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English-Thai Dictionary

berth

N ที่นอน ใน เรือ หรือ รถไฟ  ที่นอน  bunk bed ti-non-nai-ruea-rue-rod-fai

 

bertha

N ปก เสื้อ ของ สตรี 

 

berthage

N ท่าเรือ 

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

BERT

[Eng. bright. ] [See Bright. ]

 

BERTH

n.[from the root of bear. ] 1. A station in which a ship rides at anchor, comprehending the space in which she ranges. In more familiar usage, the word signifies any situation or place, where a vessel lies or can lie, whether at anchor or at a wharf.
2. A room or apartment in a ship, where a number of officers or men mess and reside.
3. The box or place for sleeping at the sides of a cabin; the place for a hammoc, or a repository for chests, etc.
To berth, in seamen's language, is to allot to each man a place for his hammoc.

 

BERTRAM

n.[L. pyrethrum, said to be from fire, from its acrid quality. ] Bastard pellitory, a plant.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

BERTH

Berth, n. Etym: [From the root of bear to produce, like birth nativity. See Birth. ] [Also written birth. ]

 

1. (Naut. ) (a ) Convenient sea room. (b ) A room in which a number of the officers or ship's company mess and reside. (c ) The place where a ship lies when she is at anchor, or at a wharf.

 

2. An allotted place; an appointment; situation or employment. "He has a good berth. " Totten.

 

3. A place in a ship to sleep in; a long box or shelf on the side of a cabin or stateroom, or of a railway car, for sleeping in. Berth deck, the deck next below the lower gun deck. Ham. Nav. Encyc. -- To give (the land or any object ) a wide berth, to keep at a distance from it.

 

BERTH

Berth, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Berthed; p. pr. & vb. n. Berthing. ]

 

1. To give an anchorage to, or a place to lie at; to place in a berth; as, she was berthed stem to stern with the Adelaide.

 

2. To allot or furnish berths to, on shipboard; as, to berth a ship's company. Totten.

 

BERTHA

Ber "tha, n. Etym: [F. berthe, fr. Berthe, a woman's name. ]

 

Defn: A kind of collar or cape worn by ladies.

 

BERTHAGE

BERTHAGE Berth "age, n.

 

Defn: A place for mooring vessels in a dock or harbor.

 

BERTHIERITE

Ber "thi *er *ite, n. Etym: [From Berthier, a French naturalist. ] (Min. )

 

Defn: A double sulphide of antimony and iron, of a dark steel-gray color.

 

BERTHING

BERTHING Berth "ing, n. (Naut. )

 

Defn: The planking outside of a vessel, above the sheer strake. Smyth.

 

BERTILLON SYSTEM

BERTILLON SYSTEM Ber `til `lon " sys "tem. [After Alphonse Bertillon, French anthropologist. ]

 

Defn: A system for the identification of persons by a physical description based upon anthropometric measurements, notes of markings, deformities, color, impression of thumb lines, etc.

 

BERTRAM

Ber "tram, n. Etym: [Corrupted fr. L. pyrethrum, Gr. a hot spicy plant, fr. fire. ] (Bot. )

 

Defn: Pellitory of Spain (Anacyclus pyrethrum ).

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

berth

berth |bərTH bərθ | noun 1 a ship's allotted place at a wharf or dock. 2 a fixed bed or bunk on a ship, train, or other means of transport. 3 informal (often in a sports context ) a situation or position in an organization or event: today's victory clinched a berth for the Orioles in the playoffs. verb [ with obj. ] 1 moor (a ship ) in its allotted place: these modern ships can almost berth themselves. [ no obj. ] (of a ship ) dock: the Dutch freighter berthed at the Brooklyn docks. 2 (of a passenger ship ) provide a sleeping place for (someone ). PHRASES give a wide berth steer (a ship ) well clear of something while passing it: ships are advised to give a wide berth to the Outer Banks. stay away from someone or something: I'd sworn to give women a wide berth. ORIGIN early 17th cent. (in the sense adequate sea room ): probably from a nautical use of bear 1 + -th 2 .

 

bertha

ber tha |ˈbərTHə ˈbərθə | noun chiefly historical a deep collar, typically made of lace, attached to the top of a dress that has a low neckline. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from the given name Bertha.

 

berthing

berth ing |ˈbərTHiNG ˈbərθɪŋ | noun 1 the action of mooring a ship: as soon as the berthing was complete, they went ashore. 2 mooring position; accommodation in berths: there were more than 12 miles of berthing.

 

Bertillon, Alphonse

Ber til lon, Alphonse |ˈbərtlˌän, ˌbertēˈyôN ˈbɛrdəlɑn | (1853 –1914 ), French criminologist. He devised a system of body measurements (the Bertillon system ) for the identification of criminals, which was widely used until superseded by the technique of fingerprinting at the beginning of the 20th century.

 

Bertolucci, Bernardo

Ber to luc ci, Bernardo |ˌbertlˈo͞oCHē ˌbərdəˈlutʃi | (1940 –), Italian movie director. Notable works: The Spider's Stratagem (1970 ), Last Tango in Paris (1972 ), The Last Emperor (1988 ), and The Dreamers (2003 ).

 

Oxford Dictionary

berth

berth |bəːθ | noun 1 a ship's allotted place at a wharf or dock. 2 a fixed bunk on a ship, train, or other means of transport. 3 informal (often in a sporting context ) a position in an organization or event: he looked at home in an unfamiliar right-back berth. verb [ with obj. ] 1 moor (a ship ) in its allotted place. [ no obj. ] (of a ship ) dock. 2 (of a passenger ship ) provide a sleeping place for (someone ). PHRASES give someone /thing a wide berth steer a ship well clear of something while passing it. stay away from someone or something. ORIGIN early 17th cent. (in the sense adequate sea room ): probably from a nautical use of bear 1 + -th 2 .

 

bertha

ber ¦tha |ˈbəːθə | noun chiefly historical a deep collar, typically made of lace, attached to the top of a dress that has a low neckline. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from the given name Bertha.

 

berthing

berth |ing |bɜːθɪŋ | noun [ mass noun ] accommodation for ships in berths: there were more than 12 miles of berthing.

 

Bertillon, Alphonse

Bertillon, Alphonse |ˈbɛːtiːjɒ̃, French bɛʀtijɔ̃ | (1853 –1914 ), French criminologist. He devised a system of body measurements for the identification of criminals, which was widely used until superseded by fingerprinting at the beginning of the 20th century.

 

Bertolucci, Bernardo

Bertolucci, Bernardo |ˌbɛːtəˈluːtʃi, Italian bertəɔˈluttʃi | (b.1940 ), Italian film director. Notable works: The Spider's Stratagem (1970 ), Last Tango in Paris (1972 ), and The Last Emperor (1988 ).

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

berth

berth noun 1 a four-berth cabin: bunk, bed, cot, couch, hammock. 2 the vessel left its berth: mooring, dock, slip, anchorage; wharf, pier, jetty, quay. verb they berthed at a jetty in Ram's Head Bay: dock, moor, land, tie up, make fast. PHRASES give someone /something a wide berth they learned to give those gang members a wide berth: avoid, shun, keep away from, stay away from, steer clear of, keep at arm's length, have nothing to do with; dodge, sidestep, circumvent, skirt around.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

berth

berth noun 1 she suffers badly from seasickness and keeps to her berth: bunk, bed, bunk bed, cot, couch, hammock; sleeping quarters, sleeping accommodation, cabin, compartment, billet; informal sack; Brit. informal pit; Scottish informal kip. 2 the vessel left its berth: docking site, anchorage, mooring. PHRASES give someone /something a wide berth avoid, shun, keep away from, stay away from, steer clear of, keep at arm's length, fight shy of, have nothing to do with, have no truck with, have no dealings with, have no contact with, give something /someone a miss; eschew, dodge, sidestep, circumvent, skirt round. verb 1 the ship berthed at Wallasey docks: dock, moor, land, tie up, make fast. 2 the boats berthed two or three: accommodate, sleep, provide beds for, put up, house, shelter, lodge.

 

Duden Dictionary

Bert

Bert Eigenname |B e rt |männlicher Vorname

 

Berta

Ber ta , Ber tha Eigenname Bertha |B e rta B e rtha |weiblicher Vorname

 

Berthe

Ber the Substantiv, feminin , die |B e rthe |die Berthe; Genitiv: der Berthe, Plural: die Berthen französisch (in der Damenmode um 1850 übliche ) kragenartige Einfassung des Halsausschnittes

 

Berthilde

Bert hil de Eigenname |Berth i lde |weiblicher Vorname

 

Berthold

Bert hold Eigenname Bertold |B e rthold |männlicher Vorname

 

Berti

Ber ti Eigenname |B e rti |weiblicher oder männlicher Vorname

 

Bertillonage

Ber til lo na ge Substantiv, feminin , die |bɛrtijoˈnaːʒə |die Bertillonage; Genitiv: der Bertillonage französisch ; vom Namen des französischen Anthropologen A. Bertillon, † 1914 überholtes Verfahren zur Wiedererkennung rückfälliger Verbrecher durch Registrierung unveränderlicher Körpermerkmale

 

Bertina

Ber ti na Eigenname Bertine |Bert i na |weiblicher Vorname

 

Bertine

Ber ti ne Eigenname Bertina |Bert i ne |weiblicher Vorname

 

Bertold

Ber told Eigenname Berthold |B e rtold |männlicher Vorname

 

Bertram

Bert ram Eigenname |B e rtram |männlicher Vorname

 

Bertrand

Bert rand Eigenname |B e rtrand |männlicher Vorname

 

Spanish Dictionary

bertsolari

bertsolari (también versolari )nombre masculino En el País Vasco, España, persona que compone versos de forma improvisada .Se pronuncia aproximadamente ‘bersolari ’.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

berth

berth /bəː r θ /名詞 C 1 (船 列車などの )寝台 (席 ).2 〘海 〙停泊位置, 投錨 びよう ; 停泊余地, 操船余地 .3 ⦅くだけて ⦆職, 勤め口 ; (しばしばスポーツで )地位 .4 適当な場所 .g ve A a w de b rth =g ve a w de b rth to A A 〈人 物 〉に近寄らない [を避ける ]; (船などが )A 〈物 〉に対して十分間隔をあける .動詞 他動詞 1 〈船 〉を停泊位置に付ける .2 乗客 〉に寝台を割り当てる ; …に寝床を与える .自動詞 停泊する, 投錨地に着く .