English-Thai Dictionary
conquer
VI ชนะ cha-na
conquer
VT ชนะ defeat win overcome cha-na
conquer
VT ได้มา ด้วย การ ชนะสงคราม dai-ma-duai-kan-cha-na-song-kram
conqueror
N ผู้มีชัย ชนะ
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CONQUER
v.t. 1. To subdue; to reduce, by physical force, till resistance is no longer made; to overcome; to vanquish. Alexander conquered Asia. The Romans conquered Carthage.
2. To gain by force; to win; to take possession by violent means; to gain dominion or sovereignty over, as the subduing of the power of an enemy generally implies possession of the person or thing subdued by the conqueror. Thus, a king or an army conquers a country, or a city, which is afterward restored.
3. To subdue opposition or resistance of the will by moral force; to overcome by argument, persuasion or other influence.
Anna conquers but to save, and governs but to bless.
He went forth conquering, and to conquer. Revelation 6:2.
4. To overcome, as difficulties; to surmount, as obstacles; to subdue whatever opposes; as, to conquer the passions; to conquer reluctance.
5. To gain or obtain by effort; as, to conquer freedom; to conquer peace; a French application of the word.
CONQUER
v.i.To overcome; to gain the victory. The champions resolved to conquer or to die.
CONQUERABLE
a.That may be conquered, overcome or subdued.
CONQUERED
pp. Overcome; subdued; vanquished; gained; won.
CONQUERESS
n.A female who conquers; a victorious female.
CONQUERING
ppr. Overcoming; subduing; vanquishing; obtaining.
CONQUEROR
n.One who conquers; one who gains a victory; one who subdues and brings into subjection or possession, by force or by influence. The man who defeats his antagonist in combat is a conqueror, as is the general or admiral who defeats his enemy.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CONQUER
Con "quer, v. t. [imp. & p.p. Conquered; p.pr. & vb. n. Conquering. ]Etym: [OF. conquerre, F. conquérir, fr. L. conquirere, -quisitum, to seek or search for, to bring together, LL. , to conquer; con- + quaerere to seek. See Quest. ]
1. To gain or acquire by force; to take possession of by violent means; to gain dominion over; to subdue by physical means; to reduce; to overcome by force of arms; to cause to yield; to vanquish. "If thou conquer Rome. " Shak. If we be conquer'd, let men conquer us. Shak. We conquered France, but felt our captive's charms. Pope.
2. To subdue or overcome by mental or moral power; to surmount; as, to conquer difficulties, temptatin, etc. By winning words to conquer hearts, And make persuasion do the work of fear. Milton.
3. To gain or obtain, overcoming obstacles in the way; to win; as, to conquer freedom; to conquer a peace.
Syn. -- To subdue; vanquish; overcome; overpower; overthrow; defeat; rout; discomfit; subjugate; reduce; humble; crush; surmount; subject; master. -- To Conquer, Vanquish, Subdue, Subjugate, Overcome. These words agree in the general idea expressed by overcome, -- that of bringing under one's power by the exertion of force. Conquer is wider and more general than vanquish, denoting usually a succession of conflicts.Vanquish is more individual, and refers usually to a single conflict. Thus, Alexander conquered Asia in a succession of battles, and vanquished Darius in one decisive engagement. Subdue implies a more gradual and continual pressure, but a surer and more final subjection. We speak of a nation as subdued when its spirit is at last broken, so that no further resistance is offered. Subjugate is to bring completely under the yoke of bondage. The ancient Gauls were never finally subdued by the Romans until they were completely subjugated. These words, when used figuratively, have correspondent meanings. We conquer our prejudices or aversions by a succesion of conflicts; but we sometimes vanquish our reluctance to duty by one decided effort: we endeavor to subdue our evil propensities by watchful and persevering exertions. Subjugate is more commonly taken in its primary meaning, and when used figuratively has generally a bad sense; as, his reason was completely subjugated to the sway of his passions.
CONQUER
CONQUER Con "quer, v. i.
Defn: To gain the victory; to overcome; to prevail. He went forth conquering and to conquer. Rev. vi. 2. The champions resolved to conquer or to die. Waller.
CONQUERABLE
CONQUERABLE Con *quer *a *ble, a.
Defn: Capable of being conquered or subdued. South. -- Con "quer *a *ble *ness, n.
CONQUERESS
CONQUERESS Con "quer *ess, n.
Defn: A woman who conquers. Fairfax.
CONQUEROR
Con "quer *or, n. Etym: [OF. conquereor, fr. conquerre,]
Defn: One who conquers. The Conqueror (Eng. Hist. ). William the Norman (1 27 -1 67 ) who invaded England, defeated Harold in the battle of Hastings, and was crowned king, in 1 66.
New American Oxford Dictionary
conquer
con quer |ˈkäNGkər ˈkɑŋkər | ▶verb [ with obj. ] overcome and take control of (a place or people ) by use of military force: the Magyars conquered Hungary in the Middle Ages. • successfully overcome (a problem or weakness ): a fear she never managed to conquer. • climb (a mountain ) successfully: the second American to conquer Everest. • gain the love, admiration, or respect of (a person or group of people ): the Beatles were to leave Liverpool and conquer the world. DERIVATIVES con quer a ble |-k (ə )rəbəl |adjective ORIGIN Middle English (also in the general sense ‘acquire, attain ’): from Old French conquerre, based on Latin conquirere ‘gain, win, ’ from con- (expressing completion ) + quaerere ‘seek. ’
conqueror
con quer or |ˈkäNGkərər ˈkɑːŋkərər | ▶noun a person who conquers a place or people: a people ruled over by a foreign conqueror | figurative : a chance for revenge against his Olympic conqueror.
Oxford Dictionary
conquer
con |quer |ˈkɒŋkə | ▶verb [ with obj. ] overcome and take control of (a place or people ) by military force: he conquered Cyprus | figurative : they've conquered new markets in Japan. (as adj. conquered ) : a conquered people. • successfully overcome (a problem or weakness ): a fear she never managed to conquer. • climb (a mountain ) successfully: the second Briton to conquer Everest. • gain the love, admiration, or respect of (a person or group of people ): the Beatles were to leave Liverpool and conquer the world. DERIVATIVES conquerable adjective ORIGIN Middle English (also in the general sense ‘acquire, attain ’): from Old French conquerre, based on Latin conquirere ‘gain, win ’, from con- (expressing completion ) + quaerere ‘seek ’.
conqueror
con |queror |ˈkɒŋk (ə )rə (r )| ▶noun a person who conquers a place or people; a vanquisher: a people ruled over by a foreign conqueror | figurative : a chance for revenge against his Olympic conqueror.
American Oxford Thesaurus
conquer
conquer verb 1 the Franks conquered the Visigoths: defeat, beat, vanquish, trounce, triumph over, be victorious over, get the better of, worst; overcome, overwhelm, overpower, overthrow, subdue, subjugate, quell, quash, crush, rout; informal lick, best, hammer, clobber, thrash, paste, demolish, annihilate, wipe the floor with, walk all over, make mincemeat of, massacre, slaughter, cream, shellac, skunk. 2 Peru was conquered by Spain: seize, take (over ), appropriate, subjugate, capture, occupy, invade, annex, overrun. 3 the first men to conquer Mount Everest: climb, ascend, mount, scale, top, crest. 4 the way to conquer fear: overcome, get the better of, control, master, get a grip on, deal with, cope with, surmount, rise above, get over; quell, quash, beat, triumph over; informal lick.
conqueror
conqueror noun they may have uncovered the burial ground of legendary conqueror Genghis Khan: vanquisher, conquistador; victor, winner, champion, conquering hero.
Oxford Thesaurus
conquer
conquer verb 1 the Franks conquered the Visigoths in the South of France: defeat, beat, vanquish, trounce, annihilate, triumph over, be victorious over, best, get the better of, worst, bring someone to their knees, overcome, overwhelm, overpower, overthrow, subdue, subjugate, put down, quell, quash, crush, repress, rout; informal lick, hammer, clobber, thrash, paste, pound, pulverize, demolish, destroy, drub, give someone a drubbing, cane, wipe the floor with, walk all over, give someone a hiding, take to the cleaners, blow someone out of the water, make mincemeat of, murder, massacre, slaughter, flatten, turn inside out, tank; Brit. informal stuff; N. Amer. informal blow out, cream, shellac, skunk, slam. ANTONYMS lose to. 2 Peru had been conquered by Spain: seize, take possession of, take control of, take over, appropriate, subjugate, capture, occupy, invade, annex, overrun, win. ANTONYMS liberate, lose. 3 the first men to conquer Mount Everest: climb, ascend, mount, scale, top, crest. 4 the only way to conquer fear is to face it: overcome, get the better of, control, get control of, master, gain mastery over, get a grip on, deal with, cope with, surmount, rise above, get over; curb, subdue, repress, quell, quash, defeat, vanquish, beat, triumph over, prevail over; informal lick. ANTONYMS yield to.
conqueror
conqueror noun Robert Clive was known as the conqueror of Bengal: vanquisher, defeater, subjugator; victor, winner, champion, hero, conquering hero, lord, master; Spanish conquistador. ANTONYMS vanquished; loser.
French Dictionary
conquérant
conquérant , ante adj. et n. m. et f. adjectif et nom masculin et féminin Qui fait, qui a fait des conquêtes en combattant. : Hannibal était un conquérant habile. SYNONYME vainqueur .
conquérir
conquérir v. tr. verbe transitif 1 Acquérir par les armes, par l ’effort. : Conquérir le pouvoir. Les Anglais ont conquis la Nouvelle-France. SYNONYME vaincre . 2 Gagner, séduire. : Il a conquis son auditoire. SYNONYME captiver ; charmer . acquérir INDICATIF PRÉSENT Je conquiers, tu conquiers, il conquiert, nous conquérons, vous conquérez, ils conquièrent. IMPARFAIT Je conquérais. PASSÉ SIMPLE Je conquis, nous conquîmes. FUTUR Je conquerrai, tu conquerras, il conquerra, nous conquerrons, vous conquerrez, ils conquerront. CONDITIONNEL PRÉSENT Je conquerrais, tu conquerrais, il conquerrait, nous conquerrions, vous conquerriez, ils conquerraient. IMPÉRATIF PRÉSENT Conquiers, conquérons, conquérez. SUBJONCTIF PRÉSENT Que je conquière, que tu conquières, qu ’il conquière, que nous conquérions, que vous conquériez, qu ’ils conquièrent. IMPARFAIT Que je conquisse. PARTICIPE PRÉSENT Conquérant. PASSÉ Conquis, ise. Conjugaison À noter qu ’il n ’y a pas de c devant qu, contrairement au verbe acquérir.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
conquer
con quer /kɑ́ŋkə r |kɔ́ŋ -/〖con (完全に )quer (探す, 求める )〗(名 )conqueror, conquest 動詞 ~s /-z /; ~ed /-d /; ~ing 他動詞 1 〈人 国などが 〉〈敵 国 〉を征服する ; (征服して )〈領土 〉を獲得する ; (試合で )〈相手 〉を打ち負かす ▸ conquer the world 世界を征服する ▸ Britain conquered Sudan in 1899 .英国はスーダンを1899年に征服した 2 〈人が 〉〈病気 困難 障害など 〉を克服する ; 〈感情 〉を抑える ; 〈 (未登頂の )山 〉を征服する ▸ conquer cancer [every obstacle ]癌 (がん )[あらゆる障害 ]を克服する ▸ conquer one's fear 恐怖心を乗り越える 3 ⦅主に文 ⦆〈名声 賞賛 愛など 〉を得る , 獲得する ; 〈異性 〉を口説き落とす ▸ conquer A's heart A 〈人 〉の心をとらえる 4 〈国 都市など 〉で成功する , 人気者 [有名 ]になる ▸ conquer America as a comedian コメディアンとしてアメリカで成功する 自動詞 征服する ; ⦅文 ⦆勝利を得る , 勝つ ▸ stoop to conquer 負けて勝つ, 勝利を得るために (ひとまず )折れる .~̀ ing h é ro 凱旋 (がいせん )の英雄 .~a ble 形容詞 征服 [克服 ]できる .
conqueror
con quer or /kɑ́ŋk (ə )rə r |kɔ́ŋ -/→conquer 名詞 複 ~s /-z /C 1 征服者, (戦争などの最終的 )勝者 ; ⦅報道 ⦆(スポーツなどの )勝者 ▸ William the Conqueror ウィリアム征服王 (→William 2 ).2 ⦅英 ⦆=conker .