English-Thai Dictionary
fork
N คราด krad
fork
N ง่าม เหล็ก ง่าม สิ่ง ที่ เป็น ง่าม ngam
fork
N ทางแยก (ของ ถนน หรือ แม่น้ำ tang-yeak
fork
N ส้อม som
fork
VI แยก ออก เป็น กิ่งก้านสาขา bifurcate branch divaricate yaek-ook-pen-king-kan-sa-ka
fork out
PHRV ขุด (ดิน ถาง kud
fork out
PHRV ไม่เต็มใจ จ่าย ให้ (เงิน mai-tem-jai-jai-hai
fork over
PHRV ขุด (ดิน ถาง kud
fork over
PHRV ไม่เต็มใจ จ่าย ให้ (เงิน mai-tem-jai-jai-hai
fork up
PHRV ขุด (ดิน ถาง kud
fork up
PHRV ไม่เต็มใจ จ่าย ให้ (เงิน mai-tem-jai-jai-hai
forked
A ที่ เป็น กิ่งก้าน
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
FORK
n.[L. furca. ] 1. an instrument consisting of a handle, and a blade of metal, divided into two or more points or prongs, used for lifting or pitching any thing; as a tablefork for feeding; a pitchfork; a dungfork, etc. forks are also made of ivory, wood or other material.
2. A point; as a thunderbolt with three forks. Shakespeare uses it for the point of an arrow.
3. Forks, in the plural, the point where a road parts into two; and the point where a river divides, or rather where two rivers meet and unite in one stream. Each branch is called a fork.
FORK
v.i. 1. To shoot into blades, as corn.
2. to divide into two; as, a road forks.
FORK
v.t. 1. to raise or pitch with a fork, as hay.
2. To dig and break ground with a fork.
3. To make sharp; to point.
FORKED
pp. 1. Raised, pitched or dug with a fork.
2. a. Opening into two or more parts, points or shoots; as a forked tongue; the forked lightning.
3. Having two or more meanings. [Not in use. ]
FORKEDLY
adv. In a forked form.
FORKEDNESS
n.The quality of opening into two or more parts.
FORKHEAD
n.the point of an arrow.
FORKTAIL
n.A salmon, in his fourth year's growth. [Local. ]
FORKY
a.Forked; furcated; opening into two or more parts, shoots or points; as a forky tongue.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
FORK
Fork, n. Etym: [AS. forc, fr. L. furca. Cf. Fourch, Furcate. ]
1. An instrument consisting consisting of a handle with a shank terminating in two or more prongs or tines, which are usually of metal, parallel and slightly curved; -- used from piercing, holding, taking up, or pitching anything.
2. Anything furcate or like of a fork in shape, or furcate at the extremity; as, a tuning fork.
3. One of the parts into which anything is furcated or divided; a prong; a branch of a stream, a road, etc. ; a barbed point, as of an arrow. Let it fall. .. though the fork invade The region of my heart. Shak. A thunderbolt with three forks. Addison.
4. The place where a division or a union occurs; the angle or opening between two branches or limbs; as, the fork of a river, a tree, or a road.
5. The gibbet. [Obs. ] Bp. Butler. Fork beam (Shipbuilding ), a half beam to support a deck, where hatchways occur. -- Fork chuck (Wood Turning ), a lathe center having two prongs for driving the work. -- Fork head. (a ) The barbed head of an arrow. (b ) The forked end of a rod which forms part of a knuckle joint. -- In fork. (Mining ) A mine is said to be in fork, or an engine to "have the water in fork, " when all the water is drawn out of the mine. Ure. -- The forks of a river or a road, the branches into which it divides, or which come together to form it; the place where separation or union takes place.
FORK
Fork, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Forked; p. pr. & vb. n. Forking.]
1. To shoot into blades, as corn. The corn beginneth to fork. Mortimer. 1
2. To divide into two or more branches; as, a road, a tree, or a stream forks.
FORK
FORK Fork, v. t.
Defn: To raise, or pitch with a fork, as hay; to dig or turn over with a fork, as the soil. Forking the sheaves on the high-laden cart. Prof. Wilson. To fork over or out, to hand or pay over, as money. [Slang ] G. Eliot.
FORKBEARD
FORKBEARD Fork "beard `, n. (Zoöl.)(a ) A European fish (Raniceps raninus ), having a large flat head; -- also called tadpole fish, and lesser forked beard. (b ) The European forked hake or hake's-dame (Phycis blennoides ); -- also called great forked beard.
FORKED
FORKED Forked, a.
1. Formed into a forklike shape; having a fork; dividing into two or more prongs or branches; furcated; bifurcated; zigzag; as, the forked lighting. A serpent seen, with forked tongue. Shak.
2. Having a double meaning; ambiguous; equivocal. Cross forked (Her. ), a cross, the ends of whose arms are divided into two sharp points; -- called also cross double fitché. A cross forked of three points is a cross, each of whose arms terminates in three sharp points. -- Forked counsel, advice pointing more than one way; ambiguous advice. [Obs. ] B. Jonson. -- Fork "ed *ly, adv. -- Fork "ed *ness, n.
FORKERVE
FORKERVE For *kerve, v. t. [Obs. ]
Defn: See Forcarve, v. t.
FORKINESS
FORKINESS Fork "i *ness, n.
Defn: The quality or state or dividing in a forklike manner.
FORKLESS
FORKLESS Fork "less, a.
Defn: Having no fork.
FORKTAIL
FORKTAIL Fork "tail `, n. (Zoöl.)(a ) One of several Asiatic and East Indian passerine birds, belonging to Enucurus, and allied genera. The tail is deeply forking. (b ) A salmon in its fourth year's growth. [Prov. Eng. ]
FORK-TAILED
FORK-TAILED Fork "-tailed `, a. (Zoöl.)
Defn: Having the outer tail feathers longer than the median ones; swallow-tailed; -- said of many birds. Fork-tailed flycatcher (Zoöl.), a tropical American flycatcher (Milvulus tyrannus ). -- Fork-tailed gull (Zoöl.), a gull of the genus Xema, of two species, esp. X. Sabinii of the Arctic Ocean. -- Fork-tailed kite (Zoöl.), a graceful American kite (Elanoides forficatus ); -- called also swallow-tailed kite.
FORKY
FORKY Fork "y, a.
Defn: Opening into two or more parts or shoots; forked; furcated. "Forky tongues." Pope.
New American Oxford Dictionary
fork
fork |fôrk fɔrk | ▶noun 1 an implement with two or more prongs used for lifting food to the mouth or holding it when cutting. • a tool of larger but similar form used for digging or lifting in a garden or farm. 2 a device, component, or part with two or more prongs, in particular: • a unit consisting of a pair of supports in which a bicycle or motorcycle wheel revolves. • a flash of forked lightning. 3 the point where something, esp. a road or river, divides into two parts. • either of two such parts. 4 Chess a simultaneous attack on two or more pieces by one piece. ▶verb 1 [ no obj. ] (esp. of a road or other route ) divide into two parts: the place where the road forks. • [ no obj. ] take or constitute one part or the other at the point where a road or other route divides: a minor road forked left. 2 [ with obj. ] dig, lift, or manipulate (something ) with a fork: fork in some compost. 3 [ with obj. ] Chess attack (two pieces ) simultaneously with one piece. PHRASAL VERBS fork something over /out /up (or fork over /out /up ) informal pay money for something, esp. reluctantly. DERIVATIVES fork ful |-ˌfo͝ol |noun ( pl. forkfuls ). ORIGIN Old English forca, force (denoting an agricultural implement ), based on Latin furca ‘pitchfork, forked stick ’; reinforced in Middle English by Anglo-Norman French furke (also from Latin furca ).
forkball
fork ball |ˈfôrkˌbôl ˈfɔːrkbɔːl | ▶noun Baseball a sinking pitch, released from between the widely spread index finger and middle finger.
Forkbeard, Sweyn
Fork beard, Sweyn |ˈfôrkˌbi (ə )rd ˈfɔrkbɪərd | see Sweyn I.
forked
forked |fôrkt fɔrkt | ▶adjective having a divided or pronged end or branches; bifurcated: a deeply forked tail. PHRASES with forked tongue humorous untruthfully; deceitfully.
forked lightning
forked light ning |fɔrkt ˈlaɪtnɪŋ | ▶noun lightning that is visible in the form of a branching line across the sky.
forklift
fork lift |ˈfôrkˌlift ˈfɔrklɪft | ▶noun (also forklift truck ) a vehicle with a pronged device in front for lifting and carrying heavy loads. ▶verb [ with obj. ] lift and carry (a heavy load ) with such a vehicle: blocks of compacted garbage being forklifted onto a trailer.
forktail
fork |tail |ˈfɔːkteɪl | ▶noun an Asian songbird of the thrush family, with a long forked tail and typically with black-and-white plumage. ●Genus Enicurus, family Turdidae: several species.
Oxford Dictionary
fork
fork |fɔːk | ▶noun 1 an implement with two or more prongs used for lifting food to the mouth or holding it when cutting. • a farm or garden tool with three or four prongs, used for digging or lifting. • [ as modifier ] denoting a light meal or buffet that may be eaten solely with a fork, while standing: a fork supper. 2 the point where something, especially a road or (N. Amer. ) river, divides into two parts: turn right at the next fork. • either of two forked parts. 3 (usu. forks ) each of a pair of supports in which a bicycle or motorcycle wheel revolves. 4 a flash of forked lightning. 5 Chess a simultaneous attack on two or more pieces by one. ▶verb 1 [ no obj. ] (especially of a route ) divide into two parts: the place where the road forks. • [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] take or constitute one route or the other at the point where a route divides: we forked north-west for Rannoch. • Computing split (a process ) into two or more independent processes. the attack can only work against a server that forks separate processes to handle client requests. 2 [ with obj. ] dig or move (something ) with a fork: fork in some compost. 3 [ with obj. ] Chess attack (two pieces ) simultaneously with one. PHRASAL VERBS fork something out /up informal pay money for something, especially reluctantly: my car had been towed away and I had to fork out 70 quid. DERIVATIVES forkful noun ( pl. forkfuls ) ORIGIN Old English forca, force (denoting a farm implement ), based on Latin furca ‘pitchfork, forked stick ’; reinforced in Middle English by Anglo-Norman French furke (also from Latin furca ).
forkball
fork |ball |ˈfɔːkbɔːl | ▶noun Baseball a pitch released from between the widely spread index finger and middle finger.
Forkbeard, Sweyn
Fork |beard |ˈfɔːkbɪəd | see Sweyn I.
forked
forked |fɔːkt | ▶adjective having a divided or pronged end or branches; bifurcated: a deeply forked tail. PHRASES with forked tongue humorous untruthfully; deceitfully.
forked lightning
forked light |ning ▶noun [ mass noun ] lightning that is visible in the form of a zigzag or branching line across the sky.
forklift
fork |lift ▶noun (also forklift truck ) a vehicle with a pronged device in front for lifting and carrying heavy loads. ▶verb [ with obj. and adverbial of place ] lift and carry (a load ) with a forklift truck.
forktail
fork |tail |ˈfɔːkteɪl | ▶noun an Asian songbird of the thrush family, with a long forked tail and typically with black-and-white plumage. ●Genus Enicurus, family Turdidae: several species.
American Oxford Thesaurus
fork
fork verb the road forks at the south end of the lake: split, branch (off ), divide, subdivide, separate, part, diverge, go in different directions, bifurcate; technical divaricate, ramify.
forked
forked adjective the hawk's distinctive forked tail: split, branching, branched, bifurcate (d ), Y-shaped, V-shaped, pronged, divided; technical divaricate. ANTONYMS straight.
Oxford Thesaurus
fork
fork verb where the road forks, bear left: branch, split, divide, subdivide, separate, part, diverge, go in different directions, go separate ways, bifurcate, split in two; branch off; technical furcate, divaricate, ramify. PHRASES fork out informal to enjoy those benefits, you will have to fork out twelve pounds a month | he resents having to fork out for these freeloaders: pay, pay up, pay out; come up with, hand over, part with, defray the cost of; foot the bill, settle up; informal cough up, shell out, dish out, lay out, come across with; Brit. informal stump up; N. Amer. informal make with, ante up, pony up.
forked
forked adjective the red kite has a forked tail: branching, branched, diverging, Y-shaped, V-shaped, pronged, divided, split, separated; technical bifurcate, divaricate. ANTONYMS straight.
Duden Dictionary
Forke
For ke Substantiv, feminin norddeutsch , die |F o rke |mittelniederdeutsch forke < lateinisch furca = zweizinkige Gabel 1 Heu-, Mistgabel 2 salopp abwertend Gabel 1
forkeln
for keln schwaches Verb Jägersprache |f o rkeln |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « zu veraltet Forkel = Gabel am Geweih des Hirsches < lateinisch furcula = gabelförmige Stütze mit dem Geweih angreifen, aufspießen, kämpfen die Hirsche forkeln
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
fork
fork /fɔː r k /〖原義は 「(農具の )くま手 」〗名詞 複 ~s /-s /C 1 (食卓用の )フォーク ▸ pick up [put down ] a knife and fork ナイフとフォークを取る [置く ]▸ eat cake with a fork フォークでケーキを食べる ▸ a dinner [serving, cake ] fork 食卓 [取り分け, ケーキ ]用フォーク 2 (農業用の )またぐわ, くま手 ▸ a hay [garden ] fork 干し草 [園芸 ]用くま手 3 (道 川などの )分岐 (点 ); 支流 ; (木 枝の )また ▸ reach the fork in [of ] the road 道の分岐点までたどり着く 4 フォーク状の物 ;〖the ~s 〗(自転車などの )フォーク 〘前輪をはさむ2本のバー 〙; 〘楽 〙音叉 (さ )(tuning fork ); 叉状電光 .5 〘チェス 〙両当り .f ò rk and kn í fe =life ; wife (→rhyming slang ).動詞 他動詞 1 «…に » 〈食べ物など 〉をフォークで入れる [置く ]; …をフォークで運ぶ «into , onto » .2 〈干し草など 〉をまたぐわで運ぶ; 〈土など 〉をくわで掘り起こす (over ).3 …をフォーク型にする .自動詞 1 〈道 川などが 〉分岐する [している ].2 〈人が 〉分岐点を曲がる ▸ fork left [right ]左 [右 ]に曲がる f ò rk ó ut ⦅くだけて ⦆ «…のために /…に » (しぶしぶ )金を払う, 渡す «for /on » .f ò rk A ó ut [ó ut A ]1 ⦅くだけて ⦆A 〈大金など 〉を (しぶしぶ )払う [出す ].2 A 〈料理など 〉を配る .f ò rk A ó ver [ó ver A ]1 ↑他動詞 2 .2 ⦅主に米 くだけて ⦆=fork A out .f ò rk A ú p [ú p A ]⦅主に米 くだけて ⦆=fork A out .~̀ l ú nch [s ú pper ]⦅英 ⦆立食式の昼 [夕 ]食 .
forkball
f ó rk b à ll 名詞 C 〘野球 〙フォークボール .
forked
f ó rked /-t /形容詞 比較なし 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗二股 (以上 )に分かれた, 分岐 [枝分かれ ]した .~̀ l í ghtning 叉 (さ )状電光 〘先端が枝分かれした稲妻などの光 〙.
forklift
f ó rk l ì ft 名詞 C 1 フォークリフト .2 フォークリフト車 (forklift truck ).