English-Thai Dictionary
scuttle
N การ วิ่ง อย่างรวดเร็ว การ วิ่ง อย่าง รีบเร่ง การ รีบเร่ง haste rush kan-wing-yang-ruad-reo
scuttle
N ช่อง เล็กๆ บน พื้น เรือ หรือ หลังคา ทางเข้า เล็กๆ ประตู เล็กๆ doorway hatch hatchway chong-lek-lek-bon-puan-ruea
scuttle
N ฝา ปิดช่องทาง เข้า ใน เรือ (ทาง นาวิก ศาสตร์ fa-pid-chong-tang-kao-ruea
scuttle
N ภาชนะ มี หู จับ สำหรับ ใส่ ถ่านหิน ใน เตาผิง ภาชนะ ก้น ตื้น ตะกร้า coal container bucket coal scuttle pa-cha-na-me-hu-jab-sam-rab-sai-tan-hin
scuttle
VI วิ่ง อย่างรวดเร็ว วิ่ง อย่าง รีบเร่ง เร่งฝีเท้า รีบรุด hasten hurry sprint scurry wing-yang-ruad-reo
scuttle
VT จม เรือ โดย การเจาะ รู ใต้ ท้อง เรือ (ทาง นาวิก ศาสตร์ sink submerge jom-ruea-doi-kan-jor-ru
scuttle
VT ทำลาย หยุด ยกเลิก ทิ้ง abandon destroy foil quit tam-lai
scuttle across
PHRV รีบ วิ่ง ข้าม เคลื่อน ข้าม ไป rib-wing-kam
scuttle away / off
PHRV รีบ หลบ ไป rib-lob-pai
scuttlebutt
N ข่าวลือ (คำ สแลง คำ นินทา คำ ล้อเลียน gossip rumor kao-lue
scuttlebutt
N ที่ ดื่ม น้ำ ใน เรือ ถัง เก็บ น้ำจืด ใน เรือ ti-duam-nam-nai-ruea
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
SCUTTLE
n.[L. scutella, a pan or saucer. ] A broad shallow basket; so called from its resemblance to a dish.
SCUTTLE
n. 1. In ships, a small hatchway or opening in the deck, large enough to admit a man, and with a lid for covering it; also, a like hole in the side of a ship, and through the coverings of her hatchways, etc.
2. A square hole in the roof of a house, with a lid.
3. [from scud, and properly scuddle. ] A quick pace; a short run.
SCUTTLE
v.i.To run with affected precipitation.
SCUTTLE
v.t.[from the noun. ] 1. To cut large holes through the bottom or sides of a ship for any purpose.
2. To sink by making holes through the bottom; as, to scuttle a ship.
SCUTTLE-BUTT
n.A butt or cask having a square piece sawn out of its lilge, and lashed
SCUTTLE-CASK
upon deck.
SCUTTLED
pp. Having holes made in the bottom or sides; sunk by means of cutting holes in the bottom or side.
SCUTTLE-FISH
n.The cuttle-fich, so called. [See Cuttle-fish.]
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
SCUTTLE
Scut "tle, n. Etym: [AS. scutel a dish, platter; cf. Icel. skutill;both fr. L. scutella, dim. of scutra, scuta, a dish or platter; cf. scutum a shield. Cf. Skillet. ]
1. A broad, shallow basket.
2. A wide-mouthed vessel for holding coal: a coal hod.
SCUTTLE
Scut "tle, v. i. Etym: [For scuddle, fr. scud. ]
Defn: To run with affected precipitation; to hurry; to bustle; to scuddle. With the first dawn of day, old Janet was scuttling about the house to wake the baron. Sir W. Scott.
SCUTTLE
SCUTTLE Scut "tle, n.
Defn: A quick pace; a short run. Spectator.
SCUTTLE
Scut "tle, n. Etym: [OF. escoutille, F. éscoutille, cf. Sp. escotilla; probably akin to Sp. escoter to cut a thing so as to make it fit, to hollow a garment about the neck, perhaps originally, to cut a bosom- shaped piece out, and of Teutonic origin; cf. D. schoot lap, bosom, G. schoss, Goth. skauts the hem of a garnment. Cf. Sheet an expanse. ]
1. A small opening in an outside wall or covering, furnished with a lid. Specifically: (a ) (Naut. ) A small opening or hatchway in the deck of a ship, large enough to admit a man, and with a lid for covering it, also, a like hole in the side or bottom of a ship. (b ) An opening in the roof of a house, with a lid.
2. The lid or door which covers or closes an opening in a roof, wall, or the like. Scuttle butt, or Scuttle cask (Naut. ), a butt or cask with a large hole in it, used to contain the fresh water for daily use in a ship. Totten.
SCUTTLE
Scut "tle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Scuttled; p. pr. & vb. n. Scuttling. ]
1. To cut a hole or holes through the bottom, deck, or sides of (as of a ship ), for any purpose.
2. To sink by making holes through the bottom of; as, to scuttle a ship.
New American Oxford Dictionary
scuttle
scut tle 1 |ˈskətl ˈskədl | ▶noun (in full coal scuttle ) a metal container with a sloping hinged lid and a handle, used to fetch and store coal for a domestic fire. • the amount of coal held in such a container: carrying endless scuttles of coal up from the cellar. ORIGIN late Old English scutel ‘dish, platter, ’ from Old Norse skutill, from Latin scutella ‘dish. ’
scuttle
scut tle 2 |ˈskədl ˈskətl | ▶verb [ no obj. ] run hurriedly or furtively with short quick steps: a mouse scuttled across the floor. ▶noun [ in sing. ] an act or sound of scuttling: I heard the scuttle of rats across the room. ORIGIN late 15th cent.: compare with dialect scuddle, frequentative of scud .
scuttle
scut tle 3 |ˈskədl ˈskətl | ▶verb [ with obj. ] sink (one's own ship ) deliberately by holing it or opening its seacocks to let water in. • deliberately cause (a scheme ) to fail: some of the stockholders are threatening to scuttle the deal. ▶noun an opening with a lid in a ship's deck or side. ORIGIN late 15th cent. (as a noun ): perhaps from Old French escoutille, from the Spanish diminutive escotilla ‘hatchway. ’ The verb dates from the mid 17th cent.
scuttlebutt
scut tle butt |ˈskətlˌbət ˈskədlˌbət | ▶noun informal rumor; gossip: the scuttlebutt has it that he was a spy | the court cautioned against relying on scuttlebutt. ORIGIN early 19th cent. (denoting a water butt on the deck of a ship, providing drinking water ): from scuttled butt .
Oxford Dictionary
scuttle
scuttle 1 |ˈskʌt (ə )l | ▶noun 1 a metal container with a handle, used to fetch and store coal for a domestic fire. • the amount of coal held in a scuttle: carrying endless scuttles of coal up from the cellar. 2 Brit. the part of a car's bodywork between the windscreen and the bonnet. ORIGIN late Old English scutel ‘dish, platter ’, from Old Norse skutill, from Latin scutella ‘dish ’.
scuttle
scuttle 2 |ˈskʌt (ə )l | ▶verb [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] run hurriedly or furtively with short quick steps: a mouse scuttled across the floor. ▶noun [ in sing. ] an act or sound of scuttling: I heard the scuttle of rats across the room. ORIGIN late 15th cent.: compare with dialect scuddle, frequentative of scud 1 .
scuttle
scuttle 3 |ˈskʌt (ə )l | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 sink (one's own ship ) deliberately by holing it or opening its seacocks to let water in. 2 deliberately cause (a scheme ) to fail: some of the stockholders are threatening to scuttle the deal. ▶noun an opening with a cover in a ship's deck or side. ORIGIN late 15th cent. (as a noun ): perhaps from Old French escoutille, from the Spanish diminutive escotilla ‘hatchway ’. The verb dates from the mid 17th cent.
scuttlebutt
scuttle |butt |ˈskʌt (ə )lbʌt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] N. Amer. informal rumour; gossip: the scuttlebutt had it that he was a government spy. ORIGIN early 19th cent. (denoting a water butt on the deck of a ship, providing drinking water ): from scuttled butt .
American Oxford Thesaurus
scuttle
scuttle verb See scurry (verb ).
Oxford Thesaurus
scuttle
scuttle verb there were men scuttling across the upper deck: scamper, scurry, scramble, bustle, skip, trot, hurry, hasten, make haste, rush, race, dash, run, sprint; Brit. scutter; informal scoot, beetle. ▶noun there was the soft scuttle of rats: scamper, scampering noise, scurry, scurrying; bustle, bustling, trot, hurry, haste, rush, race, dash, run, sprint; rustle, rasp, scratching noise; Brit. scutter, scuttering.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
scuttle
scut tle 1 /skʌ́t (ə )l /名詞 C ⦅主に英 ⦆(室内用の )石炭入れ [バケツ ].
scuttle
scut tle 2 動詞 自動詞 〖~+副詞 〗〈人 小動物が 〉小走りで急ぐ, あわてて逃げる (along, past, down, away ).名詞 U 〖時に a ~〗急ぎ足, あわてて逃げること .
scuttle
scut tle 3 名詞 C 1 〘海 〙(甲板または舷側 (げんそく )の )丸窓, 舷窓 (げんそう ); (ふたの付いた )小昇降口 〘1人だけ出入りできる甲板上の穴 〙.2 ⦅米 ⦆(ふたの付いた )天窓 .動詞 他動詞 1 〈計画 提案など 〉を捨てる, つぶす, (妨害して )止めさせる .2 (特に敵に利用されないようにわざと )船底に穴を空けて 〈船 〉を沈める .
scuttlebutt
sc ú ttle b ù tt 名詞 U ⦅くだけて ⦆うわさ .