English-Thai Dictionary
bore
VT ทะลุ เจาะ ไช ด้น ไชชอน ream tha-lu
bore
VT ระอา เบื่อหน่าย ra-ar
bore to death
PHRV เบื่อ มาก bore to sleep buea mak
bore to sleep
PHRV เบื่อ มาก bore to death buea mak
bore to tears
PHRV เบื่อ มาก bore to death buea mak
boreal
A ทางเหนือ
boreas
N ชื่อ เทพเจ้า ของ กรีก เกี่ยวกับ ลม ทางเหนือ
bored
ADJ ที่ น่าเบื่อ ti-na-buea
boredom
N ความเหนื่อยหน่าย ความเบื่อหน่าย ระอา ennui excitement khwam-neai-nai
borehole
N หลุม ลึก ที่ เจาะ ลง ดิน เพื่อ หา น้ำ หรือ น้ำมัน lum-luek-ti-jor-long-din-puea-ha-nam-rue-nam-man
borer
N เครื่อง เจาะ รู
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
BORE
v.t.[L. foro and perforo, to bore, to perforate; Gr. to pierce or transfix; also, to pass over, in which sense it coincides with ferry; L. veru, from thrusting or piercing, coincide in elements with this root. ] 1. To perforate or penetrate a solid body and make a round hole by turning an auger, gimlet, or other instrument. Hence, to make hollow; ; to form a round hole; as, to bore a cannon.
2. To eat out or make a hollow by gnawing or corroding, as a worm.
3. To penetrate or break through by turning or labor; as, to bore through a crowd.
BORE
v.i.To be pierced or penetrated by an instrument that turns; as, this timber does not bore well or is hard to bore. 1. To pierce or enter by boring; as, an auger bores well.
2. To push forward toward a certain point.
Boring to the west.
3. With horsemen, a horse bores, when he carries his nose to the ground.
4. In a transitive or intransitive sense, to pierce the earth with scooping irons, which, when drawn out, bring with them samples of the different stratums, through which they pass. This is a method of discovering veins of ore and coal without opening a mine.
BORE
n.The hole made by boring. Hence, the cavity or hollow of a gun, cannon, pistol or other fire-arm; the caliber; whether formed by boring or not. 1. Any instrument for making holes by boring or turning, as an auger, gimlet or wimble.
BORE
n.A tide, swelling above another tide. A sudden influx of the tide into a river or narrow strait.
BORE
pret.of bear. [See Bear. ]
BORE-COLE
n.A species of Brassica or cabbage.
BOREAL
a.[L. borealis. See Boreas. ] Northern; pertaining to the north or the north wind.
BOREAS
n.[L. boreas; Gr. the north wind. ] The northern wind; a cold northerly wind.
BORED
pp. Perforated by an auger or other turning instrument; made hollow.
BOREE
n.A certain dance, or movement in common time, of four crotchets in a bar; always beginning in the last quaver or last crotchet of the measure.
BORER
n.One who bores; also an instrument to make holes with by turning. 1. Terebella, the piercer, a genus of sea worms, that pierce wood.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
BORE
Bore, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Bored; p. pr. & vb. n. Boring. ] Etym: [OE. borien, AS. borian; akin to Icel. bora, Dan. bore, D. boren, OHG. por, G. bohren, L. forare, Gr. to plow, Zend bar. sq. root91.]
1. To perforate or penetrate, as a solid body, by turning an auger, gimlet, drill, or other instrument; to make a round hole in or through; to pierce; as, to bore a plank. I'll believe as soon this whole earth may be bored. Shak.
2. To form or enlarge by means of a boring instrument or apparatus; as, to bore a steam cylinder or a gun barrel; to bore a hole. Short but very powerful jaws, by means whereof the insect can bore, as with a centerbit, a cylindrical passage through the most solid wood. T. W. Harris.
3. To make (a passage ) by laborious effort, as in boring; as, to bore one's way through a crowd; to force a narrow and difficult passage through. "What bustling crowds I bored. " Gay.
4. To weary by tedious iteration or by dullness; to tire; to trouble; to vex; to annoy; to pester. He bores me with some trick. Shak. Used to come and bore me at rare intervals. Carlyle.
5. To befool; to trick. [Obs. ] I am abused, betrayed; I am laughed at, scorned, Baffled and bored, it seems. Beau. & Fl.
BORE
BORE Bore, v. i.
1. To make a hole or perforation with, or as with, a boring instrument; to cut a circular hole by the rotary motion of a tool; as, to bore for water or oil (i. e., to sink a well by boring for water or oil ); to bore with a gimlet; to bore into a tree (as insects ).
2. To be pierced or penetrated by an instrument that cuts as it turns; as, this timber does not bore well, or is hard to bore.
3. To push forward in a certain direction with laborious effort. They take their flight. .. boring to the west. Dryden.
4. (Ma
Defn: To shoot out the nose or toss it in the air; Crabb.
BORE
BORE Bore, n.
1. A hole made by boring; a perforation.
2. The internal cylindrical cavity of a gun, cannon, pistol, or other firearm, or of a pipe or tube. The bores of wind instruments. Bacon. Love's counselor should fill the bores of hearing. Shak.
3. The size of a hole; the interior diameter of a tube or gun barrel; the caliber.
4. A tool for making a hole by boring, as an auger.
5. Caliber; importance. [Obs. ] Yet are they much too light for the bore of the matter. Shak.
6. A person or thing that wearies by prolixity or dullness; a tiresome person or affair; any person or thing which causes ennui. It is as great a bore as to hear a poet read his own verses. Hawthorne.
BORE
Bore, n. Etym: [Icel. bara wave: cf. G. empor upwards, OHG. bor height, burren to lift, perh. allied to AS. beran, E. 1st bear. sq. root92.] (Physical Geog.) (a ) A tidal flood which regularly or occasionally rushes into certain rivers of peculiar configuration or location, in one or more waves which present a very abrupt front of considerable height, dangerous to shipping, as at the mouth of the Amazon, in South America, the Hoogly and Indus, in India, and the Tsien-tang, in China. (b ) Less properly, a very high and rapid tidal flow, when not so abrupt, such as occurs at the Bay of Fundy and in the British Channel.
BORE
BORE Bore,
Defn: imp. of 1st & 2d Bear.
BOREAL
Bo "re *al, a. Etym: [L. borealis: cf. F. boréal. See Boreas. ]
Defn: Northern; pertaining to the north, or to the north wind; as, a boreal bird; a boreal blast. So from their own clear north in radiant streams, Bright over Europe bursts the boreal morn. Thomson.
BOREAS
Bo "re *as, n. Etym: [L. boreas, Gr. .]
Defn: The north wind; -- usually a personification.
BORECOLE
Bore "cole `, n. Etym: [Cf. D. boerenkool (lit. ) husbandman's cabbage. ]
Defn: A brassicaceous plant of many varieties, cultivated for its leaves, which are not formed into a compact head like the cabbage, but are loose, and are generally curled or wrinkled; kale.
BOREDOM
BOREDOM Bore "dom, n.
1. The state of being bored, or pestered; a state of ennui. Dickens.
2. The realm of bores; bores, collectively.
BOREE
BOREE Bo *ree ", n.
Defn: Same as BourrÉ \'82. [Obs. ] Swift.
BOREL
BOREL Bor "el, n.
Defn: See Borrel.
BORELE
BORELE Bor "e *le, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The smaller two-horned rhinoceros of South Africa (Atelodus bicornis ).
BORER
BORER Bor "er, n.
1. One that bores; an instrument for boring.
2. (Zoöl.) (a ) A marine, bivalve mollusk, of the genus Teredo and allies, which burrows in wood. See Teredo. (b ) Any bivalve mollusk (Saxicava, Lithodomus, etc. ) which bores into limestone and similar substances. (c ) One of the larvæ of many species of insects, which penetrate trees, as the apple, peach, pine, etc. See Apple borer, under Apple. (d ) The hagfish (Myxine ).
New American Oxford Dictionary
bore
bore 1 |bôr bɔ (ə )r | ▶verb 1 [ with obj. ] make (a hole ) in something, esp. with a revolving tool: they bored holes in the sides | [ no obj. ] : the drill can bore through rock | figurative : his eyes bored into hers. • [ with obj. ] hollow out (a tube or tunnel ): try to bore the tunnel at the correct angle. • hollow out (a gun barrel ). 2 [ no obj. ] make one's way through (a crowd ). ▶noun 1 the hollow part inside a gun barrel or other tube. • [ often in combination ] the diameter of this; the caliber: a small-bore rifle. • [ in combination ] a gun of a specified bore: he shot a guard in the leg with a twelve-bore. 2 short for borehole. ORIGIN Old English borian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to German bohren .
bore
bore 2 |bɔ (ə )r bôr | ▶noun a person whose talk or behavior is dull and uninteresting: a crashing bore who tells the same old jokes over and over. • [ in sing. ] a tedious situation or thing: it's such a bore cooking when one's alone. ▶verb [ with obj. ] make (someone ) feel weary and uninterested by tedious talk or dullness: rather than bore you with all the details, I'll hit some of the bright spots. PHRASES bore someone to death (or to tears ) weary (a person ) in the extreme. ORIGIN mid 18th cent. (as a verb ): of unknown origin.
bore
bore 3 |bɔ (ə )r bôr | ▶noun a steep-fronted wave caused by the meeting of two tides or by the constriction of a tide rushing up a narrow estuary. ORIGIN early 17th cent.: perhaps from Old Norse bára ‘wave ’; the term was used in the general sense ‘billow, wave ’ in Middle English.
bore
bore 4 |bɔ (ə )r bôr | past of bear 1.
boreal
bo re al |ˈbôrēəl ˈbɔriəl | ▶adjective of the North or northern regions. • Ecology relating to or characteristic of the climatic zone south of the Arctic, esp. the cold temperate region dominated by taiga and forests of birch, poplar, and conifers: northern boreal forest. • ( Boreal ) Botany relating to or denoting a phytogeographical kingdom comprising the arctic and temperate regions of Eurasia and North America. ORIGIN late Middle English: from late Latin borealis, from Latin Boreas, denoting the god of the north wind, from Greek.
bored
bored 1 |bôrd bɔ (ə )rd | ▶adjective feeling weary because one is unoccupied or lacks interest in one's current activity: she got bored with staring out of the window | they would hang around all day, bored stiff . DERIVATIVES bored ly |ˈbɔːdli |adverb usage: The traditional constructions for bored are bored by or bored with. The construction bored of emerged more recently, and is extremely common, especially in informal language. Although it is perfectly logical by analogy with constructions such as tired of, it is not fully accepted in standard English.
bored
bored 2 |bɔ (ə )rd bôrd | ▶adjective [ in combination ] (of a gun ) having a specified bore: large-bored guns.
bore da
bore da |ˈbɒrɛ ˌdɑː | ▶exclamation Welsh good morning! ORIGIN Welsh, from bore ‘morning ’ + da ‘good ’.
boredom
bore dom |ˈbôrdəm ˈbɔrdəm | ▶noun the state of feeling bored: the boredom of afternoon duty could be relieved by friendly conversation.
boreen
bo reen |bôˈrēn bɔrˈin | ▶noun Irish a narrow country road. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Irish bóithrín, diminutive of bóthar ‘road. ’
borehole
bore hole |ˈbôrˌhōl ˈbɔrˌhoʊl | ▶noun a deep, narrow hole made in the ground, esp. to locate water or oil.
borek
bo rek |bôˈrek bʊˈrɛk | ▶noun an envelope of thin pastry filled with cheese, spinach, or ground meat and baked or fried. ORIGIN Turkish, ‘pie. ’
borer
bor er |ˈbôrər ˈbɔrər | ▶noun 1 a worm, mollusk, insect, or insect larva that bores into wood, other plant material, or rock. 2 a tool for boring.
borescope
bore scope |ˈbôrˌskōp ˈbɔrskoʊp | ▶noun an instrument used to inspect the inside of a structure through a small hole.
Oxford Dictionary
bore
bore 1 |bɔː | ▶verb 1 [ with obj. ] make (a hole ) in something with a tool or by digging: bore a hole in the wall to pass the cable through | [ no obj. ] : the drill can bore through rock | figurative : his eyes bored into hers. • hollow out (a gun barrel or other tube ): an 1100 cc road bike bored out to 1168 cc. 2 [ no obj. ] (of an athlete or racehorse ) push another competitor out of the way. ▶noun 1 the hollow part inside a gun barrel or other tube. • [ often in combination ] the diameter of a bore; the calibre: a small-bore rifle. • [ in combination ] a gun of a specified bore: he shot a guard in the leg with a twelve-bore. 2 short for borehole. ORIGIN Old English borian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to German bohren .
bore
bore 2 |bɔː | ▶noun a person whose talk or behaviour is dull and uninteresting: he can be a crashing bore. • [ in sing. ] a tedious or annoying situation or activity: it's such a bore cooking when one's alone. ▶verb [ with obj. ] cause (someone ) to feel weary and uninterested by dull talk or behaviour: she is too polite to bore us with anecdotes | [ with obj. and complement ] : timid women quickly bore her silly. PHRASES bore someone to death (or to tears ) make someone feel extremely bored: he would bore everyone to death with tales about his wonderful daughter. ORIGIN mid 18th cent. (as a verb ): of unknown origin.
bore
bore 3 |bɔː | ▶noun a steep-fronted wave caused by the meeting of two tides or by the constriction of a tide rushing up a narrow estuary. ORIGIN early 17th cent.: perhaps from Old Norse bára ‘wave ’; the term was used in the general sense ‘billow, wave ’ in Middle English.
bore
bore 4 |bɔː (r )| past of bear 1.
boreal
boreal |ˈbɔːrɪəl | ▶adjective 1 Ecology relating to or characteristic of the climatic zone south of the Arctic, especially the cold temperate region dominated by taiga and forests of birch, poplar, and conifers: northern boreal forest. • ( Boreal ) Botany relating to or denoting a phytogeographical kingdom comprising the arctic and temperate regions of Eurasia and North America. 2 ( Boreal ) Geology relating to or denoting the second climatic stage of the postglacial period in northern Europe, between the Preboreal and Atlantic stages (about 9,000 to 7,500 years ago ), marked by a warm, dry climate. ORIGIN late Middle English: from late Latin borealis, from Latin Boreas, denoting the god of the north wind, from Greek.
bored
bored 1 |bɔːd | ▶adjective feeling weary and impatient because one is unoccupied or lacks interest in one's current activity: she got bored with staring out of the window | they hung around all day, bored stiff | bored teenagers. John was soon bored to tears with the work. she's bored out of her mind . DERIVATIVES boredly |ˈbɔːdli |adverb usage: The traditional constructions for bored are bored by or bored with. The construction bored of emerged more recently, and is extremely common, especially in informal language. Although it is perfectly logical by analogy with constructions such as tired of, it is not fully accepted in standard English.
bored
bored 2 |bɔːd | ▶adjective [ in combination ] (of a gun ) having a specified bore: large-bored guns.
bore da
bore da |ˈbɒrɛ ˌdɑː | ▶exclamation Welsh good morning! ORIGIN Welsh, from bore ‘morning ’ + da ‘good ’.
boredom
bore |dom |ˈbɔːdəm | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the state of feeling bored: I'll die of boredom if I live that long.
boreen
boreen |bɔːˈriːn | ▶noun Irish a narrow country road. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Irish bóithrín, diminutive of bóthar ‘road ’.
borehole
bore |hole |ˈbɔːhəʊl | ▶noun a deep, narrow hole made in the ground, especially to locate water or oil.
borek
borek |bʊˈrɛk | ▶noun ( pl. same or boreks ) (in Turkish and Middle Eastern cookery ) a pie of filo pastry filled with cheese, spinach, or minced meat. ORIGIN Turkish börek.
borer
borer |ˈbɔːrə | ▶noun 1 a worm, mollusc, insect, or insect larva which bores into wood, other plant material, or rock. 2 a tool for boring.
borescope
bore |scope ▶noun an instrument used to inspect the inside of a structure through a small hole.
American Oxford Thesaurus
bore
bore verb 1 the movie bored us: stultify, pall on, stupefy, weary, tire, fatigue, send to sleep, leave cold; bore to death, bore to tears; informal turn off. 2 bore a hole in the ceiling: drill, pierce, perforate, puncture, punch, cut; tunnel, burrow, mine, dig, gouge, sink. ▶noun you can be such a bore: tedious person /thing, tiresome person /thing, dull person /thing, yawn, bother, nuisance, wet blanket.
boredom
boredom noun his eyes were glassy with boredom: weariness, ennui, apathy, unconcern; frustration, dissatisfaction, restlessness, restiveness, lethargy, lassitude; tedium, dullness, monotony, repetitiveness, flatness, dreariness; informal deadliness.
Oxford Thesaurus
bore
bore 1 verb you must bore a hole in the ceiling to pass the cable through: drill, pierce, perforate, puncture, punch, cut; tunnel, burrow, mine, dig (out ), gouge (out ), sink; make, create, put, drive. ▶noun 1 a large amount of water had been pumped from the well bore: borehole, hole, well, shaft, pit, passage, tunnel. 2 the canon has a bore of 890 millimetres: calibre, diameter, gauge.
bore
bore 2 verb the news bored Philip so he didn't watch it: be tedious to, pall on, stultify, stupefy, weary, tire, fatigue, send to sleep, exhaust, wear out, leave cold; bore to tears, bore to death, bore out of one's mind, bore stiff, bore rigid, bore stupid; informal turn off; rare hebetate. ANTONYMS interest, entertain. ▶noun the poetry reading turned out to be a great bore | you can be such a bore: tedious thing, tiresome thing, nuisance, bother, pest, annoyance, trial, vexation, thorn in one's flesh; tiresome person, tedious person; informal drag, pain, pain in the neck, bind, headache, hassle; N. Amer. informal pain in the butt, nudnik; Austral. /NZ informal nark; Brit. informal, dated blighter, blister, pill; Brit. vulgar slang pain in the arse.
boredom
boredom noun his eyes were glassy with boredom: weariness, ennui, lack of enthusiasm, lack of interest, lack of concern, apathy, uninterestedness, unconcern, languor, sluggishness, accidie, malaise, world-weariness; frustration, dissatisfaction, restlessness, restiveness; tedium, tediousness, dullness, monotony, repetitiveness, lack of variety, lack of variation, flatness, blandness, sameness, uniformity, routine, humdrum, dreariness, lack of excitement; informal deadliness; Brit. informal sameyness. ANTONYMS interest, entertainment.
Duden Dictionary
Bore
Bo re Substantiv, feminin , die |B o re |altnordisch-englisch stromaufwärts gerichtete Flutwelle in rasch sich verengenden Flussmündungen vor allem beim Ganges
boreal
bo re al Adjektiv Geografie |bore a l |lateinisch borealis dem nördlichen Klima Europas, Asiens und Amerikas zugehörend; nördlich
Boreal
Bo re al Substantiv, Neutrum , das |Bore a l |das Boreal; Genitiv: des Boreals Wärmeperiode der Nacheiszeit
Boreas
Bo re as Eigenname |B o reas |griechische Gottheit [des Nordwindes ]
Boreas
Bo re as Substantiv, maskulin , der |B o reas |lateinisch boreas < griechisch boréas 1 Nordwind im Gebiet des Ägäischen Meeres 2 dichterisch kalter Nordwind
Börek
Bö rek Substantiv, Neutrum oder Substantiv, maskulin , das oder der |B ö rek |der Börek oder das Börek; Genitiv: des Böreks, Plural: die Böreks türkisch börek = Pastete Gebäck aus einer Art Strudelteig mit einer Füllung aus Hackfleisch, Schafskäse oder Gemüse
French Dictionary
boréal
boréal , ale , als ou aux adj. adjectif Du nord. : Une aurore boréale. « Au-dessus des sommets du nord vertigineux, /Le signe avant-coureur de ton âme loyale:/Un éblouissement d ’aurore boréale » (Alfred DesRochers , À l ’ombre de l ’Orford ). ANTONYME austral . Note Technique Cet adjectif s ’emploie surtout au singulier.
Spanish Dictionary
boreal
boreal adjetivo 1 Del bóreas o relacionado con él .2 Del norte :zona boreal; polo boreal; fauna boreal; bosque boreal; Canadá pertenece a América boreal .SINÓNIMO septentrional . VÉASE aurora boreal .
bóreas
bóreas nombre masculino Viento que sopla del norte .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
bore
bore 1 /bɔː r / (! boarと同音 ) 〖語源不詳; 用例は18世紀後半から 〗(形 )bored, boring 動詞 ~s /-z /; ~d /-d /; boring (!be ~dなどの分詞形容詞用法については →bored , boring ) 他動詞 «…で » 〈人 〉を退屈させる , うんざりさせる «with » ▸ I won't bore you with my personal story .自分の話を聞かせてうんざりさせたりはしません ▸ The teacher bored me to death [to tears, stiff, rigid, silly ].その先生は僕をとことん退屈させた 名詞 C 1 うんざりさせる人, 退屈な人 .2 〖単数形で 〗うんざりさせる事, 退屈な事, 嫌な事 ▸ School was a bore .学校はうんざりだった
bore
bore 2 /bɔː r /動詞 自動詞 1 (道具などで ) «…に » 穴をあける, 穴を掘る ; 穴をあけて入る ; «…を » くり抜く «into , through » ; «…を探して » 試掘する «for » ▸ The disease has slowly bored into her bones .その病気はゆっくりと彼女の骨を侵していった 2 〈目が 〉 «…を » 穴のあくほど見つめる «into » ▸ His eyes bored into her (s ).彼の目は彼女 (の目 )をじっと見つめた 3 〈物に 〉穴があく .4 〈競走馬などが 〉相手を押しのける .他動詞 1 〈穴 〉をあける ; 〈トンネル 井戸など 〉を掘る ▸ bore a hole through the wall 壁を貫通する穴をあける 2 〈板など 〉に穴をあける .b ò re one's w á y «…を » かきわけて進む «through » .名詞 1 C U (銃 パイプなどの )内部の空間, 内腔 (こう ); 口径, 内径 (⦅主に米 ⦆gauge )▸ a twelve -bore shotgun 12口径のショットガン 2 C (道具であけた ) 穴, 掘り抜き井戸 ; (石油などの採掘用 )試掘孔 (borehole ).
bore
bore 3 動詞 /bɔː r /bear 1 の過去形 .
bore
bore 4 名詞 C (河口をさかのぼる )高潮, 潮津波 .
bored
bored /bɔː r d / (! boardと同音 ) →bore 1 形容詞 «…に [で ]» 退屈して , うんざりして «with , of » ; 〖名詞 の前で 〗うんざりした, 退屈そうな 〈表情など 〉(→tired 2 )▸ He got bored with the whole business .彼は仕事がみんなめんどうになった ▸ Boys are easily bored .男の子はすぐ退屈する be b ò red to d é ath [to t é ars, out of one's m í nd ]=be b ò red st í ff [s í lly, r í gid ]⦅くだけて ⦆あきあきする .
boredom
bore dom /bɔ́ː r dəm /名詞 U 退屈 (さ ), 倦怠 (けんたい ); 退屈にさせるもの .
borehole
b ó re h ò le 名詞 〘鉱 〙=bore 2 名詞 2 .
borer
bor er /bɔ́ːrə r /名詞 C 1 穴をあける人 [道具 ].2 (木などに )穴をあける虫, 穿孔 (せんこう )虫 .