English-Thai Dictionary
wallow
N การ เกลือกกลิ้ง kan-kuea-kling
wallow
N บริเวณ ที่ สัตว์ มา เกลือกกลิ้ง (เช่น ปลัก บริเวณ โคลน เลน สำหรับ ให้ สัตว์ มา เกลือกกลิ้ง bo-ri-wen-ti-me-sad-ma-kuea-kling
wallow
N สภาพ ที่ เสื่อมทราม ลง sa-pab-ti-suam-sam-long
wallow
VI มี จำนวนมาก me-jam-nuan-mak
wallow
VI หลง มัวเมา indulge luxuriate revel long-mua-mao
wallow
VI เกลือกกลิ้ง กลิ้ง ตัว กลิ้งเกลือก kuea-kling
wallow
VI เดิน ด้วย ความยากลำบาก (เหมือนกับ อยู่ ใน โคลน เลน doen-duai-kwam-yak-lam-bak
wallow in
PHRV กลิ้ง อยู่ ใน เกลือกกลิ้ง อยู่ ใน grovel in welter in kling-yu-nai
wallow in
PHRV ดีใจ ใน เรื่อง ยินดี กับ grovel in welter in de-jai-nai-ruang
wallow in
PHRV มีเงิน มาก roll in me-ngen-mak
wallower
N ผู้ กลิ้ง ตัว ผู้ เกลือกกลิ้ง ผู้ เกลือกกลั้ว phu-kling-tua
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
WALLOW
v.i.[L., G. This verb seems to be connected with well, walk, etc. ] 1. To roll ones body on the earth, in mire, or on other substance; to tumble and roll in water. Swine wallow in the mire.
2. To move heavily and clumsily.
Part huge of bulk, wallowing unwieldy, enormous in their gait, tempest the ocean. [Unusual. ]
3. To live in filth or gross vice; as man wallowing in his native impurity.
WALLOW
v.t.To roll ones body. Wallow thyself in ashes. Jeremiah 6:26.
WALLOW
n.A kind of rolling walk.
WALLOWER
n.One that rolls in mire.
WALLOWING
ppr. Rolling the body on any thing.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
WALLOW
Wal "low, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Wallowed; p. pr. & vb. n. Wallowing. ]Etym: [OE. walwen, AS. wealwian; akin to Goth. walwjan (in comp. ) to roll, L. volvere; cf. Skr. val to turn. *147. Cf. Voluble Well, n.]
1. To roll one's self about, as in mire; to tumble and roll about; to move lazily or heavily in any medium; to flounder; as, swine wallow in the mire. I may wallow in the lily beds. Shak.
2. To live in filth or gross vice; to disport one's self in a beastly and unworthy manner. God sees a man wallowing in his native impurity. South.
3. To wither; to fade. [Prov. Eng. & Scot. ]
WALLOW
WALLOW Wal "low, v. t.
Defn: To roll; esp. , to roll in anything defiling or unclean. "Wallow thyself in ashes. " Jer. vi. 26.
WALLOW
WALLOW Wal "low, n.
Defn: A kind of rolling walk. One taught the toss, and one the new French wallow. Dryden.
WALLOWER
WALLOWER Wal "low *er, n.
1. One who, or that which, wallows.
2. (Mach. )
Defn: A lantern wheel; a trundle.
WALLOWISH
Wal "low *ish, a. Etym: [Scot. wallow to fade or wither. ]
Defn: Flat; insipid. [Obs. ] Overbury.
New American Oxford Dictionary
wallow
wal low |ˈwälō ˈwɑloʊ | ▶verb [ no obj. ] 1 (chiefly of large mammals ) roll about or lie relaxed in mud or water, esp. to keep cool, avoid biting insects, or spread scent: watering places where buffalo liked to wallow. • (of a boat or aircraft ) roll from side to side: the small jet wallowed in the sky. 2 (wallow in ) (of a person ) indulge in an unrestrained way in (something that creates a pleasurable sensation ): I was wallowing in the luxury of the hotel | he had been wallowing in self-pity. ▶noun 1 an act of wallowing: a wallow in nostalgia. 2 an area of mud or shallow water where mammals go to wallow, typically developing into a depression in the ground over long use. DERIVATIVES wal low er noun ORIGIN Old English walwian ‘to roll around, ’ of Germanic origin, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin volvere ‘to roll. ’
Wallowa Mountains
Wal low a Moun tains |wäˈlôə ˌwɑlɔə ˈmaʊntənz | a range in northeastern Oregon. The Wallowa River valley, on its east, is home to the Nez Perce Indians.
Oxford Dictionary
wallow
wal ¦low |ˈwɒləʊ | ▶verb [ no obj. ] 1 (chiefly of large mammals ) roll about or lie in mud or water, especially to keep cool or avoid biting insects: there were watering places where buffalo liked to wallow. • (of a boat or aircraft ) roll from side to side: a ship wallowing in stormy seas. 2 (wallow in ) (of a person ) indulge in an unrestrained way in (something that one finds pleasurable ): I was wallowing in the luxury of the hotel | he had been wallowing in self-pity. ▶noun 1 an act of wallowing: a wallow in nostalgia. 2 a depression containing mud or shallow water, formed by the wallowing of large mammals. DERIVATIVES wallower noun ORIGIN Old English walwian ‘to roll about ’, of Germanic origin, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin volvere ‘to roll ’.
Wallowa Mountains
Wal low a Moun tains |wäˈlôə ˌwɑlɔə ˈmaʊntənz | a range in northeastern Oregon. The Wallowa River valley, on its east, is home to the Nez Perce Indians.
American Oxford Thesaurus
wallow
wallow verb 1 pigs wallow in the mud: loll about /around, roll about /around, lie about /around, splash about /around; slosh, wade, paddle; informal splosh. 2 a ship wallowing in stormy seas: roll, lurch, toss, plunge, pitch, reel, rock, flounder, keel, list; labor. 3 she seems to wallow in self-pity: luxuriate, bask, take pleasure, take satisfaction, indulge (oneself ), delight, revel, glory; enjoy, like, love, relish, savor; informal get a kick out of, get off on.
Oxford Thesaurus
wallow
wallow verb 1 a pond in which water buffalo wallowed: loll about /around, lie about /around, tumble about /around, splash about /around; slosh, wade, paddle, slop, squelch, welter; informal splosh. 2 a ship wallowing in stormy seas: roll, lurch, toss (about ), plunge, reel, sway, rock, flounder, keel, list; labour, make heavy weather. 3 she seems to wallow in her self-pity: luxuriate, bask, take pleasure, take satisfaction, indulge (oneself ), delight, revel, glory; give oneself up to, take to; enjoy, like, love, relish, savour, rejoice in, exult in; informal get a kick /buzz out of, get a kick /buzz from; N. Amer. informal get a bang from, get a charge out of. ANTONYMS eschew.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
wallow
wal low /wɑ́loʊ |wɔ́l -/動詞 自動詞 1 ⦅否定的に ⦆〈人が 〉【悪い状況で 】(悲しんで )同情をかおうとする ; 【感情などに 】おぼれる, ひたる «in » ▸ wallow in self-pity [despair, defeat ]自己憐憫 (れんびん )[絶望, 敗北感 ]にひたる 2 〈動物 人が 〉【泥 水などの中で 】(喜んで )転げまわる, 横たわる «in » .3 〈船などが 〉 (荒波の中で )もまれる, 激しく揺れる .名詞 C 1 «…に » つかること, ふけること «in » .2 (動物が )泥浴びをする場所, 水浴び場 .