English-Thai Dictionary
chase
N การ ไล่ตาม การ ติดตาม pursuit kan-lai-tam
chase
N ร่อง ใน กำแพง หรือ พื้น สำหรับ วาง ท่อน้ำ rong-nai-kam-paeng-rue-puen-sam-rab-wang-thol-nam
chase
VI เร่งรีบ เร่ง reng-rib
chase
VI ไล่ตาม กวด ไล่กวด วิ่งไล่ วิ่งกวด วิ่ง ตาม ตาม ติดตาม chase after dog go after trail tail tag track lai-tam
chase
VT ขับไล่ ไล่ จับ khab-lai
chase
VT ทำให้ เป็น ร่อง สลัก ลาย แกะ tam-hai-pen-rong
chase
VT ประดับ ตกแต่ง โดย การสลัก หรือ ดุน ลวดลาย pra-dab-tok-taeng-doi-kan-sa-lak-rue-dun-luad-lai
chase
VT ไล่ตาม กวด ไล่กวด วิ่งไล่ วิ่งกวด วิ่ง ตาม ตาม ติดตาม chase after dog go after trail tail tag track lai-tam
chase about
PHRV ตาม จีบ ไล่ จับ tam-jeb
chase about
PHRV เล่น ไป ทั่ว วิ่งไล่ กัน ไป ทั่ว len-pai-thua
chase after
PHRV พยายาม ตาม จีบ หรือ ขอ ความรัก pa-ya-yam-tam-jeb-rue-kor-kwam-rak
chase after
PHRV ไล่ตาม ติดตาม lai-tam
chase around
PHRV เล่น ไป ทั่ว วิ่งไล่ กัน ไป ทั่ว chase about len-pai-thua
chase down
PHRV ตามด้วย (เฉพาะ การ ดื่มเหล้า หรือ เครื่องดื่ม tam-duai
chase the dragon
SL สูด ควัน เฮโรอีน จาก การ เผา sud-kwan-hero-in-jak-kan-pao
chase up
PHRV เร่ง เตือน กระตุ้น lang
chaser
N ผู้ตาม ล่า นัก ล่า pursuer hunter phu-tam-la
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CHASE
v.t. 1. Literally to drive, urge, press forward with vehemence; hence, to pursue for the purpose of taking, as game; to hunt.
2. To purse, or drive, as a defeated or flying enemy. Leviticus 26:7; Deuteronomy 32:3 .
3. To follow or pursue, as an object of desire; to pursue for the purpose of taking; as, to chase a ship.
4. To drive; to pursue.
Chased by their brothers endless malice.
To chase away, is to compel to depart; to disperse.
To chase metals. [See Enchase. ]
CHASE
n. 1. Vehement pursuit; a running or driving after; as game, in hunting; a flying enemy, in war; a ship a sea, etc.
2. Pursuit with an ardent desire to obtain, as pleasure, profit, fame, etc. ; earnest seeking.
3. That which may be chased; that which is usually taken by chase; as beasts of chase.
4. That which is pursued or hunted; as, seek some other chase. So at sea, a ship chased is called the chase.
5. In law, a driving of cattle to or from a place.
6. An open ground, or place of retreat for deer and other wild beasts; differing from a forest, which is not private property and is invested with privileges, and from a park which is inclosed. A chase is private property, and well stored with wild beasts or game.
7. An iron frame used by printers to confine types, when set in columns.
8. Chase of a gun, is the whole length of the bore.
9. A term in the game of tennis.
Chase guns, in a ship of war, guns used in chasing an enemy or in defending a ship when chased. These have their ports at the head or stern. A gun at the head is called a bow-chase; at the stern, a stern-chase.
CHASED
pp. Pursed; sought ardently; driven.
CHASER
n. 1. One who chases; a pursuer; a driver; a hunter.
2. An enchaser. [See Enchase. ]
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CHASE
Chase, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Chased; p. pr. & vb. n. Chasing. ] Etym: [OF. chacier, F. chasser, fr. (assumed ) LL. captiare, fr. L. captare to strive to seize. See Catch. ]
1. To pursue for the purpose of killing or taking, as an enemy, or game; to hunt. We are those which chased you from the field. Shak. Philologists, who chase A panting syllable through time and place. Cowper.
2. To follow as if to catch; to pursue; to compel to move on; to drive by following; to cause to fly; -- often with away or off; as, to chase the hens away. Chased by their brother's endless malice from prince to prince and from place to place. Knolles.
3. To pursue eagerly, as hunters pursue game. Chasing each other merrily. Tennyson.
CHASE
CHASE Chase, v. i.
Defn: To give chase; to hunt; as, to chase around after a doctor. [Colloq. ]
CHASE
Chase, n. Etym: [Cf. F. chasse, fr. chasser. See Chase, v.]
1. Vehement pursuit for the purpose of killing or capturing, as of an enemy, or game; an earnest seeking after any object greatly desired; the act or habit of hunting; a hunt. "This mad chase of fame. " Dryden. You see this chase is hotly followed. Shak.
2. That which is pursued or hunted. Nay, Warwick, seek thee out some other chase, For I myself must hunt this deer to death. Shak.
3. An open hunting ground to which game resorts, and which is private properly, thus differing from a forest, which is not private property, and from a park, which is inclosed. Sometimes written chace. [Eng. ]
4. (Court Tennis )
Defn: A division of the floor of a gallery, marked by a figure or otherwise; the spot where a ball falls, and between which and the dedans the adversary must drive his ball in order to gain a point. Chase gun (Naut. ), a cannon placed at the bow or stern of an armed vessel, and used when pursuing an enemy, or in defending the vessel when pursued. -- Chase port (Naut. ), a porthole from which a chase gun is fired. -- Stern chase (Naut. ), a chase in which the pursuing vessel follows directly in the wake of the vessel pursued.
CHASE
Chase, n. Etym: [F. cháse, fr. L. capsa box, case. See Case a box. ](Print. )
1. A rectangular iron frame in which pages or columns of type are imposed.
2. (Mil. )
Defn: The part of a cannon from the reënforce or the trunnions to the swell of the muzzle. See Cannon.
3. A groove, or channel, as in the face of a wall; a trench, as for the reception of drain tile.
4. (Shipbuilding )
Defn: A kind of joint by which an overlap joint is changed to a flush joint, by means of a gradually deepening rabbet, as at the ends of clinker-built boats.
CHASE
Chase, v. t. Etym: [A contraction of enchase. ]
1. To ornament (a surface of metal ) by embossing, cutting away parts, and the like.
2. To cut, so as to make a screw thread.
CHASER
CHASER Chas "er, n.
1. One who or that which chases; a pursuer; a driver; a hunter.
2. (Naut. )
Defn: Same as Chase gun, esp. in terms bow chaser and stern chaser. See under Bow, Stern.
CHASER
CHASER Chas "er, n.
1. One who chases or engraves. See 5th Chase, and Enchase.
2. (Mech. )
Defn: A tool with several points, used for cutting or finishing screw threads, either external or internal, on work revolving in a lathe.
New American Oxford Dictionary
chase
chase 1 |CHās tʃeɪs | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 pursue in order to catch or catch up with: police chased the stolen car through the city | [ no obj. ] : the dog chased after the stick. • seek to attain: seventy candidates chasing a single job. • seek the company of (a member of the opposite sex ) in an obvious way: playing football by day and chasing women by night. • drive or cause to go in a specified direction: she chased him out of the house. 2 try to make contact with (someone ) in order to get something owed or required: chasing customers who had not paid their bills. • make further investigation of (an unresolved matter ): investigators got a warrant, but they didn't have time to chase down the case. ▶noun an act of pursuing someone or something: they captured the youths after a brief chase | a chase for limited supplies of hard currency | a car chase. • (the chase ) hunting as a sport: she was an ardent follower of the chase. • short for steeplechase. • Brit. an area of unenclosed land formerly reserved for hunting. • archaic a hunted animal. PHRASES give chase go in pursuit: a patrol car gave chase and finally overtook him. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French chacier (verb ), chace (noun ), based on Latin captare ‘continue to take, ’ from capere ‘take. ’
chase
chase 2 |tʃeɪs CHās | ▶verb [ with obj. ] (usu. as adj. chased ) engrave (metal, or a design on metal ): a miniature container with a delicately chased floral design. ORIGIN late Middle English: apparently from earlier enchase, from Old French enchasser.
chase
chase 3 |tʃeɪs CHās | ▶noun (in letterpress printing ) a metal frame for holding the composed type and blocks being printed at one time. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from French châsse, from Latin capsa ‘box ’ (see case 2 ).
chase
chase 4 |CHās tʃeɪs | ▶noun 1 the part of a gun enclosing the bore. 2 a groove or furrow cut in the face of a wall or other surface to receive a pipe. ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from French chas ‘enclosed space, ’ from Provençal cas, caus, from medieval Latin capsum ‘thorax or nave of a church. ’
Chase, Salmon P.
Chase, Salmon P. |CHās tʃeɪs | (1808 –73 ), US chief justice 1864 –73; full name Salmon Portland Chase. He served in the US Senate 1849 –55, as governor of Ohio 1855 –59, and as US secretary of the treasury 1861 –64, during which time he established the national banking system and issued the first “greenbacks.”
Chase, Samuel
Chase, Samuel |CHās tʃeɪs | (1741 –1811 ), US Supreme Court associate justice 1796 –1811. A delegate to the Continental Congresses and a signer of the Declaration of Independence, he stressed national supremacy.
chaser
chas er |ˈCHāsər ˈtʃeɪsər | ▶noun 1 a person or thing that chases: [ in combination ] : promotion-chasers. 2 informal a drink taken after another of a different kind, typically a weak alcoholic drink after a stronger one: bourbon on the rocks with a beer chaser. 3 a horse for steeplechasing.
Oxford Dictionary
chase
chase 1 |tʃeɪs | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 pursue in order to catch or catch up with: police chased the stolen car through the city | [ no obj. ] : the dog chased after the stick. • seek to attain: the team are chasing their first home win this season. • seek the company of (a member of the opposite sex ) in an obvious way: he spends all his free time chasing girls. 2 [ with obj. and adverbial of direction ] drive or cause to go in a specified direction: she chased him out of the house. • [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] rush in a specified direction: he chased down the motorway. 3 try to obtain (something owed or required ): the company employs people to chase up debts. • try to make contact with (someone ) in order to obtain something owed or required: the council recently appointed its own team of bailiffs to chase non-payers. • (chase something up (or US down )) make further investigation of an unresolved matter. ▶noun an act of pursuing someone or something: they captured the youths after a brief chase. • short for steeplechase. • (the chase ) hunting as a sport: she was an ardent follower of the chase. • [ in place names ] Brit. an area of unenclosed land formerly reserved for hunting: Cannock Chase. • archaic a hunted animal. PHRASES chase the game (in soccer ) adopt attacking tactics, especially when losing, at the risk of being vulnerable to counter-attack. chase shadows pursue illusory targets: I found that the three-day mission did little more than chase shadows. give chase go in pursuit: a patrol car gave chase and finally overtook him | officers gave chase to one of the thieves. go and chase oneself [ in imperative ] informal go away. the thrill of the chase see thrill. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French chacier (verb ), chace (noun ), based on Latin captare ‘continue to take ’, from capere ‘take ’.
chase
chase 2 |tʃeɪs | ▶verb [ with obj. ] (usu. as adj. chased ) engrave (metal, or a design on metal ): a miniature container with a delicately chased floral design. ORIGIN late Middle English: apparently from earlier enchase, from Old French enchasser.
chase
chase 3 |tʃeɪs | ▶noun (in letterpress printing ) a metal frame for holding the composed type and blocks being printed at one time. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from French châsse, from Latin capsa ‘box ’ (see case 2 ).
chase
chase 4 |tʃeɪs | ▶noun 1 the part of a gun enclosing the bore. 2 a groove or furrow cut in the face of a wall or other surface to receive a pipe or wire. ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from French chas ‘enclosed space ’, from Provençal cas, caus, from medieval Latin capsum ‘thorax or nave of a church ’.
Chase, Salmon P.
Chase, Salmon P. |CHās tʃeɪs | (1808 –73 ), US chief justice 1864 –73; full name Salmon Portland Chase. He served in the US Senate 1849 –55, as governor of Ohio 1855 –59, and as US secretary of the treasury 1861 –64, during which time he established the national banking system and issued the first “greenbacks.”
Chase, Samuel
Chase, Samuel |CHās tʃeɪs | (1741 –1811 ), US Supreme Court associate justice 1796 –1811. A delegate to the Continental Congresses and a signer of the Declaration of Independence, he stressed national supremacy.
chaser
chaser |ˈtʃeɪsə | ▶noun 1 a person or thing that pursues someone or something: [ in combination ] : a woman-chaser. 2 a horse for steeplechasing. 3 informal a strong alcoholic drink taken after a weaker one: drinking pints of bitter with vodka chasers.
American Oxford Thesaurus
chase
chase verb 1 the cat chased the mouse: pursue, run after, give chase to, follow; hunt, track, trail; informal tail. 2 chasing young girls: pursue, run after, make advances to, flirt with; informal come on to, hit on; dated woo, court, romance, set one's cap for /at, make love to. 3 she chased away the donkeys: drive away, drive off, send away, scare off; informal shoo (away ), send packing. 4 she chased away all thoughts of him: dispel, banish, dismiss, drive away, shut out, put out of one's mind. ▶noun they gave up the chase: pursuit, hunt, trail.
Oxford Thesaurus
chase
chase 1 verb 1 the attacker chased Mr Lee into an alley | the dogs chased after the fox: pursue, run after, follow, hunt, track, trail; give chase to, be hot on someone's heels; informal tail. ANTONYMS run away from. 2 Jim had been chasing young girls for years: court, woo, pursue, run after, seek the company of, make advances to, make up to, flirt with, romance; informal chat up, make (sheep's ) eyes at, give the come-on to, come on to, be all over; Austral. informal track with, track square with; dated set one's cap at, pay addresses to, pay suit to, pay court to, seek the hand of, make love to; archaic spark. 3 she chased away some donkeys from her garden: drive away, drive off, drive out, put to flight, send away, scare off, scatter; informal send packing. 4 she chased away all thoughts of him: dispel, banish, dismiss, drive away, drive off, shut out, put out of one's mind. ANTONYMS conjure up. 5 photographers chased on to the runway to photograph him: rush, dash, race, speed, streak, shoot, charge, career, scramble, scurry, hurry, make haste, hare, fly, pelt; informal scoot, belt, tear, zip, whip, go like a bat out of hell; N. Amer. informal boogie, hightail, clip; N. Amer. vulgar slang drag /tear /haul ass; informal, dated cut along; archaic post, hie. ANTONYMS amble. PHRASES chase someone /something up his job includes chasing up slow payers: pester, harass, harry, nag, plague, hound; seek out, find, go after, follow up; informal hassle. ▶noun the predator finally gave up the chase: pursuit, hunt, trail; hunting, coursing, course. PHRASES give chase to they give chase to the bandits: chase, pursue, run after, follow, hunt, track, trail; be hot on someone's heels; informal tail.
chase
chase 2 verb figures are chased in low relief on the dish: engrave, etch, carve, inscribe, cut, chisel, imprint, impress, print, mark.
Duden Dictionary
Chase
Chase Substantiv, Neutrum oder Substantiv, feminin Musik , das oder die |tʃeɪs |das oder die Chase; Genitiv: der Chase englisch chase, eigentlich = Jagd < altfranzösisch chace, zu: chacier = jagen Improvisation im Jazz, bei der sich zwei oder mehrere Solisten periodisch abwechseln
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
chase
chase 1 /tʃeɪs /〖語源は 「捕える 」〗動詞 ~s /-ɪz /; ~d /-t /; chasing 他動詞 1 a. 〈人 物 動物など 〉を (捕えるために )追う, 追跡する , 追いかける (along, down, up )(⦅かたく ⦆pursue )(→follow 類義 )▸ The dog chased the cat up a tree .イヌはネコを追いかけ木に登らせた ▸ The police chased the thief .警察はその泥棒を追いかけた ▸ chase the enemy's ship 敵艦を追撃する .b. 〈人が 〉〈金 仕事など 〉を (得ようと )探し求める .c. ⦅くだけて ⦆〈人が 〉〈異性 〉に しつこく [露骨に ]言い寄る , つきまとう ▸ He was chasing girls all the time at the party .彼はパーティではずっと女の尻 (しり )ばかり追いかけていた .2 〈人などが 〉 «…から » 〈人 物など 〉を (乱暴に )追い出す [払う ]; 【地位 仕事などから 】〈人 団体など 〉を降ろす ; «…から » 〈心配 恐怖など 〉を追い払う (away , off , out ) «from , out of » ▸ chase a fly (away ) out of the room ハエを部屋から追い出す ▸ The President was chased out of the country .大統領は国外追放された .3 ⦅くだけて ⦆〈人が 〉〈人など 〉に約束を思い出させる , 催促する (up )▸ I chased him about returning my books .私は本を返してくれるように彼に催促した .自動詞 1 〈人 物などが 〉 «…を » 追う , 追跡する ; 探し求める ; 【異性に 】つきまとう «after » ▸ chase after a butterfly [robber ]チョウ [強盗 ]を追いかける .2 ⦅くだけて ⦆〖~+副詞 〗急ぐ , 走り回る (!副詞 はaround, up, downなど方向 場所の表現 ) ▸ We chased around the town looking for the missing child .私たちは行方不明の子供を探して町じゅう走り回った .ch à se A d ó wn [d ó wn A ]1 ⦅主に米 ⦆A 〈人 物 獲物など 〉を追いかけて捕まえる ; 見つける .2 ↑他動詞 1a .ch à se A ú p [ú p A ]⦅主に英 ⦆1 ↑他動詞 3 .2 A 〈物など 〉を急いで準備させる, あわてて探す .Go ch á se yourself! ⦅米俗 ⦆出て行け (Get out! ).名詞 複 ~s /-ɪz /1 C U 追跡, 追求 , 追撃 ▸ the chase after the murderer 殺人犯の追跡 ▸ be in (full ) chase of the criminal 犯人を (全力で )追跡中である ▸ take [give ] up the chase 追跡を開始する [やめる ]▸ a paper chase ⦅くだけて ⦆(時間のかかる )書類の山との格闘 (→paper chase ).2 U ⦅やや古 ⦆〖通例the ~〗狩猟 (hunting ); C 獲物 .3 =steeplechase .a w ì ld g ó ose chase 無益な追求, くたびれもうけ .c ù t to the ch á se 本題に入る .g ì ve ch á se ⦅文 ⦆ «…を » 追跡 [追撃 ]する «to » .l è ad A a m è rry ch á se A 〈人など 〉をあっちこっち引っぱり回す, 手こずらせる .
chase
chase 2 動詞 他動詞 〈金属 〉を彫金する, …に浮き彫りを施す ; …に (ねじ切り工具などで )ねじを切る .
chase
chase 3 名詞 C 1 溝 (groove ); 〘建 〙(パイプを通すためなどに )壁面に作った長い溝 .2 砲身 (の前身 ).3 〘印 〙チェース 〘活字を結んで入れる締め版わく 〙.動詞 他動詞 …に溝 [ほぞ穴 ]を作る .
chaser
chas er /tʃéɪsə r /名詞 C 1 追撃 [追跡 ]するもの [人 ].2 チェイサー 〘強い [弱い ]酒の後に飲む軽い飲み物 [強い酒 ]〙.3 障害物競走馬 .