English-Thai Dictionary
bat
N กระบอง club kra-bong
bat
N ค้างคาว khang-khao
bat
N แส้ ไว้ ใช้ หวด หรือ ตี ม้า เวลา แข่ง saee-wai-chai-huad-rue-te-ma-we-la-kaeng
bat
N ไม้ ตี ลูก เบสบอล หรือ ลูก คริก เก็ต ไม้ ตี ลูกบอล stick club racket mai-ti-luk-bes-bon-rue-luk-karik-ked
bat
VT กระพริบตา ขยิบตา wink ka-phrib-tar
bat
VT ตี ด้วย ไม้ hit rap stike te-duai-mai
bat
VT ได้เปรียบ จาก การ ตี ลูก dai-priab-jak-kan-te-luk
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
BAT
n. 1. A heavy stick or club; a piece of wood with one end thicker or broader than the other.
2. Bat or bate, a small copper coin of Germany, with a small mixture of silver, worth four crutzers. Also a coin of Switzerland, worth five livres.
3. A term given by miners to shale or bituminous shale.
BAT
v.i.To manage a bat, or play with one.
BAT
n.[I have not found this word in any European language, except in English. ] A race of quadrupeds, technically called Vespertilio, of the order primates, in Linne's system. The fore feet have the toes connected by a membrane, expanded into a kind of wings, by means of which the animals fly. The species are numerous. Of these, the vampire or Ternate bat inhabits Africa and the Oriental Isles. These animals fly in flocks from isle to isle, obscuring the sun by their numbers. Their wings when extended measure five or six feet. They live on fruits; but are said sometimes to draw blood from persons when asleep. The bats of the northern latitudes are small; they are viviparous and suckle their young. Their skin resembles that of a mouse. They enter houses in pleasant summer evenings, feed upon moths, flies, flesh, and oily substances, and are torpid during the winter.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
BAT
Bat, n. Etym: [OE. batte, botte, AS. batt; perhaps fr. the Celtic; cf. Ir. bat, bata, stick, staff; but cf. also F. batte a beater (thing ), wooden sword, battre to beat. ]
1. A large stick; a club; specifically, a piece of wood with one end thicker or broader than the other, used in playing baseball, cricket, etc.
2. (Mining )
Defn: Shale or bituminous shale. Kirwan.
3. A sheet of cotton used for filling quilts or comfortables; batting.
4. A part of a brick with one whole end. Bat bolt (Machinery ), a bolt barbed or jagged at its butt or tang to make it hold the more firmly. Knight.
BAT
Bat, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Batted (p. pr. & vb. n. Batting. ]
Defn: To strike or hit with a bat or a pole; to cudgel; to beat. Holland.
BAT
BAT Bat, v. i.
Defn: To use a bat, as in a game of baseball.
BAT
Bat, n. Etym: [Corrupt. from OE. back, backe, balke; cf. Dan. aften- bakke ] (aften evening ), Sw. natt-backa ] (natt night ), Icel. le (le leather ), Icel. blaka to flutter. ] (Zoöl.)
Defn: One of the Cheiroptera, an order of flying mammals, in which the wings are formed by a membrane stretched between the elongated fingers, legs, and tail. The common bats are small and insectivorous. See Cheiroptera and Vampire. Bat tick (Zoöl.), a wingless, dipterous insect of the genus Nycteribia, parasitic on bats.
New American Oxford Dictionary
bat
bat 1 |bat bæt | ▶noun an implement with a handle and a solid surface, usually of wood, used for hitting the ball in games such as baseball, cricket, and table tennis. • the person batting, esp. in cricket: the team's opening bat. • each of a pair of objects resembling table tennis bats, used by a person on the ground to guide a taxiing aircraft. ▶verb ( bats, batting , batted ) 1 [ no obj. ] (of a team or a player in sports such as baseball ) take in turns the role of hitting rather than fielding: Ruth came to bat in the fifth inning. 2 [ with obj. ] hit at (someone or something ) with the palm of one's hand: he batted the flies away. PHRASES bat a thousand informal be very successful; achieve perfection: with the tortellini, I batted a thousand —both kids had seconds. go to bat for informal defend the interests of; support: his willingness to go to bat for his employees. right off the bat at the very beginning. PHRASAL VERBS bat around (or about ) informal travel widely, frequently, or casually: I'm always batting around between England and America. bat something around (or about ) informal discuss an idea or proposal casually or idly. ORIGIN late Old English batt ‘club, stick, staff, ’ perhaps partly from Old French batte, from battre ‘to strike. ’
bat
bat 2 |bæt bat | ▶noun 1 a mainly nocturnal mammal capable of sustained flight, with membranous wings that extend between the fingers and connecting the forelimbs to the body and the hindlimbs to the tail. [Order Chiroptera: many families and numerous species. The large tropical fruit bats (suborder Megachiroptera ) generally have good eyesight and feed mainly on fruit; the numerous smaller bats (suborder Microchiroptera ) are mouselike in appearance, mainly insectivorous, and use ultrasonic echolocation. ] 2 (usu. old bat ) a woman regarded as unattractive or unpleasant: some deranged old bat. PHRASES have bats in the (or one's ) belfry informal be eccentric or crazy. like a bat out of hell informal very fast and wildly. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: alteration, perhaps by association with medieval Latin batta, blacta, of Middle English bakke, of Scandinavian origin.
bat
bat 3 |bæt bat | ▶verb ( bats, batting , batted ) [ with obj. ] flutter one's eyelashes, typically in a flirtatious manner: she batted her long dark eyelashes at him. PHRASES not bat (or without batting ) an eyelid (or eye or eyelash ) informal show (or showing ) no reaction: she paid the bill without batting an eyelid. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from dialect bat ‘to wink, blink, ’ variant of obsolete bate ‘to flutter. ’
Oxford Dictionary
bat
bat 1 |bat | ▶noun an implement with a handle and a solid surface, typically of wood, used for hitting the ball in games such as cricket, baseball, and table tennis. • a turn at playing with a bat. • a person batting, especially in cricket; a batsman. • each of a pair of objects resembling table tennis bats, used by a person on the ground to guide a taxiing aircraft. • a slab on which pottery is formed, dried, or fired. ▶verb ( bats, batting, batted ) [ no obj. ] 1 (of a sports team or player ) take the role of hitting rather than throwing the ball. • (bat for (or go to bat for )) informal, chiefly N. Amer. defend the interests of; support: she turned out to have the law batting for her. 2 [ with obj. and adverbial of direction ] hit at (someone or something ) with the flat of one's hand: he batted the flies away. PHRASES bat a thousand US. informal be very successful; achieve perfection: with tortellini in brodo, I batted a thousand —both kids had seconds. off one's own bat Brit. at one's own instigation; spontaneously. right off the bat N. Amer. at the very beginning; straight away. PHRASAL VERBS bat around (or about ) informal, chiefly N. Amer. travel widely, frequently, or casually: I'm always batting around between England and America. bat something around (or about ) informal discuss an idea or proposal casually or idly: we bat around a wide variety of issues. ORIGIN late Old English batt ‘club, stick, staff ’, perhaps partly from Old French batte, from battre ‘to strike ’.
bat
bat 2 |bat | ▶noun 1 a mainly nocturnal mammal capable of sustained flight, with membranous wings that extend between the fingers and limbs. ●Order Chiroptera: many families and numerous species. The large tropical fruit bats (suborder Megachiroptera ) generally have good eyesight and feed mainly on fruit; the numerous smaller bats (suborder Microchiroptera ) are mouse-like in appearance, mainly insectivorous, and use ultrasonic echolocation. 2 (usu. old bat ) informal a woman regarded as unattractive or unpleasant. [from bat, a slang term for ‘prostitute ’, or from battleaxe . ] PHRASES have bats in the (or one's ) belfry informal be eccentric or mad. like a bat out of hell informal very fast and wildly. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: alteration, perhaps by association with medieval Latin batta, blacta, of Middle English bakke, of Scandinavian origin.
bat
bat 3 |bat | ▶verb ( bats, batting, batted ) [ with obj. ] flutter (one's eyelashes ), typically in a flirtatious manner: she batted her long dark eyelashes at him. PHRASES not bat (or without batting ) an eyelid (or N. Amer. eye or eyelash ) informal show (or showing ) no surprise or concern: she paid the bill without batting an eyelid. ORIGIN late 19th cent. (originally US ): from dialect and US bat ‘to wink, blink ’, variant of obsolete bate ‘to flutter ’.
Duden Dictionary
bat
bat bitten |b a t |
BAT
BAT Abkürzung Abkürzung für: Bundesangestelltentarif
French Dictionary
bât
bât n. m. nom masculin Pièce placée sur le dos des bêtes de somme pour le transport des fardeaux. LOCUTION C ’est là que le bât blesse. C ’est là le point sensible. Note Orthographique b ât.
Spanish Dictionary
bat
bat nombre masculino Car, Méx Bate .
Sanseido Dictionary
bat
bat 〖 batch 〗拡張子の一 。バッチ -ファイルを表す 。
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
bat
bat 1 /bæt /〖語源は 「(身を守る )つえ 」〗名詞 複 ~s /-ts /C 1 (野球 クリケットなどの )バット ;⦅ 英 ⦆ (卓球などの )ラケット (⦅米 ⦆paddle ).2 ⦅くだけて ⦆たたくこと, 打撃 ; 打者 .3 こん棒; (騎手の )短いむち .at (the ) b á t 〘野球 〙打席について ; 攻撃側になって .off one's ò wn b á t ⦅英 くだけて ⦆自分の責任 [力 ]で, 自分で (by oneself ).r ì ght off the b á t ⦅米 くだけて ⦆直ちに, すぐさま .動詞 ~s /-ts /; ~ted /-ɪd /; ~ting 他動詞 1 〈ボール 〉をバットで打つ ▸ bat a home run ホームランを打つ 2 〘野球 〙…の打率を持つ ▸ Bob batted. 314 last year .ボブは昨年3割1分4厘の打率を記録した (!.314はpoint three one fourと読む ) .自動詞 打順がまわってくる, 打者になる ; バットでボールを打つ .b à t A ar ó und [ar ó und A ]⦅英 くだけて ⦆A 〈計画など 〉をあれこれ議論する .b à t A í n [í n A ]〘野球 〙打ってA 〈点 〉を入れる ▸ The Mets batted in 3 runs .メッツは3得点をあげた (→RBI ).g ò (in ) to b á t for A ⦅米 くだけて ⦆A 〈人 〉を助ける, 支持する (stand up for A ).
bat
bat 2 名詞 C 1 〘動 〙コウモリ .2 ⦅くだけて 非難して ⦆〖通例old ~〗いやな女, ばばあ .(as ) blind as a b á t ⦅おどけて ⦆目が見えない .h à ve b á ts in the [one's ] b é lfry ⦅やや古 ⦆頭がおかしい, 風変わりである .like a b à t out of h é ll ⦅くだけて ⦆大変な速さで .
bat
bat 3 動詞 ~s ; ~ted ; ~ting 他動詞 〈特に女性が 〉 (自分を魅力的に見せようとして )〈まぶた まつ毛 〉をまたたかせる (wink ).