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English-Thai Dictionary

gutter

N รางน้ำ  ท่อ  ขอบ ระหว่าง หน้า หนังสือ  drain ditch trench hill rang-nam

 

gutter

VI ไหล เป็น ราง  เป็น ร่อง  gully lai-pen-rang

 

gutter

VT ทำ เป็น ร่อง  ทำให้ เป็น ราง  gully tam-pen-rong

 

gutter ditch

N คู  ditch ku

 

guttersnipe

N คนชั้นต่ำ สุด ของ สังคม  เด็ก สลัม  kon-chan-tam-sud-kong-sang-kom

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

GUTTER

n.[L. gutta, a drop. ] 1. A channel for water; a hollow piece of timber, or a pipe, for catching and conveying off the water which drops from the eaves of a building.
2. A channel or passage for water; a hollow in the earth for conveying water; and, in popular usage, a channel worn in the earth by a current of water.

 

GUTTER

v.t.To cut or form into small hollows.

 

GUTTER

v.i.To be hollowed or channeled. 1. To run or sweat as a candle.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

GUTTER

Gut "ter, n. Etym: [OE. gotere, OF. goutiere, F. gouttière, fr. OF. gote, goute, drop, F. goutte, fr. L. gutta. ]

 

1. A channel at the eaves of a roof for conveying away the rain; an eaves channel; an eaves trough.

 

2. A small channel at the roadside or elsewhere, to lead off surface water. Gutters running with ale. Macaulay.

 

3. Any narrow channel or groove; as, a gutter formed by erosion in the vent of a gun from repeated firing. Gutter member (Arch. ), an architectural member made by treating the outside face of the gutter in a decorative fashion, or by crowning it with ornaments, regularly spaced, like a diminutive battlement. -- Gutter plane, a carpenter's plane with a rounded bottom for planing out gutters. -- Gutter snipe, a neglected boy running at large; a street Arab. [Slang ] -- Gutter stick (Printing ), one of the pieces of furniture which separate pages in a form.

 

GUTTER

Gut *ter, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Guttered; p. pr. & vb. n. Guttering. ]

 

1. To cut or form into small longitudinal hollows; to channel. Shak.

 

2. To supply with a gutter or gutters. [R.] Dryden.

 

GUTTER

GUTTER Gut "ter, v. i.

 

Defn: To become channeled, as a candle when the flame flares in the wind.

 

GUTTERSNIPE

GUTTERSNIPE Gut "ter *snipe ", n. (Slang ) (a ) A small poster, suitable for a curbstone. (b ) A curbstone broker. [U. S.]

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

gutter

gut ter |ˈgətər ˈɡədər | noun 1 a shallow trough fixed beneath the edge of a roof for carrying off rainwater. a channel at the side of a street for carrying off rainwater. (the gutter ) used to refer to a poor or squalid background or environment: only moneyed privilege had kept him out of the gutter. technical a groove or channel for flowing liquid. a channel on either side of a lane in a bowling alley. 2 the blank space between facing pages of a book or between adjacent columns of type or stamps in a sheet. verb 1 [ no obj. ] (of a candle or flame ) flicker and burn unsteadily: the candles had almost guttered out . 2 [ with obj. ] archaic channel or furrow with something such as streams or tears: my cheeks are guttered with tears. [ no obj. ] (gutter down ) stream down: the raindrops gutter down her visage. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French gotiere, from Latin gutta a drop ; the verb dates from late Middle English, originally meaning cut grooves in and later (early 18th cent. ) used of a candle that melts rapidly because it has become channeled on one side.

 

gutter ball

gut ter ball noun (in tenpin bowling ) a nonscoring ball that enters the gutter before reaching the pins.

 

guttering

gut ter ing |ˈgətəriNG ˈɡədərɪŋ | noun chiefly Brit. the gutters of a building. material used to make gutters.

 

gutter press

gut ter press |ˈɡədər ˈˌprɛs | noun (the gutter press ) chiefly Brit. reporters or newspapers engaging in sensational journalism, esp. accounts of the private lives of public figures.

 

guttersnipe

gut ter snipe |ˈgətərˌsnīp ˈɡədərˌsnaɪp | noun derogatory a scruffy and badly behaved child who spends most of their time on the street.

 

Oxford Dictionary

gutter

gut ¦ter |ˈgʌtə | noun 1 a shallow trough fixed beneath the edge of a roof for carrying off rainwater. a channel at the side of a street for carrying off rainwater. (the gutter ) used to refer to a poor or squalid existence or environment: men who had fought their way out of the gutter. technical a groove or channel for flowing liquid. a channel on either side of a lane in a bowling alley. 2 the blank space between facing pages of a book or between adjacent columns of type or stamps in a sheet. verb 1 [ no obj. ] (of a candle or flame ) flicker and burn unsteadily. 2 [ with obj. ] archaic make channels or furrows in (something ): my cheeks are guttered with tears. [ no obj. ] (gutter down ) flow in streams: the raindrops gutter down her visage. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French gotiere, from Latin gutta a drop ; the verb dates from late Middle English, originally meaning cut grooves in and later (early 18th cent. ) used of a candle which melts rapidly because it has become channelled on one side.

 

gutter ball

gut ter ball noun (in tenpin bowling ) a nonscoring ball that enters the gutter before reaching the pins.

 

guttered

gut |tered |ˈɡʌtəd | adjective Scottish informal very drunk.

 

guttering

gut ¦ter |ing |ˈgʌt (ə )rɪŋ | noun [ mass noun ] chiefly Brit. the gutters of a building. material used to make gutters.

 

gutter press

gut ¦ter press noun (the gutter press ) chiefly Brit. reporters or newspapers engaging in sensational journalism, especially accounts of the private lives of public figures.

 

guttersnipe

gut ¦ter |snipe |ˈgʌtəsnʌɪp | noun derogatory a scruffy and badly behaved child who spends most of their time on the street.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

gutter

gutter noun gutters clogged with leaves: drain, sluice, sluiceway, culvert, spillway, sewer; channel, conduit, pipe; rain gutter; trough, trench, ditch, furrow, cut.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

gutter

gutter noun a tide of rainwater swept into the gutter: drain, sluice, sluiceway, culvert, spillway, flume, sewer; channel, conduit, pipe, duct, chute; trough, trench, ditch, furrow, cut.

 

guttersnipe

guttersnipe noun the child was a penniless guttersnipe: urchin, street urchin, ragamuffin, waif, stray, outcast, orphan; informal scarecrow; dated gamin; archaic mudlark, scapegrace, street Arab, wastrel, tatterdemalion.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

gutter

gut ter /ɡʌ́tə r /名詞 C 1 側溝, 排水溝, (道路に沿った )溝 ; (水 溶けたろうなどの )流れた跡 .2 (屋根の )雨樋 (あまどい )(house ).3 the 貧民街 ; 貧困生活 rise from the gutter どん底の生活から身を起こす .4 ボウリング (レーンの間の )溝, ガター .動詞 他動詞 …に溝 [樋 ]を作る .自動詞 1 筋状に流れる ; 溝になる .2 〈溶けたろうが 〉ろうそくからたれる ; 〈ろうそくが 〉明滅して消えそうになる .g tter ut 〈ろうそくなどが 〉だんだん弱まって消える ; 消えるように終わる .~́ pr ss the ; 集合的に 〗⦅英 けなして ⦆低俗新聞 [雑誌 ](⦅米 ⦆scandal sheets ).

 

guttering

g t ter ing 名詞 U 雨樋 (あまどい )(の取り付け ); 樋の資材 .