English-Thai Dictionary
wound
N บาดแผล แผล cut injury lesion bad-pare
wound
VI กิริยา ช่อง ที่ 2 และ 3 ของ wind คดเคี้ยว วกวน kri-ya-chong-ti-2-lea-3-kong
wound
VI บาดเจ็บ เป็นแผล bad-jeb
wound
VT ทำให้ เป็น บาดแผล ทำให้ บาดเจ็บ tam-hai-pen-bad-pare
wounded
ADJ ซึ่ง บาดเจ็บ ซึ่ง เป็นแผล sueng-bad-jeb
wounding
ADJ ซึ่ง บาดเจ็บ injured hurt lacerated bitten sueng-bad-jeb
woundingly
ADV โดย ได้รับบาดเจ็บ อย่าง อันตราย harmful biting doi-dai-rab-kan-bad-jeb
woundless
ADJ ซึ่ง ไม่ ได้รับบาดเจ็บ ซึ่ง ไม่ได้ รับ อันตราย sueng-mai-dai-rab-kan-bad-jeb
woundwort
N พืช ชนิด ใด ก็ตามที่ เคย ใช้ รักษา บาดแผล phud-cha-nid-dai-kor-tam-ti-koi-chai-rak-sa-bad-pare
woundwort
N พืช ตระกูล มิ นต์ ใช้ สำหรับ รักษา บาดแผล phud-ta-krun-min-chai-sam-ran-rak-sa-bad-pare
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
WOUND
n.[G.] 1. A breach of the skin and flesh of an animal, or of the bark and wood of a tree, or of the bark and substance of other plants, caused by violence or external force. The self-healing power of living beings, animal or vegetable, by which the parts separated in wounds, tend to unite and become sound, is a remarkable proof of divine benevolence and wisdom.
2. Injury; hurt; as a wound given to credit or reputation.
WOUND
v.t.To hurt by violence; as, to wound the head or the arm; to wound a tree. He was wounded for our transgressions. Isaiah 53:5.
WOUND
pret. and pp. of wind.
WOUNDED
pp. Hurt; injured.
WOUNDER
n.One that wounds.
WOUNDING
ppr. Hurting; injuring.
WOUNDLESS
a.Free from hurt or injury.
WOUNDWORT
n.The name of several plants; one, a species of Achillea; another, a species of Stachys; another, a species of Laserpitium; another, a species of Solidago; and another a species of Senecio.
WOUNDY
a.Excessive. [Not English. ]
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
WOUND
WOUND Wound,
Defn: imp. & p. p. of Wind to twist, and Wind to sound by blowing.
WOUND
Wound, n. Etym: [OE. wounde, wunde, AS. wund; akin to OFries. wunde, OS. wunda, D. wonde, OHG. wunta, G. wunde, Icel. und, and to AS. , OS. , & G. wund sore, wounded, OHG. wunt, Goth. wunds, and perhaps also to Goth. winnan to suffer, E. win. *14 . Cf. Zounds. ]
1. A hurt or injury caused by violence; specifically, a breach of the skin and flesh of an animal, or in the substance of any creature or living thing; a cut, stab, rent, or the like. Chaucer. Showers of blood Rained from the wounds of slaughtered Englishmen.Shak.
2. Fig. : An injury, hurt, damage, detriment, or the like, to feeling, faculty, reputation, etc.
3. (Criminal Law )
Defn: An injury to the person by which the skin is divided, or its continuity broken; a lesion of the body, involving some solution of continuity.
Note: Walker condemns the pronunciation woond as a "capricious novelty. " It is certainly opposed to an important principle of our language, namely, that the Old English long sound written ou, and pronounced like French ou or modern English oo, has regularly changed, when accented, into the diphthongal sound usually written with the same letters ou in modern English, as in ground, hound, round, sound. The use of ou in Old English to represent the sound of modern English oo was borrowed from the French, and replaced the older and Anglo-Saxon spelling with u. It makes no difference whether the word was taken from the French or not, provided it is old enough in English to have suffered this change to what is now the common sound of ou; but words taken from the French at a later time, or influenced by French, may have the French sound. Wound gall (Zoöl.), an elongated swollen or tuberous gall on the branches of the grapevine, caused by a small reddish brown weevil (Ampeloglypter sesostris ) whose larvæ inhabit the galls.
WOUND
Wound, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Wounded; p. pr. & vb. n. Wounding. ] Etym: [AS. wundian. *14 . See Wound, n.]
1. To hurt by violence; to produce a breach, or separation of parts, in, as by a cut, stab, blow, or the like. The archers hit him; and he was sore wounded of the archers. 1 Sam. xxxi. 3.
2. To hurt the feelings of; to pain by disrespect, ingratitude, or the like; to cause injury to. When ye sin so against the brethren, and wound their weak conscience, ye sin against Christ. 1 Cor. viii. 12.
WOUNDABLE
WOUNDABLE Wound "a *ble, a.
Defn: Capable of being wounded; vulnerable. [R.] Fuller.
WOUNDER
WOUNDER Wound "er, n.
Defn: One who, or that which, wounds.
WOUNDILY
WOUNDILY Wound "i *ly, adv.
Defn: In a woundy manner; excessively; woundy. [Obs. ]
WOUNDLESS
WOUNDLESS Wound "less, a.
Defn: Free from wound or hurt; exempt from being wounded; invulnerable. "Knights whose woundless armor rusts." Spenser. [Slander ] may miss our name, And hit the woundless air. Shak.
WOUNDWORT
WOUNDWORT Wound "wort `, n. (Bot. )
Defn: Any one of certain plants whose soft, downy leaves have been used for dressing wounds, as the kidney vetch, and several species of the labiate genus Stachys.
WOUNDY
WOUNDY Wound "y, a.
Defn: Excessive. [Obs. ] Such a world of holidays, that 't a woundy hindrance to a poor man that lives by his labor. L'Estrange.
WOUNDY
WOUNDY Wound "y, adv.
Defn: Excessively; extremely. [Obs. ] A am woundy cold. Ford.
New American Oxford Dictionary
wound
wound 1 |wo͞ond wund | ▶noun an injury to living tissue caused by a cut, blow, or other impact, typically one in which the skin is cut or broken. • an injury to a person's feelings or reputation: the new crisis has opened old wounds. ▶verb [ with obj. ] inflict an injury on (someone ): the sergeant was seriously wounded | (as adj. wounded ) : a wounded soldier. • injure (a person's feelings ): you really wounded his pride when you turned him down | (as adj. wounded ) : her wounded feelings. DERIVATIVES wound ing ly adverb, wound less adjective ORIGIN Old English wund (noun ), wundian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch wond and German Wunde, of unknown ultimate origin.
wound
wound 2 |wound waʊnd | past and past participle of wind 2.
wound
wound 3 |wound waʊnd | alternate past and past participle of wind 1.
Wounded Knee
Wound ed Knee |ˈwo͞ondid ˈwundɪd | a village in southwestern South Dakota, in the Pine Ridge Indian reservation, the site of an 1890 massacre and 1973 demonstrations.
Wounded Knee, Battle of
Wound ed Knee, Bat tle of |ˈwo͞ondid ˈnē ˌbædl əv ˌwundɪd ˈni | the last major confrontation (1890 ) between the US Army and American Indians, at the village of Wounded Knee on a reservation in South Dakota. More than 150 largely unarmed Sioux men, women, and children were massacred.
woundwort
wound wort |ˈwo͞ondˌwərt, -ˌwôrt ˈwundwərt | ▶noun a hairy Eurasian plant resembling a dead-nettle, formerly used in the treatment of wounds. [Genus Stachys, family Labiatae: several species. ]
Oxford Dictionary
wound
wound 1 |wuːnd | ▶noun an injury to living tissue caused by a cut, blow, or other impact, typically one in which the skin is cut or broken: a knife wound | chest wounds | a wound to the thigh. • an injury to a person's feelings or reputation: the new crisis has opened old wounds. ▶verb [ with obj. ] inflict a wound on: the sergeant was seriously wounded | (as adj. wounded ) : a wounded soldier. • injure (a person's feelings ): you really wounded his pride when you turned him down. DERIVATIVES wounding adjective, woundingly adverb, woundless adjective ORIGIN Old English wund (noun ), wundian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch wond and German Wunde, of unknown ultimate origin.
wound
wound 2 |waʊnd | past and past participle of wind 2.
Wounded Knee
Wound ed Knee |ˈwo͞ondid ˈwundɪd | a village in southwestern South Dakota, in the Pine Ridge Indian reservation, the site of an 1890 massacre and 1973 demonstrations.
Wounded Knee, Battle of
Wounded Knee, Battle of the last major confrontation (1890 ) between the US Army and American Indians, at the village of Wounded Knee on a reservation in South Dakota. More than 300 largely unarmed Sioux men, women, and children were massacred. A civil rights protest at the site in 1973 led to clashes with the authorities.
woundwort
wound |wort |ˈwuːndwəːt | ▶noun a hairy Eurasian plant resembling a dead-nettle, formerly used in the treatment of wounds. ●Genus Stachys, family Labiatae: several species.
American Oxford Thesaurus
wound
wound noun 1 a chest wound: injury, lesion, cut, gash, laceration, tear, slash; graze, scratch, abrasion; bruise, contusion; Medicine trauma. 2 the wounds inflicted by the media: insult, blow, slight, offense, affront; hurt, damage, injury, pain, distress, grief, anguish, torment. ▶verb 1 he was critically wounded: injure, hurt, harm; maim, mutilate, disable, incapacitate, cripple; lacerate, cut, graze, gash, stab, slash. 2 her words had wounded him: hurt, scar, damage, injure; insult, slight, offend, affront, distress, disturb, upset, trouble; grieve, sadden, pain, cut, sting, shock, traumatize, torment.
Oxford Thesaurus
wound
wound noun 1 he had a large wound in his chest: injury, lesion, cut, gash, laceration, tear, rent, puncture, slash; sore, graze, scratch, scrape, abrasion; bruise, contusion; Medicine trauma, traumatism. 2 the wounds inflicted by the media will take a long time to heal: insult, blow, slight, offence, affront; hurt, harm, damage, injury, pain, pang, ache, distress, grief, trauma, anguish, torment, torture. ▶verb 1 he was critically wounded in the battle and nearly died | they were wounded by shrapnel: injure, hurt, damage, harm, maim, mutilate, disable, incapacitate, scar; lacerate, cut, cut to ribbons, graze, scratch, gash, tear, tear apart, hack, rip, puncture, pierce, stab, slash; informal zap, plug, blast. ANTONYMS heal. 2 she could see that her words had wounded him: hurt, hurt the feelings of, scar, damage, harm, injure, insult, slight, offend, give offence to, affront, distress, disturb, upset, make miserable, trouble, discomfort; grieve, sadden, mortify, anguish, pain, sting, cut to the quick, shock, traumatize, cause suffering to, torment, torture, crucify, tear to pieces, gnaw at. ANTONYMS boost.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
wound
wound 1 /wuːnd /名詞 複 ~s /-dz /C 1 【体の部位の 】傷 , けが «in, to , on » (!特に刃物や銃などの武器による外傷をさす ) ; (樹木などの )傷 ▸ It's just a flesh wound .それはほんの浅い傷にすぎない ▸ get [suffer, receive ] a bullet wound in the arm 腕に銃による傷を負う ▸ bleeding from a head wound 頭部の傷からの出血 .2 ⦅文 ⦆ «…への » 心の傷 , 精神的痛手 ; 【感情 名声などを 】傷つけること «to » ▸ His words left a deep wound in Meg .彼の言葉がメグの心に深い傷を残した .l ì ck one's w ó unds (敗北 屈辱などの )心の傷をいやす ; じっとして英気を養う .ò pen [re ò pen ] ò ld w ó unds 古傷をえぐる, いやな経験を思い出させる .動詞 他動詞 (!be ~edなど分詞形容詞用法については →wounded ) 1 〈人 武器などが 〉〈人 〉を傷つける .2 〈人 言葉などが 〉〈人 〉 (の心 )を傷つける ; 〈感情など 〉を害する (hurt )▸ Tom's attitude wounded her pride .トムの態度が彼女の誇りを傷つけた .
wound
wound 2 /waʊnd /動詞 wind 2 , wind 3 の過去形 過去分詞 .
wounded
wound ed /wúːndɪd /形容詞 1 傷ついた ; 〖be ~〗〈人が 〉【体の部位を 戦いなどで 】負傷している «in » ▸ Four people were seriously [badly ] wounded in the explosion .その爆発で4人が重傷を負った ▸ a mortally wounded police officer 瀕死の重傷を負った警察官 .2 〖通例be ~〗〈人が 〉心が傷つけられた ▸ I felt so wounded .私はとても傷ついた 3 〖the ~; 名詞的に; 集合的に 〗負傷した人々 (!複数扱い ) .
wound-up
wound-up /wàʊndʌ́p /形容詞 興奮 [緊張 ]した .