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English-Thai Dictionary

wold

N ที่ราบสูง หรือ ที่ดอน ไร้ ต้นไม้ (ทาง วรรณ คดี  บริเวณ เขา หัวโล้น  ti-rab-suang-rue-ti-don-ton-mai

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

WOLD

in Saxon, is the same as wald and weald, a wood, sometimes perhaps a lawn or plain. Wald signifies also power, dominion, from waldan, to rule. These words occur in names.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

WOLD

Wold, n. Etym: [OE. wold, wald, AS. weald, wald, a wood, forest; akin to OFries. & OS. wald, D. woud, G. wald, Icel. völlr, a field, and probably to Gr. va a garden, inclosure. Cf. Weald. ]

 

1. A wood; a forest.

 

2. A plain, or low hill; a country without wood, whether hilly or not. And from his further bank Ætolia's wolds espied. Byron. The wind that beats the mountain, blows More softly round the open wold. Tennyson.

 

WOLD

WOLD Wold, n.

 

Defn: See Weld.

 

WOLDE

WOLDE Wolde, obs.

 

Defn: imp. of Will. See Would.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

wold

wold |wōld woʊld | noun (usu. wolds ) (in Britain, often in place names ) a piece of high, open, uncultivated land or moor: the Lincolnshire Wolds. ORIGIN Old English wald wooded upland, of Germanic origin; perhaps related to wild. Compare with Weald .

 

Oxford Dictionary

wold

wold |wəʊld | noun [ often in place names ] (usu. wolds ) (in Britain ) a piece of high, open uncultivated land or moor: the Lincolnshire Wolds. ORIGIN Old English wald wooded upland , of Germanic origin; perhaps related to wild. Compare with Weald .

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

wold

wold /woʊld /名詞 U C 1 しばしば s 〗高原, 原野 .2 〖通例the Wolds 〗ウォルズ 〘イングランド北東部に広がる丘陵地帯 〙.