English-Thai Dictionary
gull
N คน โดน หลอกลวง คน โดน ต้มตุ๋น kon-don-lok-luang
gull
N นก นางนวล nok-nang-nuan
gull
VT หลอกลวง โกง ปลิ้นปล้อน ต้มตุ๋น cheat trick dupe deceive lok-luang
gull into
PHRV โกง หลอกลวง kong
gull out of
PHRV โกง หลอกลวง cheat out of kong
gullet
N รางน้ำ ท่อน้ำ gully rang-nam
gullet
N หล อดอาหาร คอหอย ทางเดินอาหาร oesophagus throat pharynx lod-ar-han
gullibility
N ความ เซ่อซ่า การถูก หลอก ง่าย innocence naivety kwam-sor-sa
gullible
ADJ โดน หลอก ง่าย เซ่อ naive innocent born yesterday don-lok-ngai
gully
N รางน้ำ ท่อน้ำ gullet rang-nam
gully
N ห้วย ลำธาร ditch chasm crevasse ravine huai
gully
VT ทำ ทาง ให้ น้ำ ไหล ทำ รางน้ำ ชายคา ทำ ร่องน้ำ gutter tam-tang-hai-nam-lai
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
GULL
v.t.To deceive; to cheat; to mislead by deception; to trick; to defraud. The vulgar, gull'd into rebellion, armed.
GULL
n.A cheating or cheat; trick; fraud. 1. One easily cheated.
GULL
n.A marine fowl of the genus Larus, and order of ansers. There are several species.
GULLCATCHER
n.A cheat; a man who cheats or entraps silly people.
GULLED
pp. Cheated; deceived; defrauded.
GULLER
n.A cheat; an imposter.
GULLERY
n.Cheat. [Not used. ]
GULLET
n.[L. gula. ] The passage in the neck of an animal by which food and liquor are taken into the stomach; the esophagus. 1. A stream or lake. [Not used. ]
GULLIED
pp. Having a hollow worn by water.
GULLISH
n.Foolish; stupid. [Not in use. ]
GULLISHNESS
n.Foolishness; stupidity. [Not in use. ]
GULLY
n.A channel or hollow worn in the earth by a current of water.
GULLY
v.t.To wear a hollow channel in the earth.
GULLY
v.i.To run with noise. [Not in use. ]
GULLYHOLE
n.An opening where gutters empty their contents into the subterraneous sewer.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
GULL
Gull, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Gulled; p. pr. & vb. n. Gulling.] Etym: [Prob. fr. gull the bird; but cf. OSw. gylla to deceive, D. kullen, and E. cullibility. ]
Defn: To deceive; to cheat; to mislead; to trick; to defraud. The rulgar, gulled into rebellion, armed. Dryden. I'm not gulling him for the emperor's service. Coleridge.
GULL
GULL Gull, n.
1. A cheating or cheat; trick; fraud. Shak.
2. One easily cheated; a dupe. Shak.
GULL
Gull, n. Etym: [Of Celtic origin; cf. Corn. gullan, W. gwylan.](Zoöl.)
Defn: One of many species of long-winged sea birds of the genus Larus and allied genera.
Note: Among the best known American species are the herring gull (Larus argentatus ), the great black-backed gull (L. murinus ) the laughing gull (L. atricilla ), and Bonaparte's gull (L. Philadelphia ). The common European gull is Larus canus. Gull teaser (Zoöl.), the jager; -- also applied to certain species of terns.
GULLAGE
GULLAGE Gull "age, n.
Defn: Act of being gulled. [Obs. ] Had you no quirk. To avoid gullage, sir, by such a creature B. Jonson
GULLER
GULLER Gull "er, n.
Defn: One who gulls; a deceiver.
GULLERY
GULLERY Gull "er *y, n.
Defn: An act, or the practice, of gulling; trickery; fraud. [R.] "A mere gullery. " Selden.
GULLET
Gul "let, n. Etym: [OE. golet, OF. Goulet, dim. of gole, goule,throat, F. gueule, L. gula; perh. akin to Skr. gula, G. kenle; cf. F. goulet the neck of a bottle, goulotte channel gutter. Cf. Gules, Gully. ]
1. (Anat. )
Defn: The tube by which food and drink are carried from the pharynx to the stomach; the esophagus.
2. Something shaped like the food passage, or performing similar functions; as: (a ) A channel for water. (b ) (Engin. ) A preparatory cut or channel in excavations, of sufficient width for the passage of earth wagons. (c ) A concave cut made in the teeth of some saw blades.
GULLETING
GULLETING Gul "let *ing, n. (Engin. )
Defn: A system of excavating by means of gullets or channels.
GULLIBLE
GULLIBLE Gul "li *ble, a.
Defn: Easily gulled; that may be duped. -- Gul "li *bii `i *ty, n. Burke.
GULLISH
GULLISH Gull "ish, a.
Defn: Foolish; stupid. [Obs. ] Gull "ish *ness, n. [Obs. ]
GULLY
Gul "ly, n.; pl. Gulles. Etym: [Etymol. uncertain ]
Defn: A large knife. [Scot. ] Sir W. Scott.
GULLY
Gul "ly, n.; pl. Gullies. Etym: [Formerly gullet. ]
1. A channel or hollow worn in the earth by a current of water; a short deep portion of a torrent's bed when dry.
2. A grooved iron rail or tram plate. [Eng. ] Gully gut, a glutton. [Obs. ] Chapman. -- Gully hole, the opening through which gutters discharge surface water.
GULLY
Gul "ly, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Gullied; p. pr. & vb. n. Gullying.]
Defn: To wear into a gully or into gullies.
GULLY
GULLY Gul "ly, v. i.
Defn: To flow noisily. [Obs. ] Johnson.
New American Oxford Dictionary
gull
gull 1 |gəl ɡəl | ▶noun a long-winged, web-footed seabird with a raucous call, typically having white plumage with a gray or black mantle. [Family Laridae: several genera, in particular Larus, and numerous species. ] ORIGIN late Middle English: of Celtic origin; related to Welsh gwylan and Breton gwelan.
gull
gull 2 |ɡəl gəl | ▶verb [ with obj. ] fool or deceive (someone ): workers had been gulled into inflicting poverty and deprivation upon themselves. ▶noun a person who is fooled or deceived. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: of unknown origin.
Gullah
Gul lah |ˈgələ ˈɡələ | ▶noun 1 a member of a black people living on the coast of South Carolina and nearby islands. 2 the Creole language of this people, having an English base with elements from various West African languages. It has about 125,000 speakers. ▶adjective of or relating to this people or their language. ORIGIN perhaps a shortening of Angola, or from Gola, the name of an agricultural people of Liberia and Sierra Leone.
gullery
gull er y |ˈgələrē ˈɡələri | ▶noun ( pl. gulleries ) a breeding colony, breeding place, or roost of gulls.
gullet
gul let |ˈgəlit ˈɡələt | ▶noun the passage by which food passes from the mouth to the stomach; the esophagus. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French goulet, diminutive of goule ‘throat, ’ from Latin gula .
gulley
gul ley |ˈgəlē ˈɡəli | ▶noun ( pl. gulleys ) variant spelling of gully.
gullible
gul li ble |ˈgələbəl ˈɡələbəl | ▶adjective easily persuaded to believe something; credulous: an attempt to persuade a gullible public to spend their money. DERIVATIVES gul li bil i ty |ˌgələˈbilitē |noun, gul li bly |-blē |adverb ORIGIN early 19th cent.: from gull 2 + -ible .
gull wing
gull wing ▶noun [ as modifier ] (of a door on a car or aircraft ) opening upward: gull-wing doors.
gully
gul ly |ˈgəlē ˈɡəli |(also gulley ) ▶noun ( pl. gullies ) a water-worn ravine. • a deep artificial channel serving as a gutter or drain. ▶verb [ with obj. ] (usu. as adj. gullied ) erode gullies into (land ) by water action: he began to pick his way over the gullied landscape. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (in the sense ‘gullet ’): from French goulet (see gullet ).
Oxford Dictionary
gull
gull 1 |gʌl | ▶noun a long-winged web-footed seabird with a raucous call, typically having white plumage with a grey or black mantle. ●Family Laridae: several genera, in particular Larus, and numerous species. ORIGIN late Middle English: of Celtic origin; related to Welsh gwylan and Breton gwelan.
gull
gull 2 |gʌl | ▶verb [ with obj. ] fool or deceive (someone ): he had been gulled into believing that the documents were authentic. ▶noun a person who is fooled or deceived. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: of unknown origin.
Gullah
Gullah |ˈgʌlə | ▶noun ( pl. same or Gullahs ) 1 a member of a black people living on the coast of South Carolina and nearby islands. 2 [ mass noun ] the Creole language of the Gullah, having an English base with elements from various West African languages. It has about 125,000 speakers. ▶adjective relating to the Gullah or their language. ORIGIN perhaps a shortening of Angola, or from Gola, the name of an agricultural people of Liberia and Sierra Leone.
gullery
gull |ery |ˈgʌləri | ▶noun ( pl. gulleries ) a breeding colony, breeding place, or roost of gulls.
gullet
gul ¦let |ˈgʌlɪt | ▶noun the passage by which food passes from the mouth to the stomach; the oesophagus. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French goulet, diminutive of goule ‘throat ’, from Latin gula .
gulley
gul ¦ley ▶noun ( pl. gulleys ) variant spelling of gully.
gullible
gul |lible |ˈgʌlɪb (ə )l | ▶adjective easily persuaded to believe something; credulous: an attempt to persuade a gullible public to spend their money. DERIVATIVES gullibility |-ˈbɪlɪti |noun, gullibly adverb ORIGIN early 19th cent.: from gull 2 + -ible .
gull wing
gull wing ▶noun [ as modifier ] (of a door on a car or aircraft ) opening upwards: gull-wing doors. DERIVATIVES gull-winged adjective
gully
gully |ˈgʌli | ▶noun ( pl. gullies ) 1 (also gulley ) a ravine formed by the action of water. • Austral. /NZ a river valley. • a deep artificial channel serving as a gutter or drain. 2 Cricket a fielding position on the off side between point and the slips. • a fielder at gully. 3 (also gali ) Indian an alley. [from Hindi galī. ] ▶verb (also gulley ) [ with obj. ] (usu. as adj. gullied ) (of water ) make gullies or deep channels in (land ). ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (in the sense ‘gullet ’): from French goulet (see gullet ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
gull
gull verb he gulled Lisa's entire family before he skipped town: hoodwink, fool, dupe, deceive, delude, hoax, trick, mislead, lead on, take in, swindle, cheat, double-cross; informal pull the wool over someone's eyes, pull a fast one on, put one over on, bamboozle, con, sucker, snooker; literary cozen.
gullet
gullet noun the bird's gullet: esophagus, throat, maw, pharynx; crop, craw; archaic throttle, gorge.
gullible
gullible adjective he was a swindler who preyed on gullible elderly widows: credulous, naive, overtrusting, overtrustful, easily deceived, easily taken in, exploitable, dupable, impressionable, unsuspecting, unsuspicious, unwary, ingenuous, innocent, inexperienced, unworldly, green; informal wet behind the ears, born yesterday. ANTONYMS suspicious. CHOOSE THE RIGHT WORD gullible, callow, credulous, ingenuous, naive, trusting, unsophisticated Some people will believe anything. Those who are truly gullible are the easiest to deceive, which is why they so often make fools of themselves. Those who are merely credulous might be a little too quick to believe something, but they usually aren't stupid enough to act on it. Trusting suggests the same willingness to believe (a trusting child ), but it isn't necessarily a bad way to be (a person so trusting he completely disarmed his enemies ). No one likes to be called naive because it implies a lack of street smarts (she's so naive she'd accept a ride from a stranger ), but when applied to things other than people, it can describe a simplicity and absence of artificiality that is quite charming (the naive style in which nineteenth-century American portraits were often painted ). Most people would rather be thought of as ingenuous, meaning straightforward and sincere (an ingenuous confession of the truth ), because it implies the simplicity of a child without the negative overtones. Callow, however, comes down a little more heavily on the side of immaturity and almost always goes hand-in-hand with youth. Whether young or old, someone who is unsophisticated suffers from a lack of experience. These notes show fine distinctions in meaning between closely related synonyms to help you find the best word.
gully
gully noun 1 a steep icy gully: ravine, canyon, gorge, pass, defile, couloir, gulch, coulee, draw. 2 water runs from the drainpipe into a gully: channel, conduit, trench, ditch, drain, culvert, cut, gutter.
Oxford Thesaurus
gull
gull verb she knew she wouldn't be able to gull him. See deceive (sense 1 ). ▶noun she is unaware of being the gull of John's plot. See victim (sense 2 ).
gullet
gullet noun oesophagus, throat, pharynx; crop, craw, maw; informal, dated the red lane; archaic weasand, throttle, gorge, gula. WORD LINKS gullet oesophageal relating to the gullet 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.
gullible
gullible adjective the swindler preyed upon gullible old women: credulous, over-trusting, over-trustful, trustful, easily deceived /led, easily taken in, exploitable, dupable, deceivable, impressionable, unsuspecting, unsuspicious, unwary, unguarded, unsceptical, ingenuous, naive, innocent, simple, inexperienced, unworldly, green, as green as grass, childlike, ignorant; foolish, silly; informal wet behind the ears, born yesterday. ANTONYMS cynical; suspicious. CHOOSE THE RIGHT WORD gullible, credulous ■ A gullible person is easy to deceive because they are too ready to believe or trust someone (professional manipulators intent on pulling the wool over the eyes of a gullible public ). They are particularly likely to believe something that would be to their advantage or that they want to be true. Gullible carries a note of scornful pity at someone's foolish failure to examine the evidence critically. ■ Credulous also describes people who are too ready to believe or accept what they are told (the very incomprehensibility of the modern world has made us even more credulous ), but, unlike gullible, credulous does not necessarily imply that anyone is deliberately trying to take advantage of an easily-fooled person. These notes show fine distinctions in meaning between closely related synonyms to help you find the best word.
gully
gully noun 1 the climber plunged 300 feet down an icy gully: ravine, canyon, gorge, pass, defile, couloir, deep narrow valley; gulf, chasm, abyss; S. English chine, bunny; N. English clough, gill, thrutch; Scottish cleuch, heugh; N. Amer. gulch, coulee, flume; S. African sloot, kloof, donga. 2 the water runs from the drainpipe into a gully: channel, conduit, trench, ditch, drain, culvert, cut, flume, gutter, furrow, groove, depression.
Duden Dictionary
Gülle
Gül le Substantiv, feminin , die |G ü lle |die Gülle; Genitiv: der Gülle mittelhochdeutsch gülle = Pfütze 1 a flüssiger Stalldünger, der sich aus Jauche, Kot, eventuell Wasser sowie Resten von Einstreu und Futter zusammensetzt b südwestdeutsch, schweizerisch, österreichisch Jauche 2 südwestdeutsch umgangssprachlich abwertend etwas, was als schlecht, ärgerlich o. ä. empfunden, angesehen wird
Güllefass
Gül le fass Substantiv, Neutrum südwestdeutsch, schweizerisch , das Güllenfass |G ü llefass |Jauchefass
güllen
gül len schwaches Verb südwestdeutsch, schweizerisch |g ü llen |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « jauchen
Güllenfass
Gül len fass Substantiv, Neutrum südwestdeutsch, schweizerisch , das Güllefass |G ü llenfass |Jauchefass
Gully
Gul ly Substantiv, maskulin oder Substantiv, Neutrum , der oder das |G u lly |der, auch: das Gully; Genitiv: des Gullys, Plural: die Gullys englisch gully, eigentlich = Rinne, wohl zu: gullet = Schlund < altfranzösisch goulet, Verkleinerungsform von: goule < lateinisch gula = Kehle in die Straßendecke eingelassener Sinkkasten, durch den die Straßenabwässer in die Kanalisation abgeführt werden der Gully ist verstopft, läuft über | etwas in den Gully werfen
Gullyplatte
Gul ly plat te Substantiv, feminin , die |G u llyplatte |Platte, mit der ein Gully abgedeckt ist
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
gull
gull 1 /ɡʌl /名詞 C 〘鳥 〙カモメ 〘カモメ科の鳥の総称 〙.
gull
gull 2 名詞 C だまされやすい人, かも .動詞 他動詞 …をだます ; «…を » 〈人 〉からだまし取る «out of » ; 〈人 〉をだまして «…を » させる «into do ing » .
gullet
gul let /ɡʌ́lɪt /名詞 C ⦅くだけて ⦆食道 ; のど .
gulley
gul ley /ɡʌ́li /名詞 複 ~s =gully .
gullibility
gul li bil i ty /ɡʌ̀ləbɪ́ləti /名詞 U だまされやすい性格 .
gullible
gul li ble /ɡʌ́ləb (ə )l /形容詞 信じやすい, だまされやすい .g ú l li bly 副詞 信じやすく .
Gulliver's Travels
G ù l li ver's Tr á vels /ɡʌ̀lɪvə r z- /名詞 『ガリバー旅行記 』 〘英国のJonathan Swiftの風刺小説 〙.
gully
gul ly /ɡʌ́li /名詞 複 -lies C 1 (雨水の浸食でできた )小峡谷 .2 ⦅英 ⦆溝, 小水路 .3 ⦅豪 ⦆小さな谷 .4 〘クリケット 〙ガリー 〘打者の右前方の守備位置; その野手 〙.動詞 他動詞 自動詞 (…に )溝を作る, 水路をうがつ .