English-Thai Dictionary
abut
VI ชิด ติดกัน จด adjoin border on chid
abut
VT ชิด ติดกัน กับ จด chid
abut against
PHRV ติดกับ ชิด กับ ชิด จรด จด tid kab
abut on
PHRV ติดกับ ชิด กับ ชิด จรด จด border on verge on tid kab
abutilon
N ปอ เขียว por-keaw
abutment
N การ ติดกัน kan-tid-kan
abutment
N เครื่องรับ น้ำหนัก เครื่อง ค้ำ เครื่อง ยัน khrueang-rap-nam-nak
abuttal
N เขตแดน kaet-dan
abutter
N ผู้ มี ที่ดิน ติดกัน poo-mee-tee-din-tid-kan
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
ABUT
v.i.To border upon; to be contiguous to; to meet; in strictness, to adjoin to at the end; but this distinction has not always been observed. The word is chiefly used in describing the bounds or situation of land, and in popular language, is contracted into but, as butted and bounded.
ABUTMENT
n. 1. The head or end; that which unites one end of a thing to another; chiefly used to denote the solid pier or mound of earth, stone or timber, which is erected on the bank of a river to support the end of a bridge and connect it with the land.
2. That which abuts or borders on another.
ABUTTAL
n.The butting or boundary of land at the end; a head-land.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
ABUT
A *but ", v. i. [imp. & p. p. Abutted; p. pr. & vb. n. Abutting.] Etym: [OF. abouter, aboter; cf. F. aboutir, and also abuter; a (L. ad ) + OF. boter, buter, to push: cf. F. bout end, and but end, purpose. ]
Defn: To project; to terminate or border; to be contiguous; to meet; -- with on, upon, or against; as, his land abuts on the road.
ABUTILON
A *bu "ti *lon, n. Etym: [Ar. aubutilun.] (Bot. )
Defn: A genus of malvaceous plants of many species, found in the torrid and temperate zones of both continents; -- called also Indian mallow.
ABUTMENT
ABUTMENT A *but "ment, n.
1. State of abutting.
2. That on or against which a body abuts or presses; as (a ) (Arch. ) The solid part of a pier or wall, etc. , which receives the thrust or lateral pressure of an arch, vault, or strut. Gwilt. (b ) (mech. ) A fixed point or surface from which resistance or reaction is obtained, as the cylinder head of a steam engine, the fulcrum of a lever, etc. (c ) In breech-loading firearms, the block behind the barrel which receives the pressure due to recoil.
ABUTTAL
ABUTTAL A *but "tal, n.
Defn: The butting or boundary of land, particularly at the end; a headland. Spelman.
ABUTTER
ABUTTER A *but "ter, n.
Defn: One who, or that which, abuts. Specifically, the owner of a contiguous estate; as, the abutters on a street or a river.
New American Oxford Dictionary
abut
a but |əˈbət əˈbət | ▶verb ( abuts, abutting, abutted ) [ with obj. ] (of an area of land or a building ) be next to or have a common boundary with: gardens abutting Prescott Street | [ no obj. ] : a park abutting on an area of wasteland. • touch or lean upon: masonry may crumble where a roof abuts it. ORIGIN late Middle English: the sense ‘have a common boundary ’ from Anglo-Latin abuttare, from a- (from Latin ad ‘to, at ’) + Old French but ‘end ’; the sense ‘lean upon ’ (late 16th cent. ) from Old French abouter, from a- (from Latin ad ‘to, at ’) + bouter ‘strike, butt, ’ of Germanic origin.
abutilon
a bu ti lon |əˈbyo͞otlˌän əˈbjudlɑn | ▶noun a herbaceous plant or shrub of the mallow family, native to warm climates and typically bearing showy yellow, red, or mauve flowers. [Genus Abutilon, family Malvaceae. ] ORIGIN modern Latin, from Arabic ūbūṭīlūn ‘Indian mallow. ’
abutment
a but ment |əˈbətmənt əˈbətmənt | ▶noun a structure built to support the lateral pressure of an arch or span, e.g., at the ends of a bridge. • the process of supporting something with such a structure. • a point at which something abuts against something else.
abutter
a but ter |əˈbətər əˈbədər | ▶noun the owner of property that abuts (touches on ) another.
Oxford Dictionary
abut
abut |əˈbʌt | ▶verb ( abuts, abutting, abutted ) [ with obj. ] (of a building or an area of land ) be next to or have a common boundary with: gardens abutting Great Prescott Street | [ no obj. ] : a park abutting on an area of waste land. • touch or lean on: masonry may crumble where a roof abuts it. ORIGIN late Middle English: the sense ‘have a common boundary ’ from Anglo-Latin abuttare, from a- (from Latin ad ‘to, at ’) + Old French but ‘end ’; the sense ‘lean upon ’ (late 16th cent. ) from Old French abouter, from a- (from Latin ad ‘to, at ’) + bouter ‘strike, butt ’, of Germanic origin.
abutilon
abutilon |əˈbjuːtɪlɒn | ▶noun a herbaceous plant or shrub of warm climates, typically bearing showy yellow, red, or mauve flowers and sometimes used for fibre. ●Genus Abutilon, family Malvaceae. ORIGIN modern Latin, from Arabic ūbūṭīlūn ‘Indian mallow ’.
abutment
abut |ment |əˈbʌtm (ə )nt | ▶noun a structure built to support the lateral pressure of an arch or span, e.g. at the ends of a bridge. • [ mass noun ] the process of supporting something with an abutment. • a point at which something abuts against something else.
abutter
abut |ter |əˈbʌtə | ▶noun chiefly US the owner of an adjoining property.
American Oxford Thesaurus
abut
abut verb two rows of forsythia abut one another where the driveway meets the sidewalk: adjoin, be adjacent to, butt against, border, neighbor, join, touch, meet, reach, be contiguous with.
Oxford Thesaurus
abut
abut verb one of my pastures abuts your garden: adjoin, be adjacent to, border, butt up against /to, be next to, neighbour, verge on, join, touch, meet, reach, impinge on, be contiguous with.
Duden Dictionary
Abutilon
Abu ti lon Substantiv, Neutrum , das |Ab u tilon |das Abutilon; Genitiv: des Abutilons, Plural: die Abutilons arabisch-neulateinisch Malvengewächs z. B. Zimmerahorn
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
abut
a but /əbʌ́t /動詞 ~s, ~ted, ~ting ⦅かたく ⦆他動詞 〈土地 建物などが 〉…に隣接する (border ); 寄りかかっている ▸ My house abuts the city hall .我が家は市役所に隣接している 自動詞 «…に » 接する «on , upon » .
abutment
a b ú t ment 名詞 〘建 〙1 C 迫 (せり )台, 迫持受 〘アーチやボールトの押圧力を支える台石 〙, 橋台, (ダムの )側壁, 合端 (あいば ) 〘石積みの石材と石材との接合面 〙.2 U 隣接 .