OE. rotien, AS. rotian; akin to D. rotten, Prov. G. rotten, OHG. rozz, G. rösten to steep flax, Icel. rotna to rot, Sw. ruttna, Dan. raadne, Icel. rottin rotten. sq. root117. Cf. Ret, Rotten. ]
1. To undergo a process common to organic substances by which they lose the cohesion of their parts and pass through certain chemical changes, giving off usually in some stages of the process more or less offensive odors; to become decomposed by a natural process; to putrefy; to decay. Fixed like a plant on his peculiar spot, To draw nutrition, propagate, and rot. Pope.
2. Figuratively: To perish slowly; to decay; to die; to become corrupt. Four of the sufferers were left to rot in irons. Macaulay. Rot, poor bachelor, in your club. Thackeray.
Syn. -- To putrefy; corrupt; decay; spoil.
ROT
ROT Rot, v. t.
1. To make putrid; to cause to be wholly or partially decomposed by natural processes; as, to rot vegetable fiber.
2. To expose, as flax, to a process of maceration, etc. , for the purpose of separating the fiber; to ret.
ROT
ROT Rot, n.
1. Process of rotting; decay; putrefaction.
2. (Bot. )
Defn: A disease or decay in fruits, leaves, or wood, supposed to be caused by minute fungi. See Bitter rot, Black rot, etc. , below.
3. Etym: [Cf. G. rotz glanders. ]
Defn: A fatal distemper which attacks sheep and sometimes other animals. It is due to the presence of a parasitic worm in the liver or gall bladder. See 1st Fluke, 2. His cattle must of rot and murrain die. Milton. Bitter rot (Bot. ), a disease of apples, caused by the fungus Glæosporium fructigenum. F. L. Scribner. -- Black rot (Bot. ), a disease of grapevines, attacking the leaves and fruit, caused by the fungus Læstadia Bidwellii. F. L. Scribner. -- Dry rot (Bot. ) See under Dry. -- Grinder's rot (Med. ) See under Grinder. -- Potato rot. (Bot. ) See under Potato. -- White rot (Bot. ), a disease of grapes, first appearing in whitish pustules on the fruit, caused by the fungus Coniothyrium diplodiella. F. L. Scribner.
New American Oxford Dictionary
rot
rot |rät rɑt | ▶verb ( rots, rotting, rotted ) (chiefly of animal or vegetable matter ) decay or cause to decay by the action of bacteria and fungi; decompose: [ no obj. ] : the chalets were neglected and their woodwork was rotting away | [ with obj. ] : caries sets in at a weak point and spreads to rot the whole tooth. • gradually deteriorate through lack of attention or opportunity: he cannot understand the way the education system has been allowed to rot. ▶noun 1 the process of decaying: the leaves were turning black with rot. • rotten or decayed matter: she was busy cutting the rot from the potatoes. • (the rot ) a process of deterioration; a decline in standards: it was when they moved back to the family home that the rot set in . • [ usu. with modifier ] any of a number of fungal or bacterial diseases that cause tissue deterioration, esp. in plants. 2 informal nonsense; rubbish: don't talk rot. ORIGIN Old English rotian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch rotten; the noun (Middle English ) may have come via Scandinavian.
Oxford Dictionary
rot
rot |rɒt | ▶verb ( rots, rotting, rotted ) 1 (chiefly of animal or vegetable matter ) decay or cause to decay by the action of bacteria and fungi; decompose: [ no obj. ] : the chalets were neglected and their woodwork was rotting away | [ with obj. ] : caries sets in at a weak point and spreads to rot the whole tooth. • [ no obj. ] gradually deteriorate, especially through neglect: the education system has been allowed to rot. 2 [ with obj. ] Brit. informal, dated make fun of; tease: has anybody been rotting you? ▶noun [ mass noun ] 1 the process of decaying: the leaves were turning black with rot. • rotten or decayed matter. • [ usu. with modifier ] any of a number of fungal or bacterial diseases that cause tissue deterioration, especially in plants. • (often the rot ) liver rot in sheep. 2 (the rot ) Brit. a process of deterioration; a decline in standards: there is enough talent in the team to stop the rot . • US corruption on the part of officials. 3 informal, chiefly Brit. nonsense; rubbish: don't talk rot | [ as exclamation ] : ‘Rot! ’ she said with vehemence. ORIGIN Old English rotian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch rotten; the noun (Middle English ) may have come via Scandinavian.
American Oxford Thesaurus
rot
rot verb 1 the floorboards rotted: decay, decompose, become rotten; disintegrate, crumble, perish. 2 the meat began to rot: go bad, spoil, go off; molder, putrefy, fester. 3 poor neighborhoods have been left to rot: deteriorate, degenerate, decline, decay, go to rack and ruin, go to seed, go downhill; informal go to pot, go to the dogs. ANTONYMS improve, recover. ▶noun 1 the leaves turned black with rot: decay, decomposition, mold, mildew, blight, canker; putrefaction. 2 traditionalists said the rot had set in: deterioration, decline; corruption, cancer.
Oxford Thesaurus
rot
rot verb 1 the floorboards in the centre of the room had rotted: decay, decompose, disintegrate, crumble, become rotten; corrode, perish. 2 the meat was beginning to rot: go bad, go off, spoil; go sour, moulder, go mouldy, taint; putrefy, fester, become gangrenous, mortify; rare necrose, sphacelate. 3 poor city neighbourhoods have been left to rot for years: deteriorate, degenerate, decline, decay, fall into decay, go to rack and ruin, become dilapidated, go to seed, go downhill, languish, moulder; informal go to pot, go to the dogs, go down the toilet. ANTONYMS recover, improve. ▶noun 1 the leaves were turning black with rot: decay, decomposition; corrosion; mould, mouldiness, mildew, blight, canker; putrefaction, putrescence; wet rot, dry rot. 2 staunch defenders of traditionalism argued that the rot set in with Van Gogh and Gauguin: deterioration, decline; corruption, canker, cancer. 3 informal stop talking rot: nonsense, rubbish, balderdash, gibberish, claptrap, blarney, blather, blether; informal hogwash, baloney, tripe, drivel, bilge, bosh, bull, bunk, hot air, eyewash, piffle, poppycock, phooey, hooey, malarkey, twaddle, guff, dribble; Brit. informal cobblers, codswallop, cock, stuff and nonsense, tosh; Scottish & N. English informal havers; N. Amer. informal garbage, flapdoodle, blathers, wack, bushwa, applesauce; informal, dated bunkum, tommyrot, cod, gammon. ANTONYMS sense. WORD LINKS rot sapro- related prefix, as in saprogenic Word Links sections supply words that are related to the headword but do not normally appear in a thesaurus because they are not actual synonyms.
Duden Dictionary
rot
rot Adjektiv |r o t |Adjektiv; Steigerungsformen: röter, seltener: roter, röteste, seltener: roteste mittelhochdeutsch, althochdeutsch rōt 1 von der Farbe frischen Blutes rote Farbe, Tinte | eine rote Fahne, Bluse | rote Kirschen, Rosen | ein roter Abendhimmel | rote Glut | ein rotes Licht | roter Wein Rotwein | rote Lippen | eine rote Nase | rotes (fuchsrotes, rostrotes, kupferfarbenes ) Haar | ein rotes Ass ein Herzass oder ein Karoass | eine rote (auf Rot stehende ) Ampel | ein roter (umgangssprachlich ; rot schreibender ) Kugelschreiber | rotes (Physik ; langwelliges ) Licht | rote (vom Weinen o. Ä. gerötete ) Augen haben | er bekam einen [ganz ] roten Kopf ihm stieg die Röte ins Gesicht | rot wie Blut | rot glühen, leuchten | rot glühendes Eisen | rot geweinte, unterlaufene Augen | [im Gesicht ] rot anlaufen | rot geschminkte Lippen | rot gefrorene (vor Kälte gerötete ) Ohren, Hände | rot geäderte (von roten Adern durchzogene ) Augen | rot lackierte Fingernägel | etwas rot anmalen, unterstreichen, anstreichen | rot (in Rot ) geäderter Marmor | ein rot gepunkteter, gestreifter, karierter Rock | substantiviert umgangssprachlich ein Glas von dem Roten Rotwein | die Rote (umgangssprachlich ; Rothaarige ) da drüben | ich habe keinen Roten (umgangssprachlich ; überhaupt kein Geld ) mehr | der Kugelschreiber schreibt rot rot werden, sein vor Scham, Verlegenheit erröten, errötet sein sie wurde rot bis über die Ohren Rote /rote Karte Karte 1 heute rot , morgen tot der Tod kann sehr überraschend eintreten, ist oft nicht vorhersehbar wohl bezogen auf die frische rote Farbe der Wangen 2 nach der roten Fahne der Arbeiterbewegung Politik zur Linken 2 gehörend (kommunistisch, sozialistisch, sozialdemokratisch, marxistisch ) rote (marxistische ) Literatur | das rote (kommunistische ) China | eine rote (kommunistische, sozialdemokratische ) Regierung | dieser Stadtteil wählt traditionell rot sozialdemokratisch, eine linke Partei | substantiviert die Roten haben die Wahl gewonnen | ein Bündnis aus Grün und Rot aus Grünen und SPD lieber rot als tot umgangssprachlich es ist besser, kommunistisch, sozialistisch regiert zu werden, als im Kampf gegen den Kommunismus, Sozialismus zu sterben
Rot
Rot Substantiv, Neutrum , das |R o t |das Rot; Genitiv: des Rot [s ], Plural: die Rot [s ] 1 rote Farbe ein kräftiges, leuchtendes, dunkles, helles Rot | das Rot ihrer Lippen | die Ampel zeigt Rot rotes Licht | bei Rot (während die Ampel rotes Licht zeigt ) über die Kreuzung fahren | Rot (rote Schminke ) auflegen 2 a meist ohne Artikel; ohne Plural Kartenspiele (dem Herz der französischen Spielkarte entsprechende ) Farbe der deutschen Spielkarte Rot ist Trumpf b Kartenspiele Spiel, bei dem Rot 2a Trumpf ist c Kartenspiele Karte der Farbe Rot 2a [ein niedriges ] Rot ablegen 3 ohne Plural Rouge 2 Rot gewinnt
Röt
Röt Substantiv, Neutrum Geologie , das |R ö t |Stufe der unteren Triasformation
French Dictionary
rot
rot n. m. nom masculin Sortie bruyante d ’air par la bouche. : Le bébé va faire son petit rot. Prononciation Le t ne se prononce pas, [ro ]; le mot rime avec boléro Note Orthographique ro t.
rôt
rôt n. m. nom masculin vieux Rôti. : Gargantua dégusta moult potages et quatre rôts de bœuf et de gibier. Note Orthographique r ôt.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
rot
rot /rɑt |rɔt /動詞 ~s /-ts /; ~ted /-ɪd /; ~ting 自動詞 1 〈木材 食べ物などが 〉腐る , 朽ちる (away, down, off ); 朽ちてなくなる [落ちる ](off ) (!decayに比べ 「動植物などの有機物が朽ちる 」という意味が強い ) ▸ The deer was killed and left to rot .その鹿は殺されて朽ちていくままになっていた 2 堕落する ; 〈社会などが 〉衰退する ; 〈体などが 〉衰える ▸ If you do not keep growing, you rot .成長し続けなければ堕落してしまう 3 ⦅英俗 ⦆冷やかしを言う , 冗談を言う .他動詞 1 〈木材 食べ物など 〉を腐らせる , 朽ちさせる (off , away )▸ Sweet drinks rot your teeth .甘い飲み物は歯を悪くする 2 …を堕落させる .3 〈亜麻など 〉を水につけて繊維を柔らかくする .4 ⦅英 くだけて やや古 ⦆…をからかう .r ò t in j á il [pr í son, h é ll ]〈囚人などが 〉心身ともに衰弱する .名詞 U 1 腐敗 , 腐食 ; 腐敗物 ; (木材などの )腐った部分 .2 ⦅くだけて ⦆〖the ~〗(事 状況などの )悪化 ; 堕落 ; 衰退 .3 ⦅英 くだけて やや古 ⦆たわごと , ばかげたこと .4 〘植 〙腐敗病 ; 〖通例the ~〗羊の肝臓病 ; ひずめの腐敗 .間投詞 ばかな , くだらない .