English-Thai Dictionary
danger
N คน หรือ สิ่ง ที่ ก่อให้เกิด อันตราย kon-rue-sing-ti-kor-hai-koed-an-ta-rai
danger
N อันตราย ภัย ภัยอันตราย ภยันตราย การ เสี่ยงภัย ความ ไม่ปลอดภัย สถานการณ์ อันตราย peril hazard risk safety an-ta-rai
dangerful
A ที่ เต็มไปด้วย อันตราย
dangerless
A ที่ ปราศจาก อันตราย
dangerous
ADJ ซึ่ง เป็นอันตราย ไม่ปลอดภัย เป็น ภัย อยู่ ใน ระหว่าง อันตราย perilous unsafe hazardous seang-pen-an-ta-rai
dangerously
ADV อย่าง เป็นอันตราย อย่าง ไม่ปลอดภัย อย่าง เป็น ภัย perilously;hazardously yang-pen-an-ta-rai
dangle
VI ห้อย หลวมๆ ห้อย แกว่งไปแกว่งมา hang sway hoi-luam-luam
dangle
VT ห้อย หลวมๆ ห้อย แกว่งไปแกว่งมา hang sway hoi-luam-luam
dangle about
PHRV ตามตื๊อ ตาม จีบ ตาม จีบ dangle around tam-tue
dangle about
PHRV ห้อย ไว้ แกว่ง ไปมา dangle around hoi-wai
dangle around
PHRV ตามตื๊อ ตาม จีบ ตาม จีบ dangle about tam-tue
dangle around
PHRV ห้อย ไว้ แกว่ง ไปมา dangle about hoi-wai
dangle before
PHRV แกว่ง เล่น อยู่ ข้างหน้า ห้อย ไว้ ข้างหน้า kwaeng-len-yu-kang-na
dangle from
PHRV แขวน ไว้ ตรง ที่ ห้อย ไว้ ที่ kwaen-wai-trong-ti
dangle round
PHRV ตามตื๊อ ตาม จีบ ตาม จีบ dangle about tam-tue
dangle round
PHRV ห้อย ไว้ แกว่ง ไปมา dangle about hoi-wai
dangleberry
N ผลไม้ ลูก เล็ก สีน้ำเงิน ดำ กิน ได้ tangleberry huckleberry
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DANGER
n.Peril; risk; hazard; exposure to injury, loss, pain or other evil. Our craft is in danger to be set at nought. Acts 19:27.
It is easy to boast of despising death, when there is no danger.
DANGER
v.t.To put in hazard; to expose to loss or injury.
DANGERLESS
a.Free from danger; without risk.
DANGEROUS
a. 1. Perilous; hazardous; exposing to loss; unsafe; full of risk; as a dangerous voyage; a dangerous experiment.
2. Creating danger; causing risk of evil; as a dangerous man; a dangerous conspiracy.
DANGEROUSLY
adv. With danger; with risk of evil; with exposure to injury or ruin; hazardously; perilously; as, to be dangerously sick; dangerously situated.
DANGEROUSNESS
n.Danger; hazard; peril; a state of being exposed to evil; as the dangerousness of condition, of disease.
DANGLE
v.i. 1. To hang loose, flowing, shaking or waving; to hang and swing.
He'd rather on a gibbet dangle. Hudibras.
2. To hang on any one; to be a humble, officious follower; with after or about; as, to dangle about a woman; to dangle after a minister for favors.
DANGLER
n.One who dangles or hangs about.
DANGLING
ppr. Hanging loosely; busily or officiously adhering to.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DANG
DANG Dang,
Defn: imp. of Ding. [Obs. ]
DANG
Dang, v. t. Etym: [Cf. Ding. ]
Defn: To dash. [Obs. ] Till she, o'ercome with anguish, shame, and rage, Danged down to hell her loathsome carriage. Marlowe.
DANGER
Dan "ger, n. Etym: [OE. danger, daunger, power, arrogance, refusal, difficulty, fr. OF. dagier, dongier (with same meaning ), F. danger danger, fr. an assumed LL. dominiarium power, authority, from L. dominium power, property. See Dungeon, Domain, Dame. ]
1. Authority; jurisdiction; control. [Obs. ] In dangerhad he. .. the young girls. Chaucer.
2. Power to harm; subjection or liability to penalty. [Obs. ] See In one's danger, below. You stand within his danger, do you not Shak. Covetousness of gains hath brought [them ] in dangerof this statute. Robynson (More's Utopia ).
3. Exposure to injury, loss, pain, or other evil; peril; risk; insecurity.
4. Difficulty; sparingness. [Obs. ] Chaucer.
5. Coyness; disdainful behavior. [Obs. ] Chaucer. In one's danger, in one's power; liable to a penalty to be inflicted by him. [Obs. ] This sense is retained in the proverb, "Out of debt out of danger. " Those rich man in whose debt and danger they be not. Robynson (More's Utopia ). -- To do danger, to cause danger. [Obs. ] Shak.
Syn. -- Peril; hazard; risk; jeopardy. -- Danger, Peril, Hazard, Risk, Jeopardy. Danger is the generic term, and implies some contingent evil in prospect. Peril is instant or impending danger; as, in peril of one's life. Hazard arises from something fortuitous or beyond our control; as, the hazard of the seas. Risk is doubtful or uncertain danger, often incurred voluntarily; as, to risk an engagement. Jeopardy is extreme danger. Danger of a contagious disease; the perils of shipwreck; the hazards of speculation; the risk of daring enterprises; a life brought into jeopardy.
DANGER
DANGER Dan "ger, v. t.
Defn: To endanger. [Obs. ] Shak.
DANGERFUL
DANGERFUL Dan "ger *ful, a.
Defn: Full of danger; dangerous. [Obs. ] -- Dan "ger *ful *ly, adv. [Obs. ] Udall.
DANGERLESS
DANGERLESS Dan "ger *less, a.
Defn: Free from danger. [R.]
DANGEROUS
Dan "ger *ous, a. Etym: [OE. , haughty, difficult, dangerous, fr. OF. dangereus, F. dangereux. See Danger. ]
1. Attended or beset with danger; full of risk; perilous; hazardous; unsafe. Our troops set forth to-morrow; stay with us; The ways are dangerous. Shak. It is dangerous to assert a negative. Macaulay.
2. Causing danger; ready to do harm or injury. If they incline to think you dangerous To less than gods. Milton.
3. In a condition of danger, as from illness; threatened with death. [Colloq. ] Forby. Bartlett.
4. Hard to suit; difficult to please. [Obs. ] My wages ben full strait, and eke full small; My lord to me is hard and dangerous. Chaucer.
5. Reserved; not affable. [Obs. ] "Of his speech dangerous. " Chaucer. -- Dan "ger *ous *ly, adv. -- Dan "ger *ous *ness, n.
DANGLE
Dan "gle, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Dangled; p. pr. & vb. n. Dangling. ]Etym: [Akin to Dan. dangle, dial. Sw. dangla, Dan. dingle, Sw. dingla, Icel. dingla; perh. from E. ding. ]
Defn: To hang loosely, or with a swinging or jerking motion. he'd rather on a gibbet dangle Than miss his dear delight, to wrangle. Hudibras. From her lifted hand Dangled a length of ribbon. Tennyson. To dangle about or after, to hang upon importunately; to court the favor of; to beset. The Presbyterians, and other fanatics that dangle after them, are well inclined to pull down the present establishment. Swift.
DANGLE
DANGLE Dan "gle, v. t.
Defn: To cause to dangle; to swing, as something suspended loosely; as, to dangle the feet. And the bridegroom stood dangling his bonnet and plume. Sir W. Scott.
DANGLEBERRY
DANGLEBERRY Dan "gle *ber `ry, n. (Bot. )
Defn: A dark blue, edible berry with a white bloom, and its shrub (Gaylussacia frondosa ) closely allied to the common huckleberry. The bush is also called blue tangle, and is found from New England to Kentucky, and southward.
DANGLER
DANGLER Dan "gler, n.
Defn: One who dangles about or after others, especially after women; a trifler. " Danglers at toilets." Burke.
New American Oxford Dictionary
dang
dang |daNG dæŋ | ▶adjective exclam., & verb informal euphemism for damn: [ as adj. ] : just get the dang car started! | [ as exclamation ] : dang it, Phil, stop snoring! | [ as verb ] : I'll be danged.
danger
dan ger |ˈdānjər ˈdeɪnʤər | ▶noun the possibility of suffering harm or injury: his life was in danger . • a person or thing that is likely to cause harm or injury: infertile soils where drought is a danger. • the possibility of something unwelcome or unpleasant: there was no danger of the champagne running out. • Brit. the status of a railroad signal indicating that the line is not clear and that a train should not proceed. PHRASES in danger of likely to incur or to suffer from: the animal is in danger of extinction. out of danger (of a person who has suffered a serious injury or illness ) not expected to die. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French dangier, based on Latin dominus ‘lord. ’ The original sense was ‘jurisdiction or power, ’ specifically ‘power to harm, ’ hence the current meaning ‘liability to be harmed. ’
danger list
dan ¦ger list ▶noun Brit. a list of those who are dangerously ill in hospital: he is now off the danger list | the 28 -year-old is still on the danger list . figurative : languages such as Navajo are on the danger list .
danger man
dan ¦ger man ▶noun (in sport ) a player or competitor regarded as posing a particularly serious threat to the opposition.
danger money
danger money (N. Amer. danger pay ) ▶noun [ mass noun ] extra payment for working under dangerous conditions.
dangerous
dan ger ous |ˈdānjərəs ˈdeɪnʤ (ə )rəs | ▶adjective able or likely to cause harm or injury: a dangerous animal | ice was making the roads dangerous. • it is dangerous to underestimate an enemy. • likely to cause problems or to have adverse consequences: our most dangerous opponents in the playoffs | it is dangerous to underestimate an enemy. DERIVATIVES dan ger ous ly adverb, dan ger ous ness noun ORIGIN Middle English (in the senses ‘arrogant, ’ ‘fastidious, ’ and ‘difficult to please ’): from Old French dangereus, from dangier (see danger ).
danger sign
dan ger sign ▶noun an indication that a bad or dangerous situation is likely to develop: parents of young addicts often miss the early danger signs.
danger signal
dan ¦ger sig ¦nal ▶noun 1 a railway signal indicating that the line is not clear and instructing the driver to halt. 2 (also danger sign ) an indication that a bad or dangerous situation is likely to develop: a rise in tobacco use by teenagers, especially girls, is a danger signal.
dangle
dan gle |ˈdaNGgəl ˈdæŋɡəl | ▶verb [ no obj. ] hang or swing loosely: saucepans dangled from a rail | [ with obj. ] : they were dangling their legs over the water. • [ with obj. ] offer (an enticing incentive ) to someone: two rich commissions that had been dangling so sweetly in front of me. PHRASES keep someone dangling keep someone in an uncertain position. DERIVATIVES dan gler |-glər |noun, dan gly |-glē |adjective ORIGIN late 16th cent.: symbolic of something loose and pendulous, corresponding to Danish dangle, Swedish dangla, but the origin is not clear.
dangling
dan gling |ˈdaNGgliNG ˈdæŋɡlɪŋ | ▶adjective hanging or swinging loosely: a pair of dangling earrings.
dangling participle
dan gling par ti ci ple |ˈdaNGg (ə )liNG ˌdæŋɡəlɪŋ ˈpɑrdəsɪpəl | ▶noun Grammar a participle intended to modify a noun that is not actually present in the text. usage: A participle is a word formed as an inflection of the verb, such as arriving or arrived. A dangling participle is one left “hanging ” because, in the grammar of the clause, it does not relate to the noun it should. In the sentence arriving at the station, she picked up her case, the construction is correct because the participle arriving and the subject she relate to each other ( she is the one doing the arriving ). But in the following sentence, a dangling participle has been created: arriving at the station, the sun came out. We know, logically, that it is not the sun that is arriving, but grammatically that is exactly the link that has been created. Such errors are frequent in written English and can give rise to confusion.
Oxford Dictionary
dang
dang |daŋ | ▶adjective, exclamation, & verb N. Amer. informal euphemism for damn: [ as adj. ] : just get the dang car started!
danger
dan ¦ger |ˈdeɪn (d )ʒə | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the possibility of suffering harm or injury: his life was in danger . • [ count noun ] a cause or likely cause of harm or injury: the dangers of smoking. • the possibility of something unwelcome or unpleasant happening: she was in danger of being exploited | there was no danger of the champagne running out. • Brit. the status of a railway signal indicating that the line is not clear and that a train should not proceed. PHRASES out of danger (of a person who has suffered a serious injury or illness ) not expected to die. ORIGIN Middle English (in the sense ‘jurisdiction or power ’, specifically ‘power to harm ’): from Old French dangier, based on Latin dominus ‘lord ’.
danger list
dan ¦ger list ▶noun Brit. a list of those who are dangerously ill in hospital: he is now off the danger list | the 28 -year-old is still on the danger list . figurative : languages such as Navajo are on the danger list .
danger man
dan ¦ger man ▶noun (in sport ) a player or competitor regarded as posing a particularly serious threat to the opposition.
danger money
danger money (N. Amer. danger pay ) ▶noun [ mass noun ] extra payment for working under dangerous conditions.
dangerous
dan ¦ger |ous |ˈdeɪn (d )ʒ (ə )rəs | ▶adjective able or likely to cause harm or injury: a dangerous animal | insecticides which are dangerous to the environment. • likely to cause problems or to have adverse consequences: it is dangerous to convict on his evidence. • (of a drug ) addictive or otherwise harmful or illegal: promoting a dangerous drug for profit. DERIVATIVES dangerously adverb, dangerousness noun ORIGIN Middle English (in the senses ‘arrogant ’, ‘fastidious ’, and ‘difficult to please ’): from Old French dangereus, from dangier (see danger ).
danger sign
dan ger sign ▶noun an indication that a bad or dangerous situation is likely to develop: parents of young addicts often miss the early danger signs.
danger signal
dan ¦ger sig ¦nal ▶noun 1 a railway signal indicating that the line is not clear and instructing the driver to halt. 2 (also danger sign ) an indication that a bad or dangerous situation is likely to develop: a rise in tobacco use by teenagers, especially girls, is a danger signal.
dangle
dan ¦gle |ˈdaŋg (ə )l | ▶verb [ no obj., with adverbial of place ] hang or swing loosely: saucepans dangled from a rail | [ with obj. ] : they were dangling their legs over the water. • [ with obj. ] offer (an enticing incentive ) to someone: the defence portfolio could be the carrot to dangle before him. PHRASES keep someone dangling keep someone in an uncertain position. DERIVATIVES dangler noun, dangly adjective ORIGIN late 16th cent.: symbolic of something loose and pendulous, corresponding to Danish dangle, Swedish dangla, but the origin is unclear.
dangling
dan |gling |ˈdaŋg (ə )lɪŋ, ˈdaŋglɪŋ | ▶adjective hanging or swinging loosely: a pair of dangling earrings.
dangling participle
dan |gling par ¦ti |ciple ▶noun Grammar a participle intended to modify a noun which is not actually present in the text. usage: A participle is a word formed as an inflection of the verb, such as arriving or arrived. A dangling participle is one which is left ‘hanging ’ because, in the grammar of the clause, it does not relate to the noun it should. In the sentence arriving at the station, she picked up her case the construction is correct because the participle arriving and the subject she relate to each other ( she is the one doing the arriving ). But in the following sentence, a dangling participle has been created: arriving at the station, the sun came out. We know, logically, that it is not the sun which is arriving but grammatically that is exactly the link which has been created. Such errors are frequent, even in written English, and can give rise to genuine confusion.
American Oxford Thesaurus
danger
danger noun 1 an element of danger: peril, hazard, risk, jeopardy; perilousness, riskiness, precariousness, uncertainty, instability, insecurity. ANTONYMS safety. 2 that car is a danger on the roads: menace, hazard, threat, risk; informal death trap, widow-maker. 3 a serious danger of fire: possibility, chance, risk, probability, likelihood, fear, prospect.
dangerous
dangerous adjective 1 a dangerous animal: menacing, threatening, treacherous; savage, wild, vicious, murderous, desperate. ANTONYMS harmless. 2 dangerous wiring: hazardous, perilous, risky, high-risk, unsafe, unpredictable, precarious, insecure, touch-and-go, chancy, treacherous; informal dicey, hairy. ANTONYMS safe.
dangle
dangle verb 1 a chain dangled from his belt: hang (down ), droop, swing, sway, wave, trail, stream. 2 he dangled the keys: wave, swing, jiggle, brandish, flourish. 3 he dangled money in front of the locals: offer, hold out; entice someone with, tempt someone with.
dangling
dangling adjective her dangling earrings: hanging, drooping, droopy, suspended, pendulous, pendent, trailing, flowing, tumbling; hanging limply, sagging. WORD TOOLKIT See sagging . Word Toolkits illustrate the difference between close synonyms by means of words typically used with them.
Oxford Thesaurus
danger
danger noun 1 there is an element of danger in the show: peril, hazard, risk, jeopardy, endangerment, imperilment, insecurity; perilousness, riskiness, precariousness, uncertainty, instability. ANTONYMS safety. 2 such people are a danger to society: menace, hazard, threat, risk, peril; source of apprehension, source of dread, source of fright, source of fear, source of terror. 3 there is a serious danger of fire: possibility, chance, risk, probability, likelihood, fear, prospect. CHOOSE THE RIGHT WORD danger, peril, hazard, risk ■ Danger is the most general word for a possibility of suffering harm or injury (they were in great danger ). It can also refer to a likely cause of harm or injury (he is a danger to himself and others ) or, in the plural, to the quality of potentially causing harm (the dangers of smoking ). Danger can have connotations of excitement (the Prince has always enjoyed flirting with danger ). ■ Peril is a more formal or literary word (the self-government of this country is in peril | the immediate peril confronting the world in the early 1940s ), and is normally used in the plural when referring to a quality of something (the perils of drink-driving ). Peril can refer to a possibility of harm that a person may knowingly undergo (we ignore these warnings at our peril ). ■ Hazard is principally used to describe an actual source of danger (lead pipes are a serious hazard to health ), as well as the dangers inherent in something named (cuts and grazes are a hazard of life ). It is used in the plural when referring to the dangerous quality of something (increased official recognition of the hazards of asbestos ). ■ Risk denotes a more predictable possibility of harm arising from an action or a situation, or from an action or object that increases the likelihood of harm (ozone depletion may increase the risk of skin cancer | going on holiday without insurance is always a risk ). A risk may often be a danger that someone chooses to incur because it is outweighed by some other consideration (you're taking a risk by meeting me ).These notes show fine distinctions in meaning between closely related synonyms to help you find the best word.
dangerous
dangerous adjective 1 a dangerous wild animal: menacing, threatening, treacherous; savage, wild, vicious, murderous, desperate; rare minacious. ANTONYMS harmless. 2 overloading a power socket is dangerous: hazardous, perilous, risky, high-risk, fraught with danger, unsafe, uncertain, unpredictable, precarious, insecure, exposed, vulnerable, touch-and-go, chancy, tricky, treacherous; breakneck, reckless, daredevil; Scottish unchancy; informal warm, dicey, sticky, hairy; Brit. informal dodgy; N. Amer. informal gnarly. ANTONYMS safe.
dangle
dangle verb 1 a long chain dangled from his belt: hang (down ), droop, sag, swing, sway, wave, trail, stream; archaic depend. 2 he dangled the speedboat's keys enticingly: wave, swing, flap, jiggle, brandish, flourish, flaunt. 3 the prince dangled money in front of the local chief: offer, hold out; entice someone with, lure someone with, tempt someone with, tantalize someone with, seduce someone with.
dangling
dangling adjective she had long, dangling earrings: hanging, drooping, droopy, suspended, supported from above, pendulous, pendent, swinging, swaying, trailing, flowing, falling, tumbling; rare pensile. WORD TOOLKIT dangling See sagging . Word Toolkits illustrate the difference between close synonyms by means of words typically used with them.
Duden Dictionary
dang
dang dänge dingen |d a ng |
dänge
dän ge dang |d ä nge |
French Dictionary
danger
danger n. m. nom masculin Ce qui représente une menace, ce qui expose à un accident. : Il y a un danger d ’explosion. Elle est en danger de mort. SYNONYME péril ; risque . LOCUTIONS Courir un danger. S ’exposer à un danger. SYNONYME exposer ; risquer . Être un danger public. familier Constituer une menace pour les autres. : Il conduit très, très lentement: c ’est un danger public! Hors de danger. Dont la vie n ’est plus menacée. : Le blessé a été opéré; il est maintenant hors de danger. SYNONYME sain et sauf ; sauvé .
dangereusement
dangereusement adv. adverbe De façon dangereuse. : Ce garçon conduit dangereusement.
dangereux
dangereux , euse adj. adjectif Qui présente du danger. : Il est dangereux d ’escalader ces rochers. SYNONYME périlleux ; risqué . Note Orthographique dangereu x.
dangerosité
dangerosité n. f. nom féminin didactique Fait d ’être dangereux. : La dangerosité de ces produits toxiques.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
danger
dan ger /déɪn (d )ʒə r / (! -a-は /eɪ /) 〖「君主の権力 」>「危害を加える力 」>「危険 」〗(形 )dangerous 名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 U 危険 , 危機 (↔safety ; →risk 名詞 1 )▸ Danger ―Do Not Enter .⦅掲示 ⦆危険 立入禁止 ▸ The refugees will face danger upon their return .難民たちは帰国後は危険にさらされるだろう 2 C «…にとって » 危険な物 [人 ]; 脅威, 脅威となる物 [人 ] «to » ▸ a danger to peace 平和への脅威 ▸ be aware of the dangers of smoking 喫煙の危険性を認識する 3 U (悪い事が起こる )可能性, 恐れ (!具体例ではa ~/~s; その際しばしば修飾語を伴う ) ▸ There is a danger that we will end up in a difficult situation .私たちは最後には困った状況になる可能性がある ▸ There is no real danger of injury .実際にはけがの恐れはない be in d á nger of A Aの恐れ [可能性 ]がある ▸ Some kinds of monkeys are in danger of becoming extinct .サルの中には絶滅する恐れがある種類のものがいる in d á nger 危険 [危機 ]に陥って (↔out of danger )▸ Your son's life is in great [grave ] danger .あなたの息子さんは危篤状態にあります ▸ put A's life in danger Aの命を危険にさらす out of d á nger 危険 [危機 ]を脱して (↔in danger ).~́ l ì st 〖the ~〗重患名簿 ▸ be on [off ] the danger list 〈患者が 〉危篤状態にある [を脱した ]~́ p à y [⦅英 ⦆m ò ney ]危険手当 .~́ z ò ne 危険地帯 .
dangerous
dan ger ous /déɪn (d )ʒ (ə )rəs /→danger 形容詞 more ~; most ~1 «…に /…にとって » 〈人 動物 物 事が 〉危険な , 危害を及ぼす ; 〈行動などが 〉危険を引き起こす «to /for » (↔safe )▸ a dangerous man 物騒な男 (!「危険にさらされた男 」という意味ではa man in danger ) ▸ Smoking is highly dangerous to your health .喫煙は健康に大きな害を及ぼす ▸ We are in a very [potentially ] dangerous situation .私たちは極めて危険な [危険となりうる ]状況に立っている 2 〖It is dangerous (for A ) to do 〗(A 〈人 〉が )…することは危険である ; 〖A is dangerous to do 〗A 〈物 事 〉を …するのは危険である ▸ It is dangerous to cross the road. ≒The road is dangerous to cross .その道路を横切るのは危ない (╳You are dangerous to cross the road. としない )⦅作文のポイント ⦆子供が夜一人で歩くのは危険です .×It is dangerous that a child walks alone at night .○It is dangerous for a child to walk alone at night .❢╳it is dangerous that … という形はない .
dangerously
d á n ger ous ly 副詞 危険なほど ; 危うく, 危険をおかして .
dangle
dan gle /dǽŋɡ (ə )l /動詞 自動詞 1 〈物などが 〉 «…から » ぶらさがる «from » ; «…の上を » ぶらぶら揺れる «over » .2 【人に 】つきまとう «about, after, around » .他動詞 1 〈物 〉をぶらさげる ; 〈足など 〉をぶらぶらさせる .2 «…の前に » 〈ほうびなど 〉をちらつかせる «in front of , before » .k è ep [l è ave ] A d á ngling ⦅くだけて ⦆A 〈人 〉に (返事などを )知らせず宙ぶらりんにしておく .