English-Thai Dictionary
exceed
VT เกิน กว่า เกิน มากกว่า outdo surpass koen-kwa
exceeding
ADJ มากมาย (ทาง วรรณ คดี มหาศาล surpassing mak-mai
exceedingly
ADV อย่างมากมาย อย่างมหาศาล อย่าง ไม่ธรรมดา extremely greatly very yang-mak-mai
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
EXCEED
v.t.[L. excedo; ex and cedo, to pass. ] 1. To pass or go beyond; to proceed beyond any given or supposed limit, measure or quantity, or beyond any thing else; used equally in a physical or moral sense. One piece of cloth exceeds the customary length or breadth; one man exceeds another in bulk, stature or weight; one offender exceeds another in villainy.
2. To surpass; to excel. Homer exceeded all men in epic poetry. Demosthenes and Cicero exceeded their contemporaries in oratory.
King Solomon exceeded all the kings of the earth for riches and for wisdom. 1 Kings 1 :23.
EXCEED
v.i.To go too far; to pass the proper bounds; to go over any given limit, number or measure. Forty stripes may he give him, and not exceed. Deuteronomy 25:3.
1. To bear the greater proportion; to be more or larger.
[This verb is intransitive only by ellipsis. ]
EXCEEDABLE
a.That may surmount or exceed.
EXCEEDED
pp. Excelled; surpassed; outdone.
EXCEEDER
n.One who exceeds or passes the bounds of fitness.
EXCEEDING
ppr. Going beyond; surpassing; excelling; outdoing. 1. Great in extent, quantity or duration; very extensive.
Cities were built an exceeding space of time before the flood. [This sense is unusual. ]
2. adv. In a very great degree; unusually; as exceeding rich.
The Genoese were exceeding powerful by sea.
I am thy shield, and thy exceeding great reward. Genesis 15:1.
EXCEEDING
n.Excess; superfluity.
EXCEEDINGLY
adv. To a very great degree; in a degree beyond what is usual; greatly; very much. Isaac trembled exceedingly. Genesis 27:33.
EXCEEDINGNESS
n.Greatness in quantity, extent or duration. [Not used. ]
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
EXCEED
Ex *ceed ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Exceeded; p. pr. & vb. n. Exceeding. ]Etym: [L. excedere, excessum, to go away or beyond; ex out + cedere to go, to pass: cf. F. excéder. See Cede. ]
Defn: To go beyond; to proceed beyond the given or supposed limit or measure of; to outgo; to surpass; -- used both in a good and a bad sense; as, one man exceeds another in bulk, stature, weight, power, skill, etc. ; one offender exceeds another in villainy; his rank exceeds yours. Name the time, but let it not Exceed three days. Shak. Observes how much a chintz exceeds mohair. Pope.
Syn. -- To outdo; surpass; excel; transcend; outstrip; outvie; overtop.
EXCEED
EXCEED Ex *ceed ", v. i.
1. To go too far; to pass the proper bounds or measure. "In our reverence to whom, we can not possibly exceed. " Jer. Taylor. Forty stripes he may give him, and not exceed. Deut. xxv. 3.
2. To be more or greater; to be paramount. Shak.
EXCEEDABLE
EXCEEDABLE Ex *ceed "a *ble, a.
Defn: Capable of exceeding or surpassing. [Obs. ] Sherwood.
EXCEEDER
EXCEEDER Ex *ceed "er, n.
Defn: One who exceeds. Bp. Montagu.
EXCEEDING
EXCEEDING Ex *ceed "ing, a.
Defn: More than usual; extraordinary; more than sufficient; measureless. "The exceeding riches of his grace. " Eph. ii. 7. -- Ex *ceed "ing *ness, n. [Obs. ] Sir P. Sidney.
EXCEEDING
EXCEEDING Ex *ceed "ing, adv.
Defn: In a very great degree; extremely; exceedingly. [Archaic. It is not joined to verbs.] "The voice exceeding loud. " Keble. His raiment became shining, exceeding white as snow. Mark ix. 3. The Genoese were exceeding powerful by sea. Sir W. Raleigh.
EXCEEDINGLY
EXCEEDINGLY Ex *ceed "ing *ly, adv.
Defn: To a very great degree; beyond what is usual; surpassingly. It signifies more than very.
New American Oxford Dictionary
exceed
ex ceed |ikˈsēd ɪkˈsid | ▶verb [ with obj. ] be greater in number or size than (a quantity, number, or other measurable thing ): production costs have exceeded $60,000. • go beyond what is allowed or stipulated by (a set limit, esp. of one's authority ): the Tribunal's decision clearly exceeds its powers under the statute. • be better than; surpass: catalog sales have exceeded expectations. DERIVATIVES ex ceed ance noun ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘go over a boundary or specified point ’): from Old French exceder, from Latin excedere, from ex- ‘out ’ + cedere ‘go. ’
exceeding
ex ceed ing |ikˈsēdiNG ɪkˈsidɪŋ | archaic or literary ▶adjective very great: she spoke warmly of his exceeding kindness. ▶adverb [ as submodifier ] extremely; exceedingly: an ale of exceeding poor quality.
exceedingly
ex ceed ing ly |ikˈsēdiNGlē ɪkˈsidɪŋli | ▶adverb 1 [ as submodifier ] extremely: the team played exceedingly well. 2 archaic to a great extent: the supply multiplied exceedingly.
Oxford Dictionary
exceed
ex ¦ceed |ɪkˈsiːd, ɛk- | ▶verb [ with obj. ] be greater in number or size than (a quantity, number, or other measurable thing ): production costs have exceeded £60,000. • go beyond what is allowed or stipulated by (a set limit ): the Tribunal's decision clearly exceeds its powers under the statute. • be better than; surpass: economic growth exceeded expectations this year. DERIVATIVES exceedance noun ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘go over a boundary or specified point ’): from Old French exceder, from Latin excedere, from ex- ‘out ’ + cedere ‘go ’.
exceeding
exceeding |ɪkˈsiːdɪŋ, ɛk- | archaic ▶adjective very great: she spoke warmly of his exceeding kindness. ▶adverb [ as submodifier ] extremely; exceedingly: an ale of exceeding poor quality.
exceedingly
ex ¦ceed |ing ¦ly |ɪkˈsiːdɪŋli, ɛk- | ▶adverb 1 [ as submodifier ] extremely: the team played exceedingly well. 2 archaic to a great extent: the supply multiplied exceedingly.
American Oxford Thesaurus
exceed
exceed verb 1 the cost will exceed $400: be more than, be greater than, be over, go beyond, overreach, top. 2 Brazil exceeds the U.S. in fertile land: surpass, outdo, outstrip, outshine, outclass, transcend, top, cap, beat, excel, better, eclipse, overshadow; informal best, leave standing, be head and shoulders above.
exceedingly
exceedingly adverb an exceedingly comfortable home: extremely, exceptionally, especially, tremendously, very, really, truly, awfully, seriously, totally, completely; formal most; informal mega, ultra, real, mighty; archaic exceeding.
Oxford Thesaurus
exceed
exceed verb 1 the total cost will exceed £400: be more than, be greater than, be over, run over, go over, go beyond, overshoot, overreach, pass, top. ANTONYMS fall short of. 2 Brazil far exceeds America in available fertile land: surpass, outdo, outstrip, outshine, outclass, transcend, top, cap, beat, be greater than, be superior to, be better than, go one better than, better, pass, eclipse, overshadow, put in the shade, put to shame; informal best, leave standing, be head and shoulders above, be a cut above; archaic extinguish, outrival, outvie.
exceeding archaic
exceeding archaic adjective she spoke warmly of his exceeding kindness. See great (sense 2 ). ▶adverb the Lord has been exceeding gracious. See extremely.
exceedingly
exceedingly adverb an exceedingly comfortable home: extremely, exceptionally, especially, tremendously, immensely, supremely, very, really, truly, most, distinctly, decidedly; Scottish unco; French très; N. English right; informal terribly, awfully, devilishly, majorly, seriously, mega, ultra, oh-so, damn, damned; Brit. informal ever so, well, dead, jolly; N. Amer. informal real, mighty, awful, darned; archaic exceeding. WORD LINKS exceedingly ultra- related prefix, as in ultra-modern, ultramicroscopic Word Links sections supply words that are related to the headword but do not normally appear in a thesaurus because they are not actual synonyms.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
exceed
ex ceed /ɪksíːd /〖ex (外へ )ceed (行く )〗(名 )excess, (形 )excessive 動詞 ~s /-dz /; ~ed /-ɪd /; ~ing 他動詞 ⦅かたく ⦆1 【数量 能力などで 】…を超える , …以上である «in » ; «…だけ » …を上回る «by » ▸ exceed 10 feet in height 10フィートの高さを超える ▸ Exports exceed imports by fifty million dollars .5000万ドルの輸出超過である 2 〈制限 規則など 〉を越える ▸ exceed the speed limit 制限速度を越える 自動詞 «…において » まさる «in » .
exceeding
ex c é ed ing 形容詞 非常な, 異常な, 極度の .副詞 ⦅古 ⦆非常に, 極度に .
exceedingly
ex ceed ing ly /ɪksíːdɪŋli /副詞 ⦅やや古 ⦆〖通例 形容詞 の前, 動詞 の後で 〗非常に, たいそう (very much ).