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English-Thai Dictionary

Faculty of Allied Health Science

N คณะสหเวชศาสตร์  ka-na-sa-ha-wed-cha-sad

 

Faculty of Architecture

N คณ สถาปัตยกรรมศาสตร์  ka-na-sa-ta-pad-ta-ya-kam-ma-sad

 

Faculty of Arts

N คณะอักษรศาสตร์  ka-na-ak-son-sad

 

Faculty of Dentistry

N คณะ ทันต แพทยศาสตร์  ka-na-tan-ta-pad-sad

 

Faculty of Economics

N คณะเศรษฐศาสตร์  ka-na-sad-ta-sad

 

Faculty of Education

N คณะครุศาสตร์  ka-na-kar-ru-sad

 

Faculty of Engineering

N คณะวิศวกรรมศาสตร์  ka-na-wid-sa-wa-kam-ma-sad

 

Faculty of Fine and Applied Arts

N คณะศิลปกรรมศาสตร์  ka-na-sin-la-pa-sad

 

Faculty of Interior Decoration

N คณะมัณ ฑนศิลป์  ka-na-man-ta-na-sin

 

Faculty of Law

N คณะนิติศาสตร์  ka-na-ni-ti-sad

 

Faculty of Nursing

N คณะพยาบาลศาสตร์  ka-na-pa-ya-ban-sad

 

Faculty of Pharmacology

N คณะเภสัชศาสตร์  ka-na-pea-sad-cha-sad

 

Faculty of Political Science

N คณะรัฐศาสตร์  ka-na-rad-ta-sad

 

Faculty of Science

N คณะวิทยาศาสตร์  ka-na-wid-ta-ya-sad

 

faculty

N คณะ  ka-na

 

faculty

N คณะ อาจารย์  ครู สอนหนังสือ  ผู้เชี่ยวชาญ  teacher teaching staff ka-na-ar-jan

 

faculty

N ศักยภาพ หรือ ความสามารถ ใน ด้าน ร่างกาย และ จิตใจ  สติปัญญา  sak-ka-ya-phab-rue-kwam-sa-mad-nai-dan-rang-kai-lae-jid-jai

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

FACULTY

n.[L. facultas, from facio, to make. ] 1. That power of the mind or intellect which enables it to receive, revive or modify perceptions; as the faculty of seeing, of hearing, of imagining, of remembering, etc. : or in general, the faculties may be called the powers or capacities of the mind.
2. The power of doing any thing; ability. There is no faculty or power in creatures, which can rightly perform its functions, without the perpetual aid of the Supreme Being.
3. The power of performing any action, natural, vital or animal.
The vital faculty is that by which life is preserved.
4. Facility of performance; the peculiar skill derived from practice, or practice aided by nature; habitual skill or ability; dexterity; adroitness; knack. One man has a remarkable faculty of telling a story; another, of inventing excuses for misconduct; a third, of reasoning; a fourth, of preaching.
5. Personal quality; disposition or habit, good or ill.
6. Power; authority.
Hath borne his faculties so meek. [Hardly legitimate. ]
7. Mechanical power; as the faculty of the wedge. [Not used, nor legitimate. ]
8. Natural virtue; efficacy; as the faculty of simples. [Not used, nor legitimate. ]
9. Privilege; a right or power granted to a person by favor or indulgence, to do what by law he may not do; as the faculty of marrying without the bans being first published, or of ordaining a deacon under age. The archbishop of Canterbury has a court of faculties, for granting such privileges or dispensations.
1 . In colleges, the masters and professors of the several sciences.
One of the members or departments of a university. In most universities there are four faculties; of art, including humanity and philosophy; of theology; of medicine; and of law.
In America, the faculty of a college or university consists of the president, professors and tutors.
The faculty of advocates, in Scotland, is a respectable body of lawyers who plead in all causes before the Courts of Session, Justiciary and Exchequer.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

FACULTY

Fac "ul *ty, n.; pl. Faculties. Etym: [F. facult, L. facultas, fr. facilis easy (cf. facul easily ), fr. fecere to make. See Fact, and cf. Facility. ]

 

1. Ability to act or perform, whether inborn or cultivated; capacity for any natural function; especially, an original mental power or capacity for any of the well-known classes of mental activity; psychical or soul capacity; capacity for any of the leading kinds of soul activity, as knowledge, feeling, volition; intellectual endowment or gift; power; as, faculties of the mind or the soul. But know that in the soul Are many lesser faculties that serve Reason as chief. Milton. What a piece of work is a man! how noble in reason! how infinite in faculty! Shak.

 

2. Special mental endowment; characteristic knack. He had a ready faculty, indeed, of escaping from any topic that agitated his too sensitive and nervous temperament. Hawthorne.

 

3. Power; prerogative or attribute of office. [R.] This Duncan Hath borne his faculties so meek. Shak.

 

4. Privilege or permission, granted by favor or indulgence, to do a particular thing; authority; license; dispensation. The pope. .. granted him a faculty to set him free from his promise. Fuller. It had not only faculty to inspect all bishops' dioceses, but to change what laws and statutes they should think fit to alter among the colleges. Evelyn.

 

5. A body of a men to whom any specific right or privilege is granted; formerly, the graduates in any of the four departments of a university or college (Philosophy, Law, Medicine, or Theology ), to whom was granted the right of teaching (profitendi or docendi ) in the department in which they had studied; at present, the members of a profession itself; as, the medical faculty; the legal faculty, ect.

 

6. (Amer. Colleges )

 

Defn: The body of person to whom are intrusted the government and instruction of a college or university, or of one of its departments; the president, professors, and tutors in a college. Dean of faculty. See under Dean. -- Faculty of advocates. (Scot. ) See under Advocate.

 

Syn. -- Talent; gift; endowment; dexterity; expertness; cleverness; readiness; ability; knack.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

faculty

fac ul ty |ˈfakəltē ˈfækəlti | noun ( pl. faculties ) 1 an inherent mental or physical power: her critical faculties. an aptitude or talent for doing something: the author's faculty for philosophical analysis. 2 the teaching staff of a university or college, or of one of its departments or divisions, viewed as a body: there were then no tenured women on the faculty | the English faculty. a group of university departments concerned with a major division of knowledge: the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. dated the members of a particular profession, esp. medicine, considered collectively. 3 a license or authorization, esp. from a church authority. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French faculte, from Latin facultas, from facilis easy, from facere make, do.

 

Faculty of Advocates

Faculty of Advocates (in the UK ) the society constituting the Scottish Bar.

 

Oxford Dictionary

faculty

fac |ulty |ˈfak (ə )lti | noun ( pl. faculties ) 1 an inherent mental or physical power: her critical faculties | the faculty of sight. an aptitude for doing something: his faculty for taking the initiative. 2 a group of university departments concerned with a major division of knowledge: the Faculty of Arts | the law faculty. [ in sing. ] the teaching or research staff of a group of university departments, or (N. Amer. ) of a university or college, viewed as a body. dated the members of a particular profession, especially medicine, considered collectively. 3 a licence or authorization from a Church authority. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French faculte, from Latin facultas, from facilis easy , from facere make, do .

 

Faculty of Advocates

Faculty of Advocates (in the UK ) the society constituting the Scottish Bar.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

faculty

faculty noun 1 the faculty of speech: power, capability, capacity, facility, wherewithal, means; (faculties ) senses, wits, reason, intelligence. 2 an unusual faculty for unearthing contributors: ability, proficiency, competence, capability, potential, capacity, facility; aptitude, talent, gift, flair, bent, skill, knack, genius; expertise, expertness, adeptness, adroitness, dexterity, prowess, mastery, artistry. 3 conflict between students and faculty: staff, teachers, professors, instructors. 4 the arts faculty: department, school, division, section.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

faculty

faculty noun 1 the faculty of speech: power, capability, capacity, facility, potential, potentiality, propensity, wherewithal, means, preparedness; (faculties ) senses, wits, reason, intelligence. 2 he had a quite unusual faculty for unearthing contributors: ability, proficiency, competence, capability, potential, capacity, facility, readiness; aptitude, talent, gift, flair, bent, skill, knack, finesse, genius; expertise, expertness, adeptness, adroitness, dexterity, prowess, mastery, artistry, accomplishment; propensity, inclination, natural ability, suitability, fitness; head, mind, brain; informal know-how. 3 the arts faculty: department, school, division, section. 4 the vicar introduced certain ornaments without the necessary faculty to do so: authorization, authority, power, right, permission, consent, leave, sanction, licence, dispensation, assent, acquiescence, agreement, approval, seal of approval, approbation, endorsement, imprimatur, clearance; informal the go-ahead, the thumbs up, the OK, the green light, say-so; rare permit.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

faculty

fac ul ty /fǽk (ə )lti /facile (簡単な )ty 2 (状態 )〗名詞 -ties /-z /C 1 a. 〖しばしばF -〗学部 (department )the Law Faculty the Faculty of Law 法学部 b. ⦅主に米 ⦆〖集合的に; 単複両扱い 〗(大学 1学部の )教授陣 (!student, staff, administratorに対して ) ▸ a faculty meeting 教授会, 職員会議 c. ⦅米 ⦆the ; 集合的に 〗大学の全教職員 .語法 ⦅米 ⦆では1学科 [1高校 ]の全教員をさすこともある. 個々の教員をさすにはa faculty member, a member of (the ) facultyとする. facultiesは複数の教員集団をさす .2 〖しばしばone 's -ties 〗(肉体的 精神的な )機能 , 能力 (!見る 聞く 考えるなどの本来備わっている能力をいう ) develop one's critical faculties 批評能力を培 (つちか )mental faculties 思考力 be in (full ) possession of one's faculties 〈人が 〉すべての機能に (まったく )異常がない 3 かたく 〖単数形で 〗 «…の /…する » 才能 , 能力, 特殊技能 «for /of [for ] do ing » (!特定分野における, 先天的 後天的なもの ) .4 (特に教会が与えた )認可, 権限, 特権, 特許 .5 ⦅やや古 ⦆(特に医者の )同業者 ; 団体 .