English-Thai Dictionary
deduct
VI ลงความเห็น (ตาม หลัก เหตุผล อนุมาน สรุป deduce derive infer long-kwam-hen
deduct
VT ทำให้ ลดลง ลบ หักล้าง หักออก abate detract subtract take off add increase tam-hai-lod-long
deduct from
PHRV หักลบ ออกจาก หัก ออกจาก hak-lob-ook-jak
deduct from
VI ลดลง หักลบ บรรเทา abate detract subtract take off add increase lod-long
deductible
A ที่ หักลบ ได้ ti-hak-lob-dai
deduction
N การ หักลบ การอนุมาน kan-hak-lob
deductive
ADJ ซึ่ง หักลบ ไป ซึ่ง อนุมาน ได้ sueng-hak-lob-pai
deductively
ADV แบบ อนุมาน เชิง อนุมาน baeb-ar-nu-man
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DEDUCT
v.t.To take from; to subtract; to separate or remove, in numbering, estimating or calculating. Thus we say, from the sum of two numbers, deduct the lesser number; from the amount of profits, deduct the charges of freight.
DEDUCTED
pp. Taken from; subtracted.
DEDUCTING
ppt. Taking from; subtracting.
DEDUCTION
n. 1. The act of deducting.
2. That which is deducted; sum or amount taken from another; defalcation; abatement; as, this sum is a deduction from the yearly rent.
3. That which is drawn from premises; fact, opinion, or hypothesis, collected from principles or facts stated, or established data; inference; consequence drawn; conclusion; as, this opinion is a fair deduction from the principles you have advanced.
DEDUCTIVE
a.Deducible; that is or may be deduced from premises. All knowledge is deductive.
DEDUCTIVELY
adv. By regular deduction; by way of inference; by consequence.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DEDUCT
De *duct ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Deducted; p. pr. & vb. n. Deducting. ]Etym: [L. deductus, p. p. of deducere to deduct. See Deduce. ]
1. To lead forth or out. [Obs. ] A people deducted out of the city of Philippos. Udall.
2. To take away, separate, or remove, in numbering, estimating, or calculating; to subtract; -- often with from or out of. Deduct what is but vanity, or dress. Pope. Two and a half per cent should be deducted out of the pay of the foreign troops. Bp. Burnet. We deduct from the computation of our years that part of our time which is spent in. .. infancy. Norris.
3. To reduce; to diminish. [Obs. ] "Do not deduct it to days. " Massinger.
DEDUCTIBLE
DEDUCTIBLE De *duct "i *ble, a.
1. Capable of being deducted, taken away, or withdrawn. Not one found honestly deductible From any use that pleased him. Mrs. Browning.
2. Deducible; consequential.
DEDUCTION
De *duc "tion, n. Etym: [L. deductio: cf. F. déduction.]
1. Act or process of deducing or inferring. The deduction of one language from another. Johnson. This process, by which from two statements we deduce a third, is called deduction. J. R. Seely.
2. Act of deducting or taking away; subtraction; as, the deduction of the subtrahend from the minuend.
3. That which is deduced or drawn from premises by a process of reasoning; an inference; a conclusion. Make fair deductions; see to what they mount. Pope.
4. That which is deducted; the part taken away; abatement; as, a deduction from the yearly rent.
Syn. -- See Induction.
DEDUCTIVE
De *duct "ive, a. Etym: [Cf. L. deductivus derivative. ]
Defn: Of or pertaining to deduction; capable of being deduced from premises; deducible. All knowledge of causes is deductive. Glanvill. Notions and ideas... used in a deductive process. Whewell.
DEDUCTIVELY
DEDUCTIVELY De *duct "ive *ly, adv.
Defn: By deduction; by way of inference; by consequence. Sir T. Browne.
DEDUCTOR
De *duc "tor, n. Etym: [L., a guide. See Deduce. ] (Zoöl.)
Defn: The pilot whale or blackfish.
New American Oxford Dictionary
deduct
de duct |diˈdəkt dəˈdəkt | ▶verb [ with obj. ] subtract or take away (an amount or part ) from a total: tax has been deducted from the payments. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin deduct- ‘taken or led away, ’ from the verb deducere. Deduct and deduce were not distinguished in sense until the mid 17th cent.
deductible
de duct i ble |diˈdəktəbəl dəˈdəktəbəl | ▶adjective able to be deducted, esp. from taxable income or tax to be paid: child-care vouchers will be deductible expenses for employers. See also tax-deductible. ▶noun (in an insurance policy ) a specified amount of money that the insured must pay before an insurance company will pay a claim: a traditional insurance policy with a low deductible. DERIVATIVES de duct i bil i ty |-ˌdəktəˈbilitē |noun
deduction
de duc tion |diˈdəkSHən dəˈdəkʃən | ▶noun 1 the action of deducting or subtracting something: the dividend will be paid without deduction of tax. • an amount that is or may be deducted from something, esp. from taxable income or tax to be paid: tax deductions. 2 the inference of particular instances by reference to a general law or principle: the detective must uncover the murderer by deduction from facts | we do not yet know if these deductions are correct. Often contrasted with induction. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin deductio (n- ), from the verb deducere (see deduce ).
deductive
de duc tive |diˈdəktiv dəˈdəktɪv | ▶adjective characterized by the inference of particular instances from a general law: deductive reasoning. • based on reason and logical analysis of available facts: I used my deductive powers. DERIVATIVES de duc tive ly adverb ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from medieval Latin deductivus, from deduct- ‘deduced, ’ from the verb deducere (see deduce ).
Oxford Dictionary
deduct
de ¦duct |dɪˈdʌkt | ▶verb [ with obj. ] subtract or take away (an amount or part ) from a total: tax has been deducted from the payments. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin deduct- ‘taken or led away ’, from the verb deducere. Deduct and deduce were not distinguished in sense until the mid 17th cent.
deductible
de ¦duct |ible |dɪˈdʌktɪb (ə )l | ▶adjective able to be deducted, especially from taxable income or tax to be paid. See also tax-deductible. ▶noun N. Amer. the part of an insurance claim to be paid by the insured; an excess. DERIVATIVES deductibility |-ˈbɪlɪti |noun
deduction
de |duc ¦tion |dɪˈdʌkʃ (ə )n | ▶noun [ mass noun ] 1 the action of deducting or subtracting something: the dividend will be paid without deduction of tax. • [ count noun ] an amount that is or may be deducted from something, especially from taxable income or tax to be paid: tax deductions. 2 the inference of particular instances by reference to a general law or principle: the detective must uncover the murderer by deduction from facts | [ count noun ] : we do not yet know if these deductions are correct. Often contrasted with induction. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin deductio (n- ), from the verb deducere (see deduce ).
deductive
de ¦duct |ive |dɪˈdʌktɪv | ▶adjective characterized by or based on the inference of particular instances from a general law: deductive reasoning | I used my deductive powers. DERIVATIVES deductively adverb ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from medieval Latin deductivus, from deduct- ‘deduced ’, from the verb deducere (see deduce ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
deduct
deduct verb we'll deduct ten percent from the total: subtract, take away, take off, debit, dock, discount; abstract, remove, knock off. ANTONYMS add.
deduction
deduction noun 1 the deduction of tax: subtraction, removal, debit, abstraction. 2 gross pay, before deductions: subtraction. 3 she was right in her deduction: conclusion, inference, supposition, hypothesis, assumption, presumption; suspicion, conviction, belief, reasoning; archaic illation.
Oxford Thesaurus
deduct
deduct verb any tax due will be deducted from the pension: subtract, take away, take from, take off, withdraw, abstract, remove, debit, dock, discount; informal knock off, minus. ANTONYMS add.
deduction
deduction noun 1 the deduction of tax: subtraction, taking away, taking off, withdrawal, abstraction, removal, debit, docking, discounting; informal knocking off. ANTONYMS addition. 2 NI contributions are worked out on gross pay, before all deductions: stoppage, subtraction. 3 she had been right in her deduction that he was in love with someone else: conclusion, inference, supposition, hypothesis, thesis, assumption, presumption, suspicion, conviction, belief; reasoning; results, findings.
French Dictionary
déductibilité
déductibilité n. f. nom féminin Caractère de ce qui est déductible. : La déductibilité des dons de charité.
déductible
déductible adj. adjectif Que l ’on peut déduire. : Les dons de charité sont déductibles des impôts. FORME FAUTIVE déductible. Anglicisme au sens de franchise. : Cette assurance comporte une franchise (et non un *déductible ) de 50 $.
déductif
déductif , ive adj. adjectif Qui procède par déduction. : Une progression déductive.
déduction
déduction n. f. nom féminin 1 Conséquence d ’un raisonnement. : Le détective trouva le coupable par déduction. 2 Action de soustraire une somme d ’une autre. : A-t-on droit à une déduction d ’impôt pour les dons de charité? FORMES FAUTIVES déduction à la source. Calque de « deduction (at source ) » pour retenue à la source, prélèvement. déduction sur le salaire. Calque de « payroll deduction » pour retenue sur (le ) salaire, retenue (à la source ), prélèvement.
Spanish Dictionary
deductivo, -va
deductivo, -va adjetivo 1 De la deducción o relacionado con esta forma de razonamiento :el método deductivo fue utilizado por los filósofos racionalistas .ANTÓNIMO inductivo .2 Que procede por deducción .ANTÓNIMO inductivo .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
deduct
de duct /dɪdʌ́kt /動詞 ~s /-ts /; ~ed /-ɪd /; ~ing 他動詞 【全体から 】〈一定額 一部分など 〉を 差し引く , 控除する (subtract ) «from » (!しばしば受け身で ) ▸ Income tax will be deducted from your salary .所得税は賃金から差し引かれます ~i ble 形容詞 名詞
deduction
de duc tion /dɪdʌ́kʃ (ə )n /名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 U C 〘論 〙演繹 (えんえき )(法 ), 推論 (↔induction )▸ a logical deduction from the facts 事実からの論理的推論 2 C «…という /…からの » 推定, 推論 , 結論 «that 節 /from » .3 U «…からの /…に対する » 差し引き, 控除 «from /for » ; C 差し引き高, 控除額 ▸ a tax deduction 税金の控除額
deductive
de duc tive /dɪdʌ́ktɪv /形容詞 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗〘論 〙演繹 (えんえき )的な (↔inductive ); 推論による .~ly 副詞