English-Thai Dictionary
glee
N ความปิติยินดี ความ ร่าเริง ความเบิกบาน ใจ joyfulness gloom sadness kwam-pi-ti-yin-de
gleed
N ถ่าน ที่ ร้อน
gleeful
ADJ ร่าเริง ยินดี เป็นสุข happy joyful depressed ra-rang
gleeman
N นักร้อง อาชีพ พเนจร
gleesome
A ร่าเริง ยินดี
gleet
N หนองใน เรื้อรัง
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
GLEE
n. 1. Joy; merriment; mirth; gayety; particularly, the mirth enjoyed at a feast.
2. A sort of catch or song sung in parts.
GLEED
n.A glowing coal.
GLEEFUL
a.Merry; gay; joyous.
GLEEK
n.[See Glee. ] Music, or a musician. 1. A scoff; a game at cards.
GLEEK
v.i.To make sport of; to gibe; to sneer; to spend time idly.
GLEEMAN
n.A musician.
GLEEN
v.i.To shine; to glisten. [Not used. ]
GLEESOME
a.Merry; joyous.
GLEET
n.The flux of a thin humor from the urethra; a thin ichor running from a sore.
GLEET
v.i.To flow in a thin limpid humor; to ooze. 1. To flow slowly, as water.
GLEETY
a.Ichorous; thin; limpid.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
GLEE
Glee, n. Etym: [OE. gle, gleo, AS. gleów, gleó, akin to Icel. gl: cf. Gr.
1. Music; minstrelsy; entertainment. [Obs. ] Chaucer.
2. Joy; merriment; mirth; gayety; paricularly, the mirth enjoyed at a feast. Spenser.
3. (Mus. )
Defn: An unaccompanied part song for three or more solo voices. It is not necessarily gleesome.
GLEE CLUB
GLEE CLUB Glee club.
Defn: A club or company organized for singing glees, and (by extension ) part songs, ballads, etc.
GLEED
Gleed, n. Etym: [AS. gl, fr. gl to glow as a fire; akin to D. gloed,G. glut, Icel. gl. See Glow, v. i.]
Defn: A live or glowing coal; a glede. [Archaic ] Chaucer. Longfellow.
GLEEFUL
GLEEFUL Glee "ful, a.
Defn: Merry; gay; joyous. Shak.
GLEEK
Gleek, n. Etym: [Prob. fr. Icel. leika to play, play a trick on, with the prefix ge-; akin to AS. gelacan, Sw. leka to play, Dan. lege. ]
1. A jest or scoff; a trick or deception. [Obs. ] Where's the Bastard's braves, and Charles his gleeks Shak.
2. Etym: [Cf. Glicke ]
Defn: An enticing look or glance. [Obs. ] A pretty gleek coming from Pallas' eye. Beau. & Fl.
GLEEK
GLEEK Gleek, v. i.
Defn: To make sport; to gibe; to sneer; to spend time idly. [Obs. ] Shak.
GLEEK
Gleek, n. Etym: [OF. glic, G. glück, fortune. See Luck. ]
1. A game at cards, once popular, played by three persons. [Obs. ] Pepys. Evelyn.
2. Three of the same cards held in the same hand; -- hence, three of anything. [Obs. ]
GLEEMAN
Glee "man, n.; pl. Gleemen. Etym: [Glee + man; AS. gleóman.]
Defn: A name anciently given to an itinerant minstrel or musician.
GLEEN
Gleen, v. i. Etym: [Cf. Glance, Glint. ]
Defn: To glisten; to gleam. [Obs. ] Prior.
GLEESOME
GLEESOME Glee "some, a.
Defn: Merry; joyous; gleeful.
GLEET
Gleet, n. Etym: [OE. glette, glet, glat, mucus, pus, filth, OF. glete.] (Med. )
Defn: A transparent mucous discharge from the membrane of the urethra, commonly an effect of gonorrhea. Hoblyn.
GLEET
GLEET Gleet, v. i.
1. To flow in a thin, limpid humor; to ooze, as gleet. Wiseman.
2. To flow slowly, as water. Cheyne.
GLEETY
GLEETY Gleet "y, a.
Defn: Ichorous; thin; limpid. Wiseman.
New American Oxford Dictionary
glee
glee |glē ɡli | ▶noun 1 great delight: his face lit up with impish glee. 2 a song for men's voices in three or more parts, usually unaccompanied, of a type popular esp. c. 1750 –1830. ORIGIN Old English glēo ‘entertainment, music, fun, ’ of Germanic origin. Sense 2 dates from the mid 17th cent.
glee club
glee club ▶noun a group organized to sing short choral works, esp. part-songs.
gleeful
glee ful |ˈglēfəl ˈɡlifəl | ▶adjective exuberantly or triumphantly joyful: she gave a gleeful chuckle. DERIVATIVES glee ful ly adverb, glee ful ness noun
gleeman
glee man |ˈglēmən ˈɡlimən | ▶noun ( pl. gleemen ) historical a professional entertainer, esp. a singer.
gleesome
glee some |ˈglēsəm ˈɡlisəm | ▶adjective archaic gleeful.
gleet
gleet |glēt ɡlit | ▶noun Medicine a watery discharge from the urethra caused by gonorrheal infection. DERIVATIVES gleet y adjective ORIGIN Middle English (denoting mucus formed in the stomach ): from Old French glette ‘slime, secretion, ’ of unknown origin.
Oxford Dictionary
glee
glee |gliː | ▶noun 1 [ mass noun ] great delight, especially from one's own good fortune or another's misfortune: his face lit up with impish glee. 2 a song for men's voices in three or more parts, usually unaccompanied, of a type popular especially c. 1750 –1830. ORIGIN Old English glēo ‘entertainment, music, fun ’, of Germanic origin.
glee club
glee club ▶noun a society for singing part-songs.
gleeful
glee |ful |ˈgliːfʊl, -f (ə )l | ▶adjective exuberantly or triumphantly joyful: she gave a gleeful chuckle. DERIVATIVES gleefully adverb, gleefulness noun
gleeman
glee |man |gliːman | ▶noun ( pl. gleemen ) historical a professional entertainer, especially a singer.
gleesome
glee |some ▶adjective archaic gleeful.
gleet
gleet |gliːt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Medicine a watery discharge from the urethra caused by gonorrhoeal infection. DERIVATIVES gleety adjective ORIGIN Middle English (denoting mucus formed in the stomach ): from Old French glette ‘slime, secretion ’, of unknown origin.
American Oxford Thesaurus
glee
glee noun Agnes clapped her hands together with glee: delight, pleasure, happiness, joy, gladness, elation, euphoria; amusement, mirth, merriment; excitement, gaiety, exuberance; relish, triumph, jubilation, satisfaction, gratification. ANTONYMS disappointment.
gleeful
gleeful adjective the gleeful bunch over there must have been rooting for the visiting team: delighted, pleased, joyful, happy, glad, overjoyed, elated, euphoric; amused, mirthful, merry, exuberant; jubilant; informal over the moon.
Oxford Thesaurus
glee
glee noun Agnes clapped her hands together with glee: delight, pleasure, happiness, joy, joyfulness, gladness, elation, euphoria, exhilaration, cheerfulness, amusement, mirth, mirthfulness, merriment, joviality, jollity, jocularity; excitement, animation, gaiety, high spirits, exuberance, verve, liveliness, triumph, jubilation, relish, satisfaction, gratification; German Schadenfreude; humorous delectation; rare joyousness, jouissance. ANTONYMS gloom, disappointment.
gleeful
gleeful adjective a gleeful chuckle: delighted, pleased, joyful, happy, glad, amused, mirthful, cheerful, overjoyed, elated, euphoric, exhilarated; merry, gay, high-spirited, in high spirits, jolly, jovial, exuberant; cock-a-hoop, jubilant; informal over the moon; literary joyous. ANTONYMS gloomy.
Duden Dictionary
Glee
Glee Substantiv, maskulin , der |gliː |der Glee; Genitiv: des Glees, Plural: die Glees englisch einfaches Lied für drei oder mehr Stimmen (meist Männerstimmen ) ohne instrumentale Begleitung in der englischen Musik des 17. bis 19. Jahrhunderts
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
glee
glee /ɡliː /名詞 1 U 大喜び, 歓喜, 大はしゃぎ ▸ in high glee 大喜びで 2 C 〘楽 〙グリー合唱曲 〘3部以上の主に男声による無伴奏合唱曲 〙.~́ cl ù b グリー合唱団 ; (男声 )合唱団 .
gleeful
glee ful /ɡlíːf (ə )l /形容詞 大喜びの, 陽気な, 楽しい ▸ in a gleeful mood 愉快な気分で ~ly 副詞