English-Thai Dictionary
disinter
VT ขุดค้น
disinterest
N ความ ไม่สน ใจ kwam-mai-son-jai
disinterest
VT ไม่สน ใจ ไม่ มีส่วน เกี่ยวข้อง ไม่มี ส่วนได้ส่วนเสีย disregard interest mai-son-jai
disinterested
ADJ ไม่ เกี่ยวข้อง ไม่มี ส่วนได้ส่วนเสีย ไม่สน ใจ dispassionate fair indifferent interested prejudiced biased mai-kaio-kong
disinterestedly
ADV อย่างเป็นกลาง
disinterestedness
N ความเป็นกลาง ไม่ มีส่วน ได้เสีย
disinterment
N การ ขุดค้น เปิดเผย
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DISINTER
v.t.[dis and inter. ] 1. To take out of a grave, or out of the earth; as, to disinter a dead body that is buried.
2. To take out as from a grave; to bring from obscurity into view.
The philosopher--may be concealed in a plebeian, which a proper education might have disinterred. [Unusual. ]
DISINTERESSED, DISINTERESSMENT
[See Disinterested, etc. ]
DISINTEREST
n.[dis and interest. ] 1. What is contrary to the interest or advantage; disadvantage; injury. [Little used or not at all. ]
2. Indifference to profit; want of regard to private advantage.
DISINTEREST
v.t.To disengage from private interest or personal advantage. [Little used. ]
DISINTERESTED
a. 1. Uninterested; indifferent; free from self-interest; having no personal interest or private advantage in a question or affair. It is important that a judge should be perfectly disinterested.
2. Not influenced or dictated by private advantage; as a disinterested decision. [This word is more generally used than uninterested. ]
DISINTERESTEDLY
adv. In a disinterested manner.
DISINTERESTEDNESS
n.The state or quality of having no personal interest or private advantage in a question or event; freedom from bias or prejudice, on account of private interest; indifference.
DISINTERESTING
a.Uninteresting. [The latter is the word now used. ]
DISINTERMENT
n.The act of disinterring, or taking out of the earth.
DISINTERRED
pp. Taken out of the earth or grave.
DISINTERRING
ppr. Taking out of the earth, or out of a grave.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DISINTER
Dis `in *ter ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Disinterred; p. pr. & vb. n.Disinterring. ]
1. To take out of the grave or tomb; to unbury; to exhume; to dig up.
2. To bring out, as from a grave or hiding place; to bring from obscurity into view. Addison.
DISINTERESS
Dis *in "ter *ess, v. t. Etym: [F. désintéresser to deprive of interest in; pref. dés - (L. dis- ) + intéresser to interest, fr. L. interesse to import, concern. See Interest, and cf. Disinterest. ]
Defn: To deprive or rid of interest in, or regard for; to disengage. [Obs. ]
DISINTERESSMENT
Dis *in "ter *ess *ment, n. Etym: [Cf. F. désintéressement. ]
Defn: Disinterestedness; impartiality; fairness. [Obs. ] Prior.
DISINTEREST
DISINTEREST Dis *in "ter *est, p. a.
Defn: Disinterested. [Obs. ] The measures they shall walk by shall be disinterest and even. Jer. Taylor.
DISINTEREST
DISINTEREST Dis *in "ter *est, n.
1. What is contrary to interest or advantage; disadvantage. [Obs. ] Glanvill.
2. Indifference to profit; want of regard to private advantage; disinterestedness. [Obs. ] Johnson.
DISINTEREST
DISINTEREST Dis *in "ter *est, v. t.
Defn: To divest of interest or interested motives. [Obs. ] Feltham.
DISINTERESTED
Dis *in "ter *est *ed, a. Etym: [Cf. Disinteressed.]
Defn: Not influenced by regard to personal interest or advantage; free from selfish motive; having no relation of interest or feeling; not biased or prejudiced; as, a disinterested decision or judge. The happiness of disinterested sacrifices. Channing.
Syn. -- Unbiased; impartial; uninterested; indifferent.
DISINTERESTEDLY
DISINTERESTEDLY Dis *in "ter *est *ed *ly, adv.
Defn: In a disinterested manner; without bias or prejudice.
DISINTERESTEDNESS
DISINTERESTEDNESS Dis *in "ter *est *ed *ness, n.
Defn: The state or quality of being disinterested; impartiality. That perfect disinterestedness and self-devotion of which man seems to be incapable, but which is sometimes found in woman. Macaulay.
DISINTERESTING
DISINTERESTING Dis *in "ter *est *ing, a.
Defn: Uninteresting. [Obs. ] "Disinteresting passages." Bp. Warburton.
DISINTERMENT
DISINTERMENT Dis `in *ter "ment, n.
Defn: The act of disinterring, or taking out of the earth; exhumation.
New American Oxford Dictionary
disinter
dis in ter |ˌdisinˈtər ˌdɪsənˈtər | ▶verb ( disinters, disinterring, disinterred ) [ with obj. ] dig up (something that has been buried, esp. a corpse ). • discover (something that is well hidden ): he has disinterred and translated an important collection of writings. DERIVATIVES dis in ter ment noun ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from French désenterrer, from dis- (expressing reversal ) + enterrer ‘to inter. ’
disinterest
dis in ter est |disˈint (ə )rist dɪsˈɪnt (ə )rəst | ▶noun 1 the state of not being influenced by personal involvement in something; impartiality: I do not claim any scholarly disinterest with this book. 2 lack of interest in something: he chided Dennis for his disinterest in anything that is not his own idea.
disinterested
dis in ter est ed |disˈintəˌrestid, -tristid dɪsˈɪnt (ə )rəstəd | ▶adjective 1 not influenced by considerations of personal advantage: a banker is under an obligation to give disinterested advice. 2 having or feeling no interest in something: her father was so disinterested in her progress that he only visited the school once. DERIVATIVES dis in ter est ed ly adverb, dis in ter est ed ness noun ORIGIN early 17th cent.: past participle of the rare verb disinterest ‘rid of interest or concern, ’ from dis- (expressing removal ) + the verb interest . usage: One of the most contended questions of usage is the difference between disinterested and uninterested. According to traditional guidelines, disinterested should never be used to mean ‘not interested ’ (i.e., it is not a synonym for uninterested ) but only to mean ‘impartial, ’ as in the judgments of disinterested outsiders are likely to be more useful. Ironically, the earliest recorded sense of disinterested is for the disputed sense. Today, the ‘incorrect ’ use of disinterested is widespread: around a quarter of citations in the Oxford English Corpus for disinterested are for this sense.
disintermediation
dis in ter me di a tion |ˌdisintərˌmēdēˈāSHən dɪsˌɪn (t )ərmidiˈeɪʃən | ▶noun reduction in the use of intermediaries between producers and consumers, for example by investing directly in the securities market rather than through a bank.
Oxford Dictionary
disinter
disinter |ˌdɪsɪnˈtəː | ▶verb ( disinters, disinterring, disinterred ) [ with obj. ] dig up (something that has been buried, especially a corpse ). • discover (something that is well hidden ): he has disinterred an important collection of writings. DERIVATIVES disinterment noun ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from French désenterrer, from dis- (expressing reversal ) + enterrer ‘to inter ’.
disinterest
dis |in ¦ter ¦est |dɪsˈɪnt (ə )rɪst | ▶noun [ mass noun ] 1 the state of not being influenced by personal involvement in something; impartiality: I do not claim any scholarly disinterest with this book. 2 lack of interest in something: he chided Dennis for his disinterest in anything that is not his own idea.
disinterested
dis |in ¦ter |est ¦ed |dɪsˈɪnt (ə )rɪstɪd | ▶adjective 1 not influenced by considerations of personal advantage: a banker is under an obligation to give disinterested advice. 2 having or feeling no interest in something; uninterested: her father was so disinterested in her progress that he only visited the school once. DERIVATIVES disinterestedly adverb, disinterestedness noun ORIGIN early 17th cent.: past participle of the rare verb disinterest ‘rid of interest or concern ’, from dis- (expressing removal ) + interest . usage: Nowhere are the battle lines more deeply drawn in usage questions than over the difference between disinterested and uninterested. According to traditional guidelines, disinterested should never be used to mean ‘not interested ’ (i.e. it is not a synonym for uninterested ) but only to mean ‘impartial ’, as in the judgements of disinterested outsiders are likely to be more useful. Ironically, the earliest recorded sense of disinterested is for the disputed sense. Today, the ‘incorrect ’ use of disinterested is widespread: around a quarter of citations in the Oxford English Corpus for disinterested are for this sense.
disintermediation
disintermediation |ˌdɪsɪntəmiːdɪˈeɪʃ (ə )n | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Economics reduction in the use of intermediaries between producers and consumers, for example by investing directly in the securities market rather than through a bank. DERIVATIVES disintermediate verb
American Oxford Thesaurus
disinter
disinter verb the defense attorney requested that the body be disinterred for further examination: exhume, unearth, dig up, disentomb.
disinterest
disinterest noun 1 scholarly disinterest: impartiality, neutrality, objectivity, detachment, disinterestedness, lack of bias, lack of prejudice; open-mindedness, fairness, fair-mindedness, equity, balance, evenhandedness. ANTONYMS bias. 2 he looked at us with complete disinterest: indifference, lack of interest, unconcern, impassivity; boredom, apathy.
disinterested
disinterested adjective 1 disinterested advice: unbiased, unprejudiced, impartial, neutral, nonpartisan, detached, uninvolved, objective, dispassionate, impersonal, clinical; open-minded, fair, just, equitable, balanced, even-handed, with no ax to grind. 2 he looked at her with disinterested eyes: uninterested, indifferent, incurious, uncurious, unconcerned, unmoved, unresponsive, impassive, passive, detached, unenthusiastic, lukewarm, bored, apathetic; informal couldn't-care-less. WORD NOTE disinterested It is my experience that whenever one is trapped in a bar by a logomaniac, a word-bore, he will sooner or later bring to your notice His View, as though it were worth hearing, of the word disinterested. I simply cannot stand it, he will say, when young people (who are apparently always to blame for linguistic solecisms ) use disinterested to mean not interested, when of course it properly means unbiased, and the word they should be using if they weren't lazy and careless butchers of the tongue, is uninterested. Well, I have two pieces of news for you, Mr. Bore. First of all, disinterested has been used to mean not interested for a much longer time than it has ever been used to denote "nonpartisan "—nearly 50 seventeenth-century years separate the first use of one meaning from the other. And secondly —a sufficient number of these lazy and (in the logomaniacal view ) wrongheaded people, old, young, sensible, and stupid, have lately been employing the word to mean "not interested " that any future editions of a good and nonprescriptive dictionary will be bound to note that this is now a perfectly legitimate way of using the word again, if not the principal one. So forget the argument. Get over it. Though disinterested certainly and uniquely does have the sense of "unbiased, " it happens that in general use these days —and back in the beginning of the seventeenth century also, it seems —it means "uninterested " too. — SW Conversational, opinionated, and idiomatic, these Word Notes are an opportunity to see a working writer's perspective on a particular word or usage.
Oxford Thesaurus
disinter
disinter verb his corpse was disinterred and reburied in another grave: exhume, unearth, dig up, bring out of the ground, bring to the surface; rare disentomb, unbury, ungrave.
disinterest
disinterest noun 1 I do not pretend any scholarly disinterest with this book: impartiality, neutrality, objectivity, detachment, disinterestedness, lack of bias, lack of prejudice; open-mindedness, fairness, fair-mindedness, equitability, equity, balance, even-handedness, unselfishness, selflessness. ANTONYMS bias. 2 informal he looked at us with complete disinterest: indifference, lack of interest, lack of curiosity, lack of concern, lack of care, lack of enthusiasm, dispassionateness, dispassion, impassivity; boredom, apathy, nonchalance. ANTONYMS interest.
disinterested
disinterested adjective 1 she is offering disinterested advice: unbiased, unprejudiced, impartial, neutral, non-partisan, non-discriminatory, detached, uninvolved, objective, dispassionate, impersonal, clinical; open-minded, fair, just, equitable, balanced, even-handed, unselfish, selfless; free from discrimination, with no axe to grind, without fear or favour. ANTONYMS biased. 2 informal he looked at her with disinterested eyes: uninterested, indifferent, incurious, unconcerned, unmoved, unresponsive, impassive, passive, detached, unfeeling, uncaring, unenthusiastic, lukewarm, bored, apathetic, blasé, nonchalant; informal couldn't-care-less. ANTONYMS interested. EASILY CONFUSED WORDS disinterested or uninterested? Disinterested is frequently used as a synonym of uninterested, meaning ‘having or showing no interest in something ’. The traditional meaning of disinterested, however, is ‘not biased; impartial ’, as in bankers are under an obligation to give disinterested advice. Uninterested is the preferred word used to mean ‘having no interest ’, as in he was totally uninterested in politics. These notes clear up confusion between similar-looking pairs.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
disinter
dis in ter /dɪ̀sɪntə́ː r /動詞 他動詞 1 ⦅かたく ⦆【墓などから 】〈死体 〉を掘り出す, 発掘する «from » .2 ⦅しばしばおどけて ⦆〈長く使われていなかった物 埋もれていた物など 〉を再び使う, 掘り起こす, 発掘する .~ment 名詞 U 発掘 .
disinterest
dis in ter est /dɪsɪ́nt (ə )rəst /名詞 U «…に » 興味 [関心 ]がないこと «in » ; 無関心, 冷淡 ; 利害関係がないこと .
disinterested
dis í n ter est ed /-ɪd /形容詞 1 〈人 行為などが 〉利害関係 [私利私欲 ]のない, 公平な .2 ⦅非標準 ⦆ «…に » 興味 [関心 ]がない «in » (!この意味ではuninterestedが普通 ) .