English-Thai Dictionary
drown
VI จมน้ำ จม sink dip dive surface emerge jom-nam
drown
VT จมน้ำ จม sink dip dive jom-nam
drown
VT ท่วมท้น tuam-ton
drown in
PHRV ทำให้ จม อยู่ ใน แช่ อยู่ ใน tham-hai-jom-yu-nai
drown one's sorrows
IDM ดื่มเหล้า ดับทุกข์ duem-laol-dab-tuk
drown out
PHRV ทำให้ ไม่ได้ ยิน เสียง tham-hai-mai-dai-yin-siang
drown out
PHRV ไร้ ที่อยู่ เพราะ น้ำท่วม rai-ti-yu-prow-nam-tuam
drown out
VT กลบ (เสียง (มัก ใช้ รูป passive voice ทำให้เกิด เสียงดัง (จน ไม่ได้ ยิน เสียง อื่น kob
drowned
ADJ ซึ่ง จม น้ำตาย sueng-jom-nam-tai
drowned
ADJ ซึ่ง เปียกชุ่ม sueng-peak-chum
drowning
ADJ ซึ่ง จมน้ำ sueng-jom-nam
drowse
N สภาวะ ง่วง ซึม สภาวะ ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น half-sleep sa-pa-wa-nguang-suem
drowse
VI ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น สัปหงก หลับๆ ตื่นๆ ง่วง ซึม sleep catnap doze awaken kreng-lab-kreng-tuen
drowsihead
N อาการ ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น somnolence drowsiness ar-kan-kueng-lab-kueng-tuen
drowsily
ADV ด้วย ความ งัวเงีย อย่าง ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น อย่าง สะลึมสะลือ duai-kwam-ngua-ngia
drowsiness
N อาการ ครึ่งหลับครึ่งตื่น อาการ สัปหงก สภาวะ เกือบจะ หลับ somnolence nodding ar-kan-kreng-lab-kreng-tuen
drowsy
ADJ เซื่องซึม เกือบจะ หลับ ง่วง ซึม ซึมเซา sleepy somnolent sluggish wakeful alert sueang-suem
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DROWN
v.t. 1. Literally, to overwhelm in water; an appropriately, to extinguish life by immersion in water or other fluid; applied to animals; also, to suspend animation by submersion.
2. To overwhelm in water; as, to drown weeds.
3. To overflow; to deluge; to inundate; as, to drown land.
4. To immerse; to plunge and lose; to overwhelm; as, to drown ones self in sensual pleasure.
5. To overwhelm; to overpower.
My private voice is drowned amid the senate.
DROWN
v.i.To be suffocated in water or other fluid; to perish in water. Methought what pain it was to drown.
DROWNED
pp. Deprived of life by immersion in a fluid; overflowed; inundated; overwhelmed.
DROWNER
n.He or that which drowns.
DROWNING
ppr. Destroying life by submersion in a liquid; overflowing; overwhelming.
DROWSE
v.i.drowz. 1. To sleep imperfectly or unsoundly; to slumber; to be heavy with sleepiness.
2. To look heavy; to be heavy or dull.
DROWSE
v.t.To make heavy with sleep; to make dull or stupid.
DROWSIHED
n.Sleepiness.
DROWSILY
adv. 1. Sleepily; heavily; in a dull sleepy manner.
2. Sluggishly; idly; slothfully; lazily.
DROWSINESS
n. 1. Sleepiness; heaviness with sleep; disposition to sleep.
2. Sluggishness; sloth; idleness; inactivity.
DROWSY
a. 1. Inclined to sleep; sleepy; heavy with sleepiness; lethargic; comatose.
2. Dull; sluggish; stupid.
3. Disposing to sleep; lulling; as a drowsy couch.
DROWSY-HEADED
a.Heavy; having a sluggish disposition.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DROW
DROW Drow, imp.
Defn: of Draw. [Obs. ] Chaucer.
DROWN
Drown, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Drowned; p. pr. & vb. n. Drowning. ] Etym: [OE. drunen, drounen, earlier drunknen, druncnien, AS. druncnian to be drowned, sink, become drunk, fr. druncen drunken. See Drunken, Drink. ]
Defn: To be suffocated in water or other fluid; to perish in water. Methought, what pain it was to drown. Shak.
DROWN
DROWN Drown, v. t.
1. To overwhelm in water; to submerge; to inundate. "They drown the land. " Dryden.
2. To deprive of life by immersion in water or other liquid.
3. To overpower; to overcome; to extinguish; -- said especially of sound. Most men being in sensual pleasures drowned. Sir J. Davies. My private voice is drowned amid the senate. Addison. To drown up, to swallow up. [Obs. ] Holland.
DROWNAGE
DROWNAGE Drown "age, n.
Defn: The act of drowning. [R.]
DROWNER
DROWNER Drown "er, n.
Defn: One who, or that which, drowns.
DROWSE
Drowse, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Drowsed; p. pr. & vb. n. Drowsing.] Etym: [AS. dr, dr, to sink, become slow or inactive; cf. OD. droosen to be sleepy, fall asleep, LG. dr, druusken, to slumber, fall down with a noise; prob, akin to AS. dreósan to fall. See Dreary. ]
Defn: To sleep imperfectly or unsoundly; to slumber; to be heavy with sleepiness; to doze. "He drowsed upon his couch. " South. In the pool drowsed the cattle up to their knees. Lowell.
DROWSE
DROWSE Drowse, v. t.
Defn: To make heavy with sleepiness or imperfect sleep; to make dull or stupid. Milton.
DROWSE
DROWSE Drowse, n.
Defn: A slight or imperfect sleep; a doze. But smiled on in a drowse of ecstasy. Mrs. Browning.
DROWSIHEAD
DROWSIHEAD Drow "si *head, n.
Defn: Drowsiness. Thomson.
DROWSIHED
DROWSIHED Drow "si *hed, n.
Defn: Drowsihead. [Obs. ] Spenser.
DROWSILY
DROWSILY Drow "si *ly, adv.
Defn: In a drowsy manner.
DROWSINESS
DROWSINESS Drow "si *ness, n.
Defn: State of being drowsy. Milton.
DROWSY
Drow "sy, a. [Compar. Drowsier; superl. Drowsiest.]
1. Inclined to drowse; heavy with sleepiness; lethargic; dozy. "When I am drowsy. " Shak. Dapples the drowsy east with spots of gray. Shak. To our age's drowsy blood Still shouts the inspiring sea. Lowell.
2. Disposing to sleep; lulling; soporific. The drowsy hours, dispensers of all good. Tennyson.
3. Dull; stupid. " Drowsy reasoning. " Atterbury.
Syn. -- Sleepy; lethargic; dozy; somnolent; comatose; dull heavy; stupid.
DROWTH
DROWTH Drowth, n.
Defn: See Drought. Bacon.
New American Oxford Dictionary
drown
drown |droun draʊn | ▶verb [ no obj. ] die through submersion in and inhalation of water: she drowned in the pond | (be drowned ) : two fishermen were drowned when their motorboat capsized. • [ with obj. ] deliberately kill (a person or animal ) in this way: he killed his wife then drowned himself in a fit of despair. • [ with obj. ] submerge or flood (an area ): when the ice melted, the valleys were drowned. • [ with obj. ] (of a sound ) make (another sound ) inaudible by being much louder: his voice was drowned out by the approaching engine noise. • [ no obj. ] (be drowning in ) be overwhelmed by a large amount of something: both business and household sectors are drowning in debt | art dealers are still drowning in a sea of paperwork. • [ with obj. ] (drown something in ) cover or immerse food in: good pizza is not eight inches thick and drowned in tomato sauce. PHRASES drown one's sorrows forget one's problems by getting drunk. like a drowned rat extremely wet and bedraggled: she arrived at the church looking like a drowned rat. ORIGIN Middle English (originally northern ): related to Old Norse drukkna ‘to be drowned, ’ also to drink .
drowned valley
drowned val ¦ley ▶noun a valley partly or wholly submerged by a rise in sea level.
drowse
drowse |drouz ˈdraʊz | ▶verb [ no obj. ] be half asleep; doze intermittently: he was beginning to drowse in his chair. • [ with obj. ] archaic make sleepy. • archaic be sluggish or inactive: let not your prudence drowse. ▶noun [ in sing. ] a light sleep; a condition of being half asleep. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: back-formation from drowsy .
drowsiness
drow si ness |ˈdrouzēnis | ▶noun a feeling of being sleepy and lethargic; sleepiness: this drug can cause drowsiness.
drowsy
drow sy |ˈdrouzē ˈdraʊzi | ▶adjective ( drowsier, drowsiest ) sleepy and lethargic; half asleep: the wine had made her drowsy. • causing sleepiness: the drowsy heat of the meadows. • (esp. of a place ) very peaceful and quiet: a drowsy suburb. DERIVATIVES drow si ly |-zəlē |adverb ORIGIN late 15th cent.: probably from the stem of Old English drūsian ‘be languid or slow, ’ of Germanic origin; related to dreary .
Oxford Dictionary
drown
drown |draʊn | ▶verb [ no obj. ] die through submersion in and inhalation of water: a motorist drowned when her car plunged off the edge of a quay | (be drowned ) : two fishermen were drowned when their motor boat capsized. • [ with obj. ] deliberately kill (a person or animal ) by drowning: he immediately drowned four of the dogs. • [ with obj. ] submerge or flood (an area ): when the ice melted the valleys were drowned. • [ with obj. ] (of a sound ) make (another sound ) inaudible by being much louder: his voice was drowned out by the approaching engine noise. • [ no obj. ] (be drowning in ) be overwhelmed by a large amount of something: both business and household sectors are drowning in debt | art dealers are still drowning in a sea of paperwork. • [ with obj. ] (drown something in ) cover or immerse food in: good pizza is not eight inches thick and drowned in tomato sauce. PHRASES drown one's sorrows forget one's problems by getting drunk. like a drowned rat extremely wet and bedraggled. ORIGIN Middle English (originally northern ): related to Old Norse drukkna ‘to be drowned ’, also to drink .
drowned valley
drowned val ¦ley ▶noun a valley partly or wholly submerged by a rise in sea level.
drowse
drowse |draʊz | ▶verb [ no obj. ] be half asleep; doze intermittently: he was beginning to drowse in his chair. • [ with obj. ] archaic make sleepy. • archaic be sluggish or inactive. ▶noun [ in sing. ] a light sleep; a condition of being half asleep. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: back-formation from drowsy .
drowsiness
drow ¦si |ness |ˈdraʊzɪnɪs | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a feeling of being sleepy and lethargic; sleepiness: this drug can cause drowsiness.
drowsy
drowsy |ˈdraʊzi | ▶adjective ( drowsier, drowsiest ) sleepy and lethargic; half asleep: the wine had made her drowsy. • causing sleepiness: the drowsy heat of the meadows. • (of a place ) peaceful and quiet: a drowsy suburb called Surrey Hills. DERIVATIVES drowsily adverb ORIGIN late 15th cent.: probably from the stem of Old English drūsian ‘be languid or slow ’, of Germanic origin; related to dreary .
American Oxford Thesaurus
drown
drown verb 1 he nearly drowned: suffocate in water, inhale water; go to a watery grave. 2 the valleys were drowned: flood, submerge, immerse, inundate, deluge, swamp, engulf. 3 his voice was drowned out by the music: make inaudible, overpower, overwhelm, override; muffle, deaden, stifle, extinguish.
drowse
drowse verb they like to drowse in the sun: doze, nap, catnap, rest; informal snooze, get forty winks, get some shut-eye, catch some Zs. ▶noun she had been woken from her drowse: doze, light sleep, nap, catnap, rest, siesta; informal snooze, forty winks, shut-eye.
drowsy
drowsy adjective 1 the pills made her drowsy: sleepy, dozy, groggy, somnolent; tired, weary, fatigued, exhausted, yawning, nodding; lethargic, sluggish, torpid, listless, languid; informal snoozy, dopey, yawny, dead beat, all in, dog-tired, bone-weary. ANTONYMS alert. 2 a drowsy afternoon: soporific, sleep-inducing, sleepy, somniferous; narcotic, sedative, tranquilizing; lulling, soothing. ANTONYMS invigorating.
Oxford Thesaurus
drown
drown verb 1 he was shipwrecked, and very nearly drowned: suffocate in water, inhale water; go under; go to a watery grave; informal go to Davy Jones's locker. 2 when the ice melted, the valleys were drowned: flood, submerge, immerse, inundate, deluge, swamp, engulf, drench, soak, cover, saturate. ANTONYMS drain. 3 his voice was drowned by the clatter of footsteps: make inaudible, drown out, be louder than, overpower, overwhelm, overcome, override, engulf, swallow up, devour, bury; muffle, deaden, stifle, wipe out, extinguish, silence. ANTONYMS augment. 4 she had spent every waking hour working, trying to drown her private pain: suppress, deaden, stifle, restrain, smother, bottle up, hold back, keep back, check, keep in check, curb, contain, bridle, put a lid on; extinguish, quash, quench, obliterate, wipe out, get rid of.
drowse
drowse verb they were content to drowse in the sun: doze, sleep (lightly ), nap, take a nap, catnap, take a siesta, rest; informal snooze, have a snooze, snatch /get forty winks, get some shut-eye; Brit. informal kip, have a kip, get some kip; N. Amer. informal catch some Zs, catch a few Zs; literary slumber. ANTONYMS be awake. ▶noun she had been alerted from her drowse: doze, light sleep, nap, catnap, siesta, lie-down, rest; informal snooze, forty winks, shut-eye; Brit. informal kip, zizz; literary slumber. ANTONYMS wakefulness.
drowsiness
drowsiness noun these tablets often cause drowsiness: sleepiness, somnolence, tiredness, fatigue, weariness, exhaustion; sluggishness, lethargy, listlessness, torpor, enervation, lifelessness, laziness, indolence, inertia, lassitude, apathy, debility; informal doziness, dopiness, grogginess. ANTONYMS wakefulness; energy.
drowsy
drowsy adjective 1 the stove warmed the tent up and we became drowsy: sleepy, half asleep, dozy, dozing, heavy, heavy-eyed, yawning, nodding, groggy, somnolent, ready for bed, hardly able to keep one's eyes open; tired, weary, fatigued, exhausted; lethargic, sluggish, torpid, lifeless, listless, languid, languorous, comatose, dazed, drugged; informal snoozy, dopey, yawny, dead beat, all in, done in, dog-tired; Brit. informal knackered; literary slumberous. ANTONYMS wakeful, alert. 2 a warm, drowsy afternoon: soporific, sleep-inducing, sleepy, somniferous, narcotic, sedative, calmative, tranquillizing; lulling, soothing; dreamy; rare somnific. ANTONYMS invigorating.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
drown
drown /draʊn / (! -ow-は /aʊ /) 〖語源は 「水を飲む 」〗動詞 ~s /-z /; ~ed /-d /; ~ing 自動詞 1 〈人 動物が 〉おぼれ死ぬ , 溺死 (できし )する ▸ A woman was drowning in the river .女性が川でおぼれていた ▸ He almost [nearly ] drowned . ≒ He was about to drown .彼はあやうくおぼれ死ぬところだった (!過去形のdrownedだけでは 「おぼれ死んだ 」ことを表す; 必ずしも死ぬことを表さない日本語の 「おぼれた 」との違いに注意 ) ▸ A drowning man will clutch at a straw .⦅ことわざ ⦆おぼれる者はわらをもつかむ 2 ⦅くだけて ⦆〖be ~ing 〗〈人が 〉 (処理しきれないほどの ) «…を » かかえている «in » ▸ We are drowning in information .我々は情報に埋もれている 他動詞 1 〈人など 〉を溺死させる ;〖be ~ed 〗〈人などが 〉溺死する (!事故死の場合, 現在では自動詞用法の方が好まれる; ↑自動詞 1 ) ▸ drown oneself in the lake 湖に身を投げる 2 «…で » …をびしょぬれにさせる «in » ; «…に » (たっぷりと )〈食品など 〉を浸す, つける «in, with » ▸ His eyes were drowned in tears .彼の目は涙でいっぱいだった ▸ The meat was drowned in the sauce .肉には浸るほどソースがかかっていた .3 〈大きな音などが 〉〈音 声など 〉をかき消す (out )▸ His speech was drowned by jeers .彼の演説はやじで聞こえなかった .4 ⦅しばしばおどけて ⦆〈人が 〉【酒で 】〈苦労 心配など 〉を忘れる, まぎらせる «in » ▸ He tried to drown his sorrows [loneliness, fear ] in drink .彼は悲しみ [孤独, 不安 ]を酒にまぎらせようとした 5 【酒 恋 仕事などに 】〈人 〉をおぼれさせる, 熱中させる «in » .dr ò wn A ó ut [ó ut A ]1 ↑他動詞 3 .2 〈洪水などが 〉A 〈家など 〉を押し流す .dr ó wn ing 名詞
drowse
drowse /draʊz /動詞 自動詞 1 うとうとする, 居眠りする (off ).2 (状況などが )ぼんやりしている, 活気がない .他動詞 〈人 〉を眠くさせる, 〈時間 〉をうとうとして過ごす (away ).名詞 〖a ~〗居眠り, うたた寝 .
drowsy
drow sy /dráʊzi / (! -ow-は /aʊ /) 形容詞 -sier ; -siest 1 〈人が 〉眠い, 眠たい, うとうとする ▸ feel drowsy 眠気を感じる ▸ a drowsy driver うとうとしている運転手 2 〈時 場所が 〉 (人を )眠くさせる, 眠気を催す ; 活気のない, のどかな ▸ a drowsy spring afternoon 眠気を催す春の午後 .3 無気力な .dr ó ws i ly 副詞 眠そうに .dr ó ws i ness 名詞