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English-Thai Dictionary

condition

N ความเจ็บป่วย  illness ailment kwam-jeb-puai

 

condition

N ปัจจัย แวดล้อม  pad-jai-waed-lom

 

condition

N สถานะ ภาพ ทางสังคม  sa-ta-na-phab-tang-sang-kom

 

condition

N สภาวะ  circumstance sa-pa-wa

 

condition

N สุขภาพ  physical state fitness suk-ke-pab

 

condition

N เงื่อนไข  limitation restriction nguean-kai

 

condition to

PHRV ทำให้ เคยชิน กับ  tam-hai-koei-chin-kab

 

conditional

ADJ ที่ เป็น เงื่อนไข  ที่ ต้อง มี คุณ สมบัติ  qualified limited ti-pen-ngean-kai

 

conditioned

ADJ ภายใต้ เงื่อนไข  pai-tai-ngean-kai

 

conditioner

N สิ่ง ที่ กำหนด เงื่อนไข  ผู้ ที่ กำหนด เงื่อนไข 

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

CONDITION

n.[L., to build or make, to ordain; properly, to set or fix, or to set together or in order; con and do, to give; properly, to send. ] 1. State; a particular mode of being; applied to external circumstances, to the body, to the mind, and to things. We speak of a good condition or a bad condition, in reference to wealth and poverty; in reference to health and sickness; in reference to a cheerful or depressed disposition of mind; and with reference to a sound or broken, perishing state of things. The word signifies a setting or fixing, and has a very general and indefinite application, coinciding nearly with state, from sto, to stand, and denotes that particular frame, form, mode or disposition, in which a thing exists, at any given time. A man is in a good condition, when he is thriving. A nation, with an exhausted treasury and burthened with taxes, is not in a condition to make war. A poor man is in a humble condition. Religion affords consolation to man in every condition of life. Exhortations should be adapted to the condition of the mind.
Condition, circumstance, is not the thing; bliss is the same in subject or in king.
2. Quality; property; attribute.
It seemed to us a condition and property of divine powers and belongs to be hidden and unseen to others.
3. State of mind; temper; temperament; complexion. [See No. 1.]
4. Moral quality; virtue or vice.
[These senses however fall within the first definition. ]
5. Rank, that is, state with respect to the orders or grades of society, or to property; as, persons of the best condition.
6. Terms of a contract or covenant; stipulation; that is, that which is set, fixed, established or proposed. What are the conditions of the treaty?
Make our conditions with yon captive king.
He sendeth and desireth conditions of peace. Luke 14:32.
7. A clause in a bond, or other contract containing terms or a stipulation that it is to be performed, and in case of failure, the penalty of the bond is to be incurred.
8. Terms given, or provided, as the ground of something else; that which is established, or to be done, or to happen, as requisite to another act; as, I will pay a sum of money, on condition you will engage to refund it.
A condition is a clause of contingency, on the happening of which the estate granted may be defeated.

 

CONDITION

v.i.To make terms; to stipulate. It is one thing to condition for a good office, and another to execute it.

 

CONDITION

v.t.To contract; to stipulate. It was conditioned between Saturn and Titan, that Saturn should put to death all his male children.

 

CONDITIONAL

a. 1. Containing or depending on a condition or conditions; made with limitations; not absolute; made or granted on certain terms. A conditional promise is one which is to be performed, when something else stipulated is done or has taken place. A conditional fee, in law, is one which is granted upon condition, that if the donee shall die without such particular heirs as are specified, the estate shall revert to the donor. Hence it is a fee restrained to particular heirs, to the exclusion of others.
2. In grammar and logic, expressing a condition or supposition; as a conditional word, mode, or tense; a conditional syllogism.

 

CONDITIONAL

n.A limitation.

 

CONDITIONALITY

n.The quality of being conditional, or limited; limitation by certain terms.

 

CONDITIONALLY

adv. With certain limitations; on particular terms or stipulations; not absolutely or positively. We see large preferments tendered to him, but conditionally, upon his doing wicked offices.

 

CONDITIONARY

a.Conditional; Stipulated. [Not used. ]

 

CONDITIONATE

a.Conditional; established on certain terms. [Not used. ]

 

CONDITIONATE

v.t.To qualify; to regulate. [Not in use. ]

 

CONDITIONED

pp. 1. Stipulated; containing terms to be performed.
2. a. Having a certain state or qualities. This word is usually preceded by some qualifying term; as good-conditioned; ill-conditioned; best-conditioned.

 

CONDITIONLY

adv. On certain terms. [Not used. ]

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

CONDITION

Con *di "tion, n. Etym: [F., fr. L. conditio (better condicio )agreement, compact, condition; con- + a root signifying to show, point out, akin to dicere to say, dicare to proclaim, dedicate. See Teach, Token. ]

 

1. Mode or state of being; state or situation with regard to external circumstances or influences, or to physical or mental integrity, health, strength, etc. ; predicament; rank; position, estate. I am in my condition A prince, Miranda; I do think, a king. Shak. And O, what man's condition can be worse Than his whom plenty starves and blessings curse Cowley. The new conditions of life. Darwin.

 

2. Essential quality; property; attribute. It seemed to us a condition and property of divine powers and beings to be hidden and unseen to others. Bacon.

 

3. Temperament; disposition; character. [Obs. ] The condition of a saint and the complexion of a devil. Shak.

 

4. That which must exist as the occasion or concomitant of something else; that which is requisite in order that something else should take effect; an essential qualification; stipulation; terms specified. I had as lief take her dowry with this condition, to be whipped at the high cross every morning. Shak. Many are apt to believe remission of sins, but they believe it without the condition of repentance. Jer. Taylor.

 

5. (Law )

 

Defn: A clause in a contract, or agreement, which has for its object to suspend, to defeat, or in some way to modify, the principal obligation; or, in case of a will, to suspend, revoke, or modify a devise or bequest. It is also the case of a future uncertain event, which may or may not happen, and on the occurrence or non-occurrence of which, the accomplishment, recission, or modification of an obligation or testamentary disposition is made to depend. Blount. Tomlins. Bouvier. Wharton. Equation of condition. (Math. ) See under Equation. -- On or Upon condition (that ), used for if in introducing conditional sentences. "Upon condition thou wilt swear to pay him tribute. .. thou shalt be placed as viceroy under him. " Shak. -- Conditions of sale, the terms on which it is proposed to sell property by auction; also, the instrument containing or expressing these terms.

 

Syn. -- State; situation; circumstances; station; case; mode; plight; predicament; stipulation; qualification; requisite; article; provision; arrangement. See State.

 

CONDITION

Con *di "tion, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Conditioned; p. pr. & vb. n.Conditioning. ]

 

1. To make terms; to stipulate. Pay me back my credit, And I'll condition with ye. Beau. & Fl.

 

2. (Metaph.)

 

Defn: To impose upon an object those relations or conditions without which knowledge and thought are alleged to be impossible. To think of a thing is to condition. Sir W. Hamilton.

 

CONDITION

Con *di "tion, v. t. Etym: [Cf. LL. conditionare. See Condition, n.]

 

1. To invest with, or limit by, conditions; to burden or qualify by a condition; to impose or be imposed as the condition of. Seas, that daily gain upon the shore, Have ebb and flow conditioning their march. Tennyson.

 

2. To contract; to stipulate; to agree. It was conditioned between Saturn and Titan, that Saturn should put to death all his male children. Sir W. Raleigh.

 

3. (U. S. Colleges )

 

Defn: To put under conditions; to require to pass a new examination or to make up a specified study, as a condition of remaining in one's class or in college; as, to condition a student who has failed in some branch of study.

 

4. To test or assay, as silk (to ascertain the proportion of moisture it contains ). McElrath.

 

Defn: train; acclimate.

 

CONDITIONAL

Con *di "tion *al, a. Etym: [L. conditionalis. ]

 

1. Containing, implying, or depending on, a condition or conditions; not absolute; made or granted on certain terms; as, a conditional promise. Every covenant of God with man. .. may justly be made (as in fact it is made ) with this conditional punishment annexed and declared. Bp. Warburton.

 

2. (Gram. & Logic )

 

Defn: Expressing a condition or supposition; as, a conditional word, mode, or tense. A conditional proposition is one which asserts the dependence of one categorical proposition on another. Whately.The words hypothetical and conditional may be. .. used synonymously. J. S. Mill.

 

CONDITIONAL

CONDITIONAL Con *di "tion *al, n.

 

1. A limitation. [Obs. ] Bacon.

 

2. A conditional word, mode, or proposition. Disjunctives may be turned into conditionals. L. H. Atwater.

 

CONDITIONALITY

CONDITIONALITY Con *di `tion *al "i *ty, n.

 

Defn: The quality of being conditional, or limited; limitation by certain terms.

 

CONDITIONALLY

CONDITIONALLY Con *di "tion *al *ly, adv.

 

Defn: In a conditional manner; subject to a condition or conditions; not absolutely or positively. Shak.

 

CONDITIONATE

Con *di "tion *ate, a. Etym: [LL. conditionatus, p. p. See Condition, v.t.]

 

Defn: Conditional. [Obs. ] Barak's answer is faithful, though conditionate. Bp. Hall.

 

CONDITIONATE

CONDITIONATE Con *di "tion *ate, v. t.

 

1. To qualify by conditions; to regulate. [Obs. ]

 

2. To put under conditions; to render conditional.

 

CONDITIONED

CONDITIONED Con *di "tioned, a.

 

1. Surrounded; circumstanced; in a certain state or condition, as of property or health; as, a well conditioned man. The best conditioned and unwearied spirit. Shak.

 

2. Having, or known under or by, conditions or relations; not independent; not absolute. Under these, thought is possible only in the conditioned interval. Sir W. Hamilton.

 

CONDITIONLY

CONDITIONLY Con *di "tion *ly, adv.

 

Defn: Conditionally. [Obs. ]

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

condition

con di tion |kənˈdiSHən kənˈdɪʃən | noun 1 the state of something, esp. with regard to its appearance, quality, or working order: the wiring is in good condition | [ in sing. ] : the bridge is in an extremely dangerous condition. a person's or animal's state of health or physical fitness: he is in fairly good condition considering what he has has been through | [ in sing. ] : she was in a serious condition. an illness or other medical problem: a heart condition. [ in sing. ] a particular state of existence: a condition of misery. archaic social position or rank: those of humbler condition. 2 (conditions ) the circumstances affecting the way in which people live or work, esp. with regard to their safety or well-being: harsh working and living conditions. the factors or prevailing situation influencing the performance or the outcome of a process: present market conditions. the prevailing state of the weather, ground, sea, or atmosphere at a particular time, esp. as it affects a sporting event: the appalling conditions determined the style of play. 3 a state of affairs that must exist or be brought about before something else is possible or permitted: for a member to borrow money, three conditions have to be met | all personnel should comply with this policy as a condition of employment | I'll accept your offer on one condition . verb [ with obj. ] 1 have a significant influence on or determine (the manner or outcome of something ): national choices are conditioned by the international political economy. train or accustom (someone or something ) to behave in a certain way or to accept certain circumstances: we have all been conditioned to the conventional format of TV | the child is conditioned to dislike food | (as noun conditioning ) : the program examines aspects of social conditioning. 2 bring (something ) into the desired state for use: a product for conditioning leather. (often as adj. conditioned ) make (a person or animal ) fit and healthy: he was six feet two of perfectly conditioned muscle and bone. apply something to (the skin or hair ) to give it a healthy or attractive look or feel: I condition my hair regularly. (often as adj. conditioned ) bring (beer or stout ) to maturation after fermentation while the yeast is still present: cask-conditioned real ales. [ no obj. ] (of a beer or stout ) undergo such a process: brews that are allowed to condition in the bottle. 3 set prior requirements on (something ) before it can occur or be done: Congressmen have sought to limit and condition military and economic aid. PHRASES in (or out of ) condition in a fit (or unfit ) physical state. in no condition to do something certainly not fit or well enough to do something: you're in no condition to tackle the stairs. on condition that with the stipulation that: he proposed deep cuts in offensive forces, on condition that an agreement be reached. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French condicion (noun ), condicionner (verb ), from Latin condicio (n- ) agreement, from condicere agree upon, from con- with + dicere say.

 

conditional

con di tion al |kənˈdiSHənl kənˈdɪʃənl | adjective 1 subject to one or more conditions or requirements being met; made or granted on certain terms: Western aid was only granted conditional on further reform | the consortium has made a conditional offer. 2 Grammar (of a clause, phrase, conjunction, or verb form ) expressing a condition. noun 1 Grammar & Philosophy a conditional clause or conjunction. a statement or sentence containing a conditional clause. 2 Grammar the conditional mood of a verb, for example should die in if I should die . DERIVATIVES con di tion al i ty |kənˌdiSHəˈnalitē |noun, con di tion al ly adverb ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French condicionel or late Latin condicionalis, from condicio (n- ) agreement (see condition ).

 

conditional discharge

con |di ¦tion ¦al dis |charge noun an order made by a criminal court whereby an offender will not be sentenced for an offence unless a further offence is committed within a stated period.

 

conditional probability

con di tion al prob a bil i ty noun Statistics the probability of an event ( A ), given that another ( B ) has already occurred.

 

conditional sale

con di tion al sale noun the sale of goods according to a contract containing conditions, typically that ownership does not pass to the buyer until after a set time, usually after payment of the last installment of the purchase price, although the buyer has possession and is committed to acquiring ownership.

 

condition code

con |di ¦tion code noun Computing a group of bits indicating the condition of something inside a computer, often used to decide which instructions the computer will subsequently execute.

 

conditioned response

con di tioned re sponse (also conditioned reflex ) noun Psychology an automatic response established by training to an ordinarily neutral stimulus. See also classical conditioning.

 

conditioner

con di tion er |kənˈdiSH (ə )nər kənˈdɪʃ (ə )nər | noun a substance or appliance used to improve or maintain something's condition: add a water conditioner to neutralize chlorine. a liquid applied to the hair after shampooing to improve its condition: conditioner will protect your hair from damage.

 

Oxford Dictionary

condition

con |di ¦tion |kənˈdɪʃ (ə )n | noun 1 [ mass noun ] [ usu. with adj. ] the state of something with regard to its appearance, quality, or working order: the wiring is in good condition | [ in sing. ] : the bridge is in an extremely dangerous condition. a person's or animal's state of health or physical fitness: the baby was in good condition at birth | [ in sing. ] : she was in a serious condition. [ count noun ] [ often with modifier ] an illness or other medical problem: a heart condition. [ in sing. ] the situation in life of a particular group: the sorrows of the human condition. archaic social position: those of humbler condition. 2 (conditions ) the circumstances or factors affecting the way in which people live or work, especially with regard to their well-being: harsh working and living conditions. the factors or prevailing situation influencing the performance or outcome of a process: present market conditions. the prevailing state of the weather, ground, or sea at a particular time, especially as it affects a sporting event: the appalling conditions determined the style of play. 3 a situation that must exist before something else is possible or permitted: for a member to borrow money, three conditions have to be met | all personnel should comply with this policy as a condition of employment. verb [ with obj. ] 1 have a significant influence on or determine (the manner or outcome of something ): national choices are conditioned by the international political economy. train or accustom to behave in a certain way or to accept certain circumstances: our minds are heavily conditioned and circumscribed by habit | [ with obj. and infinitive ] : they are beliefs which he has been conditioned to accept | (as noun conditioning ) : social conditioning. 2 bring (something ) into the desired state for use: a product for conditioning leather. (often as adj. conditioned ) make (a person or animal ) fit and healthy: he was six feet two of perfectly conditioned muscle and bone. (often as adj. conditioned ) bring (beer ) to maturation after fermentation while the yeast is still present: [ in combination ] : cask-conditioned real ales. [ no obj. ] (of a beer ) become conditioned: brews that are allowed to condition in the bottle. 3 apply a conditioner to (the hair ): I condition my hair regularly. 4 set prior requirements on (something ) before it can occur or be done: Congressmen have sought to limit and condition military and economic aid. PHRASES in (or out of ) condition in a fit (or unfit ) physical state. in no condition to do something certainly not fit or well enough to do something: you're in no condition to tackle the stairs. on condition that with the stipulation that: I got three years' probation, on condition that I stay at the hostel for a year. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French condicion (noun ), condicionner (verb ), from Latin condicio (n- )agreement , from condicere agree upon , from con- with + dicere say .

 

conditional

con |di ¦tion ¦al |kənˈdɪʃ (ə )n (ə )l | adjective 1 subject to one or more conditions or requirements being met: the consortium have made a conditional offer | Western aid was only granted conditional on further reform. 2 Grammar (of a clause, phrase, conjunction, or verb form ) expressing a condition. noun 1 Grammar & Philosophy a conditional clause or conjunction. a sentence containing a conditional clause. 2 [ mass noun ] Grammar the conditional mood of a verb, for example should in if I should die . DERIVATIVES conditionality |-ˈnalɪti |noun, conditionally adverb

 

conditional discharge

con |di ¦tion ¦al dis |charge noun an order made by a criminal court whereby an offender will not be sentenced for an offence unless a further offence is committed within a stated period.

 

conditional probability

con |di ¦tion ¦al prob |abil ¦ity noun Statistics the probability of an event ( A ), given that another ( B ) has already occurred.

 

conditional sale

con |di ¦tion ¦al sale noun the sale of goods according to a contract under which ownership does not pass to the buyer until after a set time, usually after payment of the last instalment of the purchase price, although the buyer has possession and is committed to acquiring ownership.

 

condition code

con |di ¦tion code noun Computing a group of bits indicating the condition of something inside a computer, often used to decide which instructions the computer will subsequently execute.

 

conditioned response

conditioned response (also conditioned reflex ) noun Psychology an automatic response established by training to an ordinarily neutral stimulus.

 

conditioner

con |di ¦tion ¦er |kənˈdɪʃ (ə )nə | noun a substance or appliance used to improve the condition of something: add a water conditioner to neutralize chlorine. a liquid applied to the hair after shampooing to improve its condition.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

condition

condition noun 1 check the condition of your wiring: state, shape, order. 2 they lived in appalling conditions: circumstances, surroundings, environment, situation, setup, setting, habitat. 3 she was in top condition: fitness, health, form, shape, trim, fettle. 4 a liver condition: disorder, problem, complaint, illness, disease, ailment, sickness, affliction, infection, upset. 5 a condition of membership: stipulation, constraint, prerequisite, precondition, requirement, rule, term, specification, provision, proviso. verb 1 their choices are conditioned by the economy: constrain, control, govern, determine, decide; affect, touch; form, shape, guide, sway, bias. 2 our minds are conditioned by habit: train, teach, educate, guide; accustom, adapt, habituate, mold, inure. 3 condition the boards with water: treat, prepare, prime, temper, process, acclimatize, acclimate, season. 4 a product to condition your skin: improve, nourish, tone (up ), moisturize.

 

conditional

conditional adjective 1 their approval is conditional on success: subject to, dependent on, contingent on, based on, determined by, controlled by, tied to. 2 a conditional offer: contingent, dependent, qualified, with reservations, limited, provisional, provisory.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

condition

condition noun 1 visually check the condition of your wiring: state, shape, order; Brit. informal nick. 2 (conditions ) refugees were living in appalling conditions: circumstances, surroundings; environment, situation, state of affairs, set-up, position, context, background, setting, ambience, atmosphere, climate, milieu, habitat, way of life; informal circs. 3 he had the body of an athlete in tip-top condition: fitness, physical fitness, health, state of health, form, shape, trim, fettle. 4 a serious medical condition: disorder, problem, defect, disease, illness, complaint, ailment, weakness, infirmity, malady, indisposition, malaise, sickness, affliction, infection, upset; informal bug, virus; Brit. informal lurgy. 5 it is a condition of employment that employees should be paid through a bank: stipulation, constraint, prerequisite, precondition, requirement, rule, term, specification, provision, proviso, qualification; necessity, essential, demand, restriction. PHRASES out of condition maybe I can stop and rest my hopelessly out of condition body: unfit, unhealthy, out of shape, in poor condition, in poor shape, flabby, debilitated, weak, infirm, decrepit. ANTONYMS fit. verb 1 national choices are conditioned by the international political economy: constrain, control, govern, determine, decide; exert influence on, affect, have an effect on, act on, work on, touch, have an impact on, impact on; change, alter, modify, transform, form, shape, guide, sway, bias. 2 our minds are heavily conditioned by habit: train, teach, educate, coach, tutor, guide, groom, drill, accustom, adapt, habituate, mould, inure. 3 the boards will need to be conditioned with water: treat, prepare, make ready, ready, prime, temper, process, acclimatize, acclimate, adapt, adjust, soften, season. 4 some products contain vitamin E to condition your skin: improve, make healthy, build up, nourish, tone, tone up, get something into shape.

 

conditional

conditional adjective 1 the supporters' approval is conditional on success: subject to, dependent on, depending on, contingent on, hingeing on, resting on, hanging on, based on, determined by, controlled by, tied to, bound up with. ANTONYMS unconditional. 2 he was only made a conditional offer of a university place: contingent, dependent, qualified, with conditions (attached ), with reservations, limited, restrictive, provisional; rare stipulatory, provisory. ANTONYMS unconditional; absolute.

 

Duden Dictionary

Conditionalis

Con di ti o na lis , der Konditional |Condition a lis |

 

Conditioner

Con di tio ner Substantiv, maskulin Jargon , der |kənˈdɪʃənɐ |englisch conditioner = etwas, was die Beschaffenheit von etwas verbessert, zu: condition, Kondition Haarfestiger

 

French Dictionary

condition

condition n. f. nom féminin 1 Situation. : Il est de condition modeste. 2 État du corps, de l ’esprit. : Ils sont en bonne condition physique grâce à leur entraînement quotidien. 3 Exigence, circonstance dont dépend l ’accomplissement d ’une action. : Une condition essentielle au succès de la fête, c ’est de garder le secret. Poser des conditions. LOCUTIONS À condition de Sous réserve de. : À condition d ’avoir congé ce jour-là, je serai présente. Note Syntaxique La locution est suivie de l ’infinitif. À condition que Pourvu que. : J ’irai à la fête à condition que tu viennes aussi. Note Syntaxique Cette locution est généralement suivie du subjonctif. À la condition, sous la condition que Pourvu que. : Tu peux venir, à la condition d ’être gentil, que tu sois gentil ou que tu seras gentil. Note Syntaxique Cette locution est suivie de l ’infinitif, du subjonctif ou de l ’indicatif futur. Condition sine qua non. Condition indispensable. Dans ces conditions. Puisqu ’il en est ainsi, dans ce contexte. condition. Anglicisme au sens de maladie, état de santé. : Il souffre d ’une maladie (et non *condition ) cardiaque. Son état de santé (et non *sa condition ) est précaire.

 

conditionné

conditionné , ée adj. adjectif 1 Soumis à certaines conditions. 2 Qui a subi un conditionnement. : Des produits conditionnés de façon attrayante. LOCUTION Air conditionné. Atmosphère d ’un lieu à laquelle on a donné une certaine température à l ’aide d ’un climatiseur ou d ’un conditionneur d ’air. : En l ’absence d ’air conditionné, il fera très chaud dans cet appartement au cours de l ’été. Un cinéma à air conditionné. SYNONYME air climatisé .

 

conditionnel

conditionnel , elle adj. et n. m. adjectif Qui dépend de certaines conditions. : Ce contrat est conditionnel à la vente de la propriété. nom masculin grammaire Temps du verbe exprimant un vœu, un désir, un regret ou un fait soumis à une condition, un futur hypothétique en quelque sorte. tableau conditionnel.

 

conditionnellement

conditionnellement adv. adverbe De façon conditionnelle.

 

conditionnement

conditionnement n. m. nom masculin 1 Préparation. : Le conditionnement des viandes. Le conditionnement de l ’air. SYNONYME traitement . 2 Présentation de certains produits destinés à la vente. : Un conditionnement très élégant. Note Technique Ce nom a fait l ’objet d ’une recommandation pour remplacer l ’anglicisme *packaging. LOCUTION Conditionnement physique. Mise en forme par des exercices.

 

conditionner

conditionner v. tr. , pronom. verbe transitif 1 Traiter. : Conditionner des marchandises. 2 Emballer. : Conditionner des produits de beauté. SYNONYME présenter . 3 Constituer la condition de. : Le choix des articles conditionnera le succès de l ’entreprise. psychologie Se mettre en condition de, se préparer mentalement. : Elles se sont conditionnées à relever ce défi. Note Grammaticale À la forme pronominale, le participe passé de ce verbe s ’accorde toujours en genre et en nombre avec son sujet. Les concepteurs de ce bâtiment se sont conditionnés à protéger l ’environnement le plus possible. aimer

 

conditionneur

conditionneur n. m. nom masculin Appareil qui conditionne. : Un conditionneur d ’air.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

condition

con di tion /kəndɪ́ʃ (ə )n /con (共に )dition (話すこと )〗名詞 s /-z /1 U (物の )状態 ; (人の )体調 , 調子 ; (選手 機械などの )コンディション ; «…できる » 健康状態 «to do » (!具体例では時にa ~; その際修飾語を伴う ) be in (a ) good [in (a ) bad, out of ] condition 調子がよい [悪い ]keep in peak condition 絶好調を保つ ▸ I didn't return the book in that condition .⦅話 ⦆そんな (ひどい )状態で僕は君に本を返していないよ be in no condition to go on a trip とても旅行できるような状態ではない The patients remain in (a ) critical [serious ] condition .患者たちは危篤状態が続いている 2 s 〗(周囲の )状況 , 事情, 環境 ; 気象条件 housing conditions 住宅事情 under the current [present ] conditions 現状では work in appalling conditions ひどい環境の中で働く improve pay and conditions 給与と (労働 )条件を改善する windy [freezing ] conditions 風の強い [凍えるような ]天候 .3 C «…の /…という » (法律 契約上の )条件 ; 必要条件 «of , for /that 節 » impose [set down, lay down ] a strict condition 厳しい条件を提示する meet [satisfy ] the necessary conditions for survival 生き延びるための必要条件を満たす under certain conditions 一定の条件の下に according to the terms and conditions of the contract その契約の条件によれば We'll take you with us on one condition .君を連れていってもいいがそれには1つ条件がある 4 C (長期間にわたる )病気 He has been suffering from a serious heart [lung ] condition .彼は心臓 [肺 ]を患っている 5 かたく 〖単数形で 〗境遇 ; C ⦅古 ⦆身分 , 地位 .6 C ⦅米 ⦆追試験受験資格 .7 C 文法 条件節 []; 〘論 〙条件, 前項 .on (the ) cond tion (that ) ……という条件で, もし ならば (only if )(if 接続詞 1 表現 )On condition that her name be [is ] not used, she told us the truth .名前を出さないという条件で彼女は真相を語ってくれた on [⦅米 ⦆under ] n c ndition かたく どんな条件でも …ない You should on no condition [On no condition should you ] break this contract .いかなる場合もこの契約を破棄してはいけない 動詞 他動詞 1 〖通例be ed 〈人 動物が 〉 «…に /…するように » 慣れている , 訓練されている , 条件づけられている «to ,into /to do , into do ing » (conditioning )We are conditioned to bad news [to expect nothing from him ].私たちは悪い知らせ [彼から何も期待できないこと ]に慣れてしまっている .2 かたく 〖通例be ed 〈物 事が 〉制約を受ける, 左右 [決定 ]される Our judgments on politics are completely conditioned by the mass media .我々の政治判断は完全にマスコミに左右されている 3 …の調子を整える ; 〈髪 肌 〉をよい [健康な ]状態にする (conditioner ); (冷暖房で )〈空気 の調整をする .4 ⦅米 ⦆学生 に追試験をする .5 商品 の品質検査をする .自動詞 (髪 肌の )調子を整える .

 

conditional

con di tion al /kəndɪ́ʃ (ə )n (ə )l /形容詞 比較なし 1 〈契約などが 〉条件付きの ; «…を » 条件としての ; «…» 次第の «on , upon » (unconditioned ).2 名詞 の前で 〗文法 条件を表す .名詞 C 文法 条件文 [節 ]; the 条件法 .~̀ disch rge ⦅英 ⦆〘法 〙条件付き釈放 (判決 ).con d tion l i ty 名詞 U 条件付きであること .ly 副詞 条件付きで .

 

conditioned

con d tioned 形容詞 1 〖複合語で 〗…の状態にある well- conditioned よい状態の 2 条件付けられた ▸ a conditioned reflex [response ]条件反射 3 (冷暖房で )調節された .

 

conditioner

con d tion er 名詞 1 U C (髪 肌用 )コンディショナー, トリートメント, 乳液 .2 U C ⦅英 ⦆(洗濯用 )柔軟剤, 仕上げ液 (⦅英 ⦆softener ).3 調節 [調教 ]する人 .

 

conditioning

con d tion ing 名詞 U 1 (人 動物などの )条件付け ; (動物の )調教 .2 (体調などの )調整 .