English-Thai Dictionary
Winchester
N เมือง วินเชสเตอร์ ใน แฮม เชียร์ อยู่ ทางใต้ ของ ประเทศอังกฤษ muang-win-chel-tor-nai-ham-chie-pra-thed-ang-krid
winch
N เครื่อง กว้าน เครื่อง ฉุด ดึง หรือ ยก ของ หนัก krung-kwan
wincher
N คนที่ ใช้ เครื่อง กว้าน (สำหรับ ยก ของ หนัก kon-ti-chai-kwan
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
WINCH
n.A windlass; or an instrument with which to turn or strain something forcibly; as a winch to strain the cord of a bedstead, or to turn a wheel.
WINCH
v.i.To wince; to shrink; to kick with impatience or uneasiness. [This is a more correct orthography than wince. ]
WINCHING, WINCING
ppr. Flinching; shrinking; kicking.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
WINCH
Winch, v. i. Etym: [See Wince. ]
Defn: To wince; to shrink; to kick with impatience or uneasiness.
WINCH
WINCH Winch, n.
Defn: A kick, as of a beast, from impatience or uneasiness. Shelton.
WINCH
Winch, n. Etym: [OE. winche, AS. wince a winch, a reel to wind thread upon. Cf. Wink. ]
1. A crank with a handle, for giving motion to a machine, a grindstone, etc.
2. An instrument with which to turn or strain something forcibly.
3. An axle or drum turned by a crank with a handle, or by power, for raising weights, as from the hold of a ship, from mines, etc. ; a windlass.
4. A wince.
New American Oxford Dictionary
winch
winch |winCH wɪntʃ | ▶noun 1 a hauling or lifting device consisting of a rope, cable, or chain winding around a horizontal rotating drum, turned by a crank or by motor or other power source; a windlass. 2 the crank of a wheel or axle. ▶verb [ with obj. ] hoist or haul with a winch. DERIVATIVES winch er noun ORIGIN late Old English wince ‘reel, pulley, ’ of Germanic origin; related to the verb wink. The verb dates from the early 16th cent.
Winchester
Winchester 2 |ˈwɪntʃɪstə | a city in southern England, the county town of Hampshire; pop. 43,800 (est. 2009 ). Known to the Romans as Venta Belgarum, it became capital of the West Saxon kingdom of Wessex in 519. It is the site of Winchester College, one of the oldest public schools in England, founded by the bishop of Winchester, William of Wykeham, in 1382.
Winchester
Win ches ter 1 |ˈwinˌCHestər, -CHəstər ˈwɪntʃɪstər | a historic city in northwestern Virginia, in the Shenandoah Valley; pop. 25,897 (est. 2008 ).
Winchester
Win ches ter 3 |ˈwinˌCHestər ˈwɪntʃɪstər | ▶noun 1 (also Winchester rifle ) trademark a breech-loading side-action repeating rifle. [named after Oliver F. Winchester (1810 –80 ), the US manufacturer of the rifle. ] 2 (in full Winchester disk or drive ) Computing a disk drive in a sealed unit containing a high-capacity hard disk and the read-write heads. [so named because its original numerical designation corresponded to the caliber of the rifle. ]
winchester
win |ches ¦ter |ˈwɪntʃɪstə | ▶noun Brit. a large cylindrical bottle for holding liquids. ORIGIN early 18th cent.: originally applied to containers holding a bushel, gallon, or quart, according to an obsolete system of measurement with standards kept at Winchester (see Winchester 2 ).
Oxford Dictionary
winch
winch |wɪn (t )ʃ | ▶noun 1 a hauling or lifting device consisting of a rope or chain winding round a horizontal rotating drum, turned typically by a crank or by motor. • Brit. the reel of a fishing rod. • another term for wince 2. 2 the crank of a wheel or axle. ▶verb [ with obj. ] hoist or haul with a winch. DERIVATIVES wincher noun ORIGIN late Old English wince ‘reel, pulley ’, of Germanic origin; related to the verb wink. The verb dates from the early 16th cent.
Winchester
Winchester 2 |ˈwɪntʃɪstə | a city in southern England, the county town of Hampshire; pop. 43,800 (est. 2009 ). Known to the Romans as Venta Belgarum, it became capital of the West Saxon kingdom of Wessex in 519. It is the site of Winchester College, one of the oldest public schools in England, founded by the bishop of Winchester, William of Wykeham, in 1382.
Winchester
Winchester 3 |ˈwɪntʃɪstə | ▶noun 1 (also Winchester rifle ) trademark a breech-loading side-action repeating rifle. 2 (in full Winchester disk or drive ) Computing a disk drive in a sealed unit containing a high-capacity hard disk and the read-write heads. ORIGIN from the name of name of Oliver F. Winchester (1810 –80 ), the American manufacturer of the rifle. Sense 2 is so named because its original numerical designation corresponded to the calibre of the rifle.
Winchester
Win ches ter 1 |ˈwinˌCHestər, -CHəstər ˈwɪntʃɪstər | a historic city in northwestern Virginia, in the Shenandoah Valley; pop. 25,897 (est. 2008 ).
winchester
win |ches ¦ter |ˈwɪntʃɪstə | ▶noun Brit. a large cylindrical bottle for holding liquids. ORIGIN early 18th cent.: originally applied to containers holding a bushel, gallon, or quart, according to an obsolete system of measurement with standards kept at Winchester (see Winchester 2 ).
Oxford Thesaurus
winch
winch noun the winch was once used to haul goods and furniture into the building: crane, derrick, hoist, davit, windlass, tackle, block and tackle, lifting gear, hoisting gear, system of pulleys, sheave; Nautical sheerlegs. ▶verb the crew were winched to safety along the rope: haul, pull, drag, hoist, crane, lift, tug, heave, trail, draw, tow, manhandle; archaic hale.
Spanish Dictionary
winchester
winchester nombre masculino Fusil de repetición norteamericano, de 10,7 mm de calibre, utilizado en la Guerra de Secesión y en la Guerra de 1870 .ETIMOLOGÍA De una marca registrada .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
winch
winch /wɪn (t )ʃ /名詞 C 1 ウインチ, 巻き上げ機 〘通例windlassより複雑な仕掛けのもの 〙.2 曲がり柄, (ハンドルの付いている )クランク .動詞 他動詞 …をウインチで引き寄せる [つり上げる, 巻き上げる ](up, away, in ).
Winchester
Win ches ter /wɪ́ntʃèstə r |-tʃɪs -/名詞 1 ウィンチェスター 〘英国Hampshire州の州都 〙.2 C ⦅商標 ⦆ウィンチェスター銃 (Winchester rifle ) 〘連発式ライフル銃 〙.