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English-Thai Dictionary

cumulate

VI รวบรวม  accumulate collect ruab-ruam

 

cumulate

VT ทำให้ รวมกัน  รวม เป็นหนึ่ง  merge tam-hai-ruam-kan

 

cumulate

VT รวบรวม  accumulate collect ruab-ruam

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

CUMULATE

v.t.[L., a heap. ] To gather or throw into a heap; to form a heap; to heap together. [Accumulate is more generally used. ]

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

CUMULATE

Cu "mu *late (k "m-lt ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Cumulated (-l `td ); p. pr. &vb. n. Cumulating (-l `tng ).] Etym: [L. cumulatus, p. p. of cumulare to heap up, fr. cumulus a heap. See Cumber. ]

 

Defn: To gather or throw into a heap; to heap together; to accumulate. Shoals of shells, bedded and cumulated heap upon heap. Woodward.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

cumulate

cu mu late verb |ˈkyo͞omyəˌlāt ˈkjumjəleɪt | [ with obj. ] gather together and combine: the systems cumulate data over a period of years. [ no obj. ] be gathered together and combined: all unpaid dividend payments cumulate and are paid when earnings are sufficient. (as adj. cumulated ) Chemistry denoting two double bonds attached to the same carbon atom. noun |ˈkyo͞omyəˌlit ˈkjuːmjʊlət |Geology an igneous rock formed by gravitational settling of particles in a magma. DERIVATIVES cu mu la tion |ˌkyo͞omyəˈlāSHən |noun ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (as a verb in the sense gather in a heap ): from Latin cumulat- heaped, from the verb cumulare, from cumulus a heap. Current senses date from the early 20th cent.

 

Oxford Dictionary

cumulate

cu ¦mu |late verb |ˈkjuːmjʊleɪt | 1 [ with obj. ] gather together and combine: the systems cumulate data over a period of years. [ no obj. ] be gathered together and combined: all unpaid dividend payments cumulate and are paid when earnings are sufficient. 2 (as adj. cumulated ) Chemistry denoting two double bonds attached to the same carbon atom. noun |ˈkjuːmjʊlət |Geology an igneous rock formed by gravitational settling of particles in a magma. DERIVATIVES cumulation |-ˈleɪʃ (ə )n |noun ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (as a verb in the sense gather in a heap ): from Latin cumulat- heaped , from the verb cumulare, from cumulus a heap . Current senses date from the early 20th cent.