English-Thai Dictionary
thresh
N การ นวดข้าว การ ฟาด ข้าว threshing kan-nuad-kao
thresh
VI นวดข้าว ฟาด ข้าว thrash nuad-kao
thresh
VT นวดข้าว ฟาด ข้าว thrash nuad-kao
thresh
VT พิจารณา ละเอียด pi-ja-ra-na-la-iad
thresh
VT เฆี่ยน ฟาด หวด โบย kian
thresher
N คนที่ เฆี่ยน หรือ ฟาด คนที่ ทำให้ แพ้ อย่าง สิ้นเชิง นก พวก Toxostoma
threshold
N จุดเริ่มต้น จุดเริ่ม ของ ประสบการณ์ หรือ เหตุการณ์ ใหม่ๆ starting point jud-roem-ton
threshold
N ทางเข้า entrance tang-kao
threshold
N ธร ณีประตู doorsill tor-ra-ne-pra-tu
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
THRESH
v.t.To thrash. [See Thrash. ] The latter is the popular pronunciation, but the word is written thrash or thresh, indifferently. [See the derivation and definitions under Thrash. ]
THRESHER
n.The sea fox.
THRESHHOLD
n. 1. The door-sill; the plank, stone or piece of timber which lies at the bottom or under a door, particularly of a dwelling house, church, temple or the like; hence, entrance; gate; door.
2. Entrance; the place or point of entering or beginning. He is now at the threshhold of his argument.
Many men that stumble at the threshhold.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
THRESH
Thresh, v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p. Threshed; p. pr. & vb. n.Threshing. ]
Defn: Same as Thrash. He would thresh, and thereto dike and delve. Chaucer.
THRESHER
THRESHER Thresh "er, n.
Defn: Same as Thrasher.
THRESH-FOLD
THRESH-FOLD Thresh "-fold `, n.
Defn: Threshold. [Obs. ] Chaucer.
THRESHOLD
Thresh "old, n. Etym: [OE. threswold, þreshwold, AS. þrescwald,þerscwald, þerscold, þrescold, fr. þrescan, þerscan, to thresh; akin to Icel. þreskjöde, þröskuldr, Sw. tröskel, Dan. tærskel. See Thrash. ]
1. The plank, stone, or piece of timber, which lies under a door, especially of a dwelling house, church, temple, or the like; the doorsill; hence, entrance; gate; door.
2. Fig. : The place or point of entering or beginning, entrance; outset; as, the threshold of life.
THRESHWOLD
THRESHWOLD Thresh "wold `, n.
Defn: Threshold. [Obs. ]
New American Oxford Dictionary
thresh
thresh |THreSH θrɛʃ | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 separate grain from (a plant ), typically with a flail or by the action of a revolving mechanism: machinery that can reap and thresh corn in the same process | (as noun threshing ) : farm workers started the afternoon's threshing. 2 variant spelling of thrash. ORIGIN Old English therscan, later threscan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dorsen and German dreschen. Compare with thrash .
thresher
thresh er |ˈTHreSHər ˈθrɛʃər | ▶noun 1 a person or machine that separates grain from the plants by beating. 2 (also thresher shark ) a surface-living shark with a long upper lobe to the tail. Threshers often hunt in pairs, lashing the water with their tails to herd fish into a tightly packed shoal. [Alopias vulpinus, family Alopidae. ]
threshing floor
thresh ing floor ▶noun a hard, level surface on which grain is threshed with a flail.
threshing machine
thresh ing ma chine ▶noun a power-driven machine for separating grain from plants.
threshold
thresh old |ˈTHreSHˌ (h )ōld ˈθrɛʃˌ (h )oʊld | ▶noun 1 a strip of wood, metal, or stone forming the bottom of a doorway and crossed in entering a house or room. • [ in sing. ] a point of entry or beginning: she was on the threshold of a dazzling career. • the beginning of an airport runway on which an aircraft is attempting to land. 2 the magnitude or intensity that must be exceeded for a certain reaction, phenomenon, result, or condition to occur or be manifested: nothing happens until the signal passes the threshold | [ as modifier ] : a threshold level. • the maximum level of radiation or a concentration of a substance considered to be acceptable or safe: their water would meet the safety threshold of 50 milligrams of nitrates per liter. • Physiology & Psychology a limit below which a stimulus causes no reaction: everyone has a different pain threshold. • a level, rate, or amount at which something comes into effect: the tax threshold has risen to $10,492 of adjusted gross income. ORIGIN Old English therscold, threscold; related to German dialect Drischaufel; the first element is related to thresh (in a Germanic sense ‘tread ’), but the origin of the second element is unknown.
Oxford Dictionary
thresh
thresh |θrɛʃ | ▶verb 1 [ with obj. ] separate grain from (corn or other crops ), typically with a flail or by the action of a revolving mechanism: machinery that can reap and thresh corn in the same process | (as noun threshing ) : farm workers started the afternoon's threshing. 2 |θreʃ | [ no obj. ] move violently; thrash: a creature threshing in a net | [ with obj. ] : it threshes its wings frantically overhead. ORIGIN Old English therscan, later threscan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dorsen and German dreschen. Compare with thrash .
thresher
thresher |ˈθrɛʃə | ▶noun 1 a person or machine that separates grain from corn or other crops by beating. 2 (also thresher shark ) a surface-living shark with a long upper lobe to the tail. Threshers often hunt in pairs, lashing the water with their tails to herd fish into a tightly packed shoal. ●Alopias vulpinus, family Alopidae.
threshing floor
threshing floor ▶noun a hard, level surface on which corn or other grain is threshed with a flail.
threshing machine
threshing ma |chine ▶noun a power-driven machine for separating the grain from corn or other crops.
threshold
threshold |ˈθrɛʃəʊld, ˈθrɛʃˌhəʊld | ▶noun 1 a strip of wood or stone forming the bottom of a doorway and crossed in entering a house or room. • [ in sing. ] a point of entry or beginning: she was on the threshold of a dazzling career. • the beginning of an airport runway on which an aircraft is attempting to land. 2 the magnitude or intensity that must be exceeded for a certain reaction, phenomenon, result, or condition to occur or be manifested. • the maximum level of radiation or a concentration of a substance considered to be acceptable or safe. • the level at which one starts to feel or react to something: he has a low boredom threshold. • a level, rate, or amount at which something comes into effect: the inheritance tax threshold. ORIGIN Old English therscold, threscold; related to German dialect Drischaufel; the first element is related to thresh (in a Germanic sense ‘tread ’), but the origin of the second element is unknown.
American Oxford Thesaurus
threshold
threshold noun 1 the threshold of the church: doorstep, doorway, entrance, entry, door, gate, gateway, portal, doorsill. 2 the threshold of a new era: start, beginning, commencement, brink, verge, cusp, dawn, inception, day one, opening, debut; informal kickoff. 3 the human threshold of pain: lower limit, minimum.
Oxford Thesaurus
threshold
threshold noun 1 they stood on the threshold of the church: doorstep, sill, doorsill, doorway, entrance, entry, way in, door, gate, gateway, portal, approach. 2 these young people are at the threshold of their careers: start, starting point, beginning, brink, verge, edge, dawn, birth, origin, inception, conception, opening, launch, inauguration, institution, initiation, debut, creation, day one; informal kick-off; formal commencement. ANTONYMS end. 3 100 dB is close to the human threshold of pain: lower limit, starting point, minimum, margin; Psychology limen. WORD LINKS threshold liminal relating to a threshold 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.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
thresh
thresh /θreʃ /動詞 他動詞 1 〈穀物 〉を脱穀する .2 ⦅まれ ⦆…を (激しく )たたく .自動詞 脱穀する .thr é sh er 名詞 C 脱穀する人, 脱穀機 .
threshing
thr é sh ing 名詞 U 脱穀 .~́ mach ì ne 脱穀機 .
threshold
thresh old /θréʃ h oʊld / (! -sho-は /ʃ h oʊ /) 名詞 複 ~s /-dz /C 1 敷居 , 戸口 ,鴨居 (かもい )▸ cross the threshold of the office 事務所に入る 2 〖通例the ~〗出発点, 発端 ▸ a young woman on [at ] the threshold of a career 仕事を始めようとする若い女性 3 (何かが起きる 変化する )境界, 限界点 ;〘心 〙閾 (いき )▸ have a high threshold of pain [pain threshold ]痛みを感じにくい ▸ have a low anger threshold 怒りを感じやすい (≒feel anger easily )