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English-Thai Dictionary

hail

N การ ร้องทัก ทาย  การ ร้องทัก  kan-rong-tak-tai

 

hail

VT ร้องทัก ทาย  ทักทาย  ปราศรัย  ร้องทัก  greet salute rong-tak-tai

 

hail down on

PHRV หล่น หรือ ตกลงมา ที่  rain down on lon-rue-tok-long-ma-ti

 

hail from

PHRV มาจาก  มี ภูมิลำเนา อยู่ ที่  ma-jak

 

hail up

PHRV พัก ค้างคืน ใน โรงแรม (ใช้ ใน ภาษาอังกฤษ แบบ ออสเตรเลีย  และ เป็น คำ ไม่เป็นทางการ  pak-kang-kuen-nai-rong-raem

 

hail-fellow

N เพื่อน ที่ ดี 

 

hail-fellow-well-met

IDM เป็นมิตรกับ ทุกคน  pen-mid-kab-tuk-kon

 

hailstone

N ลูกเห็บ  hail luk-heb

 

hailstorm

N พายุลูกเห็บ  pa-yu-luk-heb

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

HAIL

n.Masses of ice or frozen vapor, falling from the clouds in showers or storms. These masses consist of little spherules united, but not all of the same consistence; some being as hard and solid as perfect ice; others soft, like frozen snow. Hailstones assume various figures; some are round, others angular, others pyramidical, others flat, and sometimes they are stellated with six radii, like crystals of snow.

 

HAIL

v.i.To pour down masses of ice or frozen vapors.

 

HAIL

v.t.To pour.

 

HAIL

a.[Gr. whole. ] Sound; whole; healthy; not impaired by disease; as a hail body; hail corn. [In this sense, it is usually written hale. ]

 

HAIL

an exclamation, or rather a verb in the imperative mode, being the adjective hail, used as a verb. Hail, be well; be in health; health to you; a term of salutation, equivalent to L. salve, salvete. Hail, hail, brave friend.

 

HAIL

n.A wish of health; a salutation. This word is sometimes used as a noun; as, the angel hail bestowed.

 

HAIL

v.t.[L. calo. See Call and Heal. ] To call; to call to a person at a distance, to arrest his attention. It is properly used in any case where the person accosted is distant, but is appropriately used by seamen. Hoa or hoi, the ship ahoay, is the usual manner of hailing; to which the answer is holloa, or hollo. Then follow the usual questions, whence came ye? where are you bound? etc.

 

HAILED

pp. Called to from a distance; accosted.

 

HAILING

ppr. Saluting; calling to from a distance. 1. Pouring down hail.

 

HAILSHOT

n.Small shot which scatter like hailstones. [Not used. ]

 

HAILSTONE

n.A single mass of ice falling from a cloud.

 

HAILY

a.Consisting of hail; as haily showers.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

HAIL

Hail, n. Etym: [OE. hail, ha, AS. hægel; akin to D., G., Dan. , & Sw. hagel; Icel. hagl; cf. Gr.

 

Defn: Small roundish masses of ice precipitated from the clouds, where they are formed by the congelation of vapor. The separate masses or grains are called hailstones. Thunder mixed with hail, Hail mixed with fire, must rend the Egyptian sky. Milton.

 

HAIL

Hail, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Halled; p. pr. & vb. n. Halting. ] Etym: [OE. hailen, AS. haqalian.]

 

Defn: To pour down particles of ice, or frozen vapors.

 

HAIL

HAIL Hail, v. t.

 

Defn: To pour forcibly down, as hail. Shak.

 

HAIL

HAIL Hail, a.

 

Defn: Healthy. See Hale (the preferable spelling ).

 

HAIL

Hail, v. t. Etym: [OE. hailen, heilen, Icel. heil hale, sound, used in greeting. See Hale sound. ]

 

1. To call loudly to, or after; to accost; to salute; to address.

 

2. To name; to designate; to call. And such a son as all men hailed me happy. Milton.

 

HAIL

HAIL Hail, v. i.

 

1. To declare, by hailing, the port from which a vessel sails or where she is registered; hence, to sail; to come; -- used with from; as, the steamer hails from New York.

 

2. To report as one's home or the place from whence one comes; to come; -- with from. [Colloq. ] G. G. Halpine.

 

HAIL

Hail, interj. Etym: [See Hail, v. t.]

 

Defn: An exclamation of respectful or reverent salutation, or, occasionally, of familiar greeting. "Hail, brave friend. " Shak. All hail. See in the Vocabulary. -- Hail Mary, a form of prayer made use of in the Roman Catholic Church in invocation of the Virgin. See Ave Maria.

 

HAIL

HAIL Hail, n.

 

Defn: A wish of health; a salutation; a loud call. "Their puissant hail. " M. Arnold. The angel hail bestowed. Milton.

 

HAIL-FELLOW

HAIL-FELLOW Hail "-fel `low, n.

 

Defn: An intimate companion. Hail-fellow well met. Lyly.

 

HAILSE

Hailse, v. t. Etym: [OE. hailsen, Icel. heilsa. Cf. Hall to call to. ]

 

Defn: To greet; to salute. [Obs. ] P. Plowman.

 

HAILSHOT

HAILSHOT Hail "shot `, n. pl.

 

Defn: Small shot which scatter like hailstones. [Obs. ] Hayward.

 

HAILSTONE

HAILSTONE Hail "stone `, n.

 

Defn: A single particle of ice falling from a cloud; a frozen raindrop; a pellet of hail.

 

HAILSTORM

HAILSTORM Hail "storm `, n.

 

Defn: A storm accompanied with hail; a shower of hail.

 

HAILY

HAILY Hai "ly, a.

 

Defn: Of hail. "Haily showers." Pope.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

hail

hail 1 |hāl heɪl | noun pellets of frozen rain that fall in showers from cumulonimbus clouds. [ in sing. ] a large number of objects hurled forcefully through the air: a hail of bullets. verb [ no obj. ] 1 (it hails, it is hailing, etc. ) hail falls: it hailed so hard we had to stop. 2 [ with adverbial of direction ] (of a large number of objects ) fall or be hurled forcefully: missiles and bombs hail down from the sky. ORIGIN Old English hagol, hægl (noun ), hagalian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch hagel and German Hagel .

 

hail

hail 2 |heɪl hāl | verb 1 [ with obj. ] call out to (someone ) to attract attention: the crew hailed a fishing boat. signal (an approaching taxicab ) to stop: she raised her hand to hail a cab. 2 [ with obj. ] acclaim enthusiastically as being a specified thing: he has been hailed as the new James Dean. 3 [ no obj. ] (hail from ) have one's home or origins in (a place ): he hails from Pittsburgh. exclam. archaic expressing greeting or acclaim: hail, Caesar! noun a shout or call used to attract attention. PHRASES within hail (or within hailing distance ) at a distance within which someone may be called to; within earshot. DERIVATIVES hail er noun ORIGIN Middle English: from the obsolete adjective hail healthy (occurring in greetings and toasts, such as wæs hæil: see wassail ), from Old Norse heill, related to hale 1 and whole .

 

Haile Selassie

Hai le Se las sie |ˈhīlē səˈlasē ˌhaɪli səˈlæsi | (1892 –1975 ), emperor of Ethiopia 1930 –74; born Tafari Makonnen. In exile in Britain during the Italian occupation of Ethiopia 1936 –41, he was restored to the throne by the Allies and ruled until he was deposed by a military coup.

 

hail-fellow-well-met

hail-fel low-well-met adjective showing excessive familiarity: Harold was accustomed to hail-fellow-well-met salesmen.

 

Hail Mary

Hail Mar y |ˈˌheɪl ˈmɛri | noun ( pl. Hail Marys ) 1 a prayer to the Virgin Mary used chiefly by Roman Catholics, beginning with part of Luke 1:28. Also called Ave Maria. a recitation of such a devotional phrase or prayer: muttering Hail Marys under her breath. 2 [ usu. as modifier ] Football a desperation long pass to try to score late in the game, typically unsuccessful: they beat the 49ers on a Hail Mary pass in the final seconds. any attempt with a small chance of success: a Hail Mary plan.

 

hailstone

hail stone |ˈhālˌstōn ˈheɪlˌstoʊn | noun a pellet of hail.

 

hailstorm

hail storm |ˈhālˌstôrm ˈheɪlˌstɔrm | noun a storm of heavy hail.

 

Hailwood, Mike

Hail |wood |ˈheɪlwʊd | (1940 –81 ), English racing motorcyclist; full name Stanley Michael Bailey Hailwood. He won the Isle of Man TT a record fourteen times and was world champion nine times in three different classes.

 

Oxford Dictionary

hail

hail 1 |heɪl | noun [ mass noun ] pellets of frozen rain which fall in showers from cumulonimbus clouds. [ in sing. ] a large number of things hurled forcefully through the air: a hail of bullets. verb [ no obj. ] 1 (it hails, it is hailing, etc. ) hail falls: it hailed so hard we had to stop. 2 [ with adverbial of direction ] (of a large number of objects ) fall or be hurled forcefully: missiles and bombs hail down from the sky. ORIGIN Old English hagol, hægl (noun ), hagalian (verb ), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch hagel and German Hagel .

 

hail

hail 2 |heɪl | verb 1 [ with obj. ] call out to (someone ) to attract attention: I hailed her in English. signal (an approaching taxi ) to stop. 2 [ with obj. ] praise (someone or something ) enthusiastically: he has been hailed as the new James Dean. 3 [ no obj. ] (hail from ) have one's home or origins in (a place ): they hail from Turkey. exclamation archaic expressing greeting or acclaim: hail, Caesar! noun a shout or call used to attract attention. PHRASES all hail archaic or humorous a cry of greeting or welcome: all hail the new kids on the block. within hail dated at a distance within which someone may be called to; within earshot. DERIVATIVES hailer noun ORIGIN Middle English: from the obsolete adjective hail healthy (occurring in greetings and toasts, such as wæs hæil: see wassail ), from Old Norse heill, related to hale 1 and whole .

 

Haile Selassie

Haile Selassie |ˌhʌɪlɪ səˈlasi | (1892 –1975 ), emperor of Ethiopia 1930 –74; born Tafari Makonnen. In exile in Britain during the Italian occupation of Ethiopia (1936 –41 ), he was restored to the throne by the Allies and ruled until deposed by a military coup. He is revered by the Rastafarian religious sect.

 

hail-fellow-well-met

hail-fellow-well-met adjective showing excessive familiarity or friendliness: Arnold was very cheerful in a hail-fellow-well-met sort of way.

 

Hail Mary

Hail Mary |heɪlˈmɛəri | noun ( pl. Hail Marys ) 1 a prayer to the Virgin Mary used chiefly by Roman Catholics, beginning with part of Luke 1:28. Also called Ave Maria . 2 [ usu. as modifier ] US (in American football ) a long, typically unsuccessful pass made in an attempt to score late in the game. a plan or project with little chance of success.

 

hailstone

hail |stone |ˈheɪlstəʊn | noun a pellet of hail.

 

hailstorm

hail |storm |ˈheɪlstɔːm | noun a storm of heavy hail.

 

Hailwood, Mike

Hail |wood |ˈheɪlwʊd | (1940 –81 ), English racing motorcyclist; full name Stanley Michael Bailey Hailwood. He won the Isle of Man TT a record fourteen times and was world champion nine times in three different classes.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

hail

hail 1 verb 1 a friend hailed him from the upper deck: call out to, shout to, address; greet, say hello to, salute. 2 he hailed a cab: flag down, wave down, signal to. 3 critics hailed the film as a masterpiece: acclaim, praise, applaud, rave about, extol, eulogize, hymn, lionize, sing the praises of, make much of, glorify, cheer, salute, toast, ballyhoo; formal laud. 4 Rick hails from Australia: come from, be from, be a native of, have one's roots in.

 

hail

hail 2 noun a hail of bullets: barrage, volley, shower, rain, torrent, burst, stream, storm, avalanche, onslaught; bombardment, cannonade, battery, blast, salvo; historical broadside. verb tons of dust hailed down on us: beat, shower, rain, fall, pour; pelt, pepper, batter, bombard, assail.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

hail

hail 1 verb 1 a friend hailed him from the upper deck: greet, salute, address, halloo, speak to, call out to, shout to, say hello to, initiate a discussion with, talk to; nod to, wave to, smile at, signal to, lift one's hat to, acknowledge; accost, approach, waylay, stop, catch; informal collar, buttonhole; Brit. informal nobble. ANTONYMS say goodbye to. 2 he hailed a cab: flag down, wave down, signal to stop, gesture to stop, make a sign to; call to, shout to; summon, accost. 3 the critics hailed the new film as a masterpiece: acclaim, praise, applaud, commend, rave about, extol, eulogize, vaunt, hymn, lionize, express approval of, express admiration for, pay tribute to, speak highly of, sing the praises of, make much of; glorify, cheer, salute, exalt, honour, hurrah, hurray, toast, welcome, pay homage to; N. Amer. informal ballyhoo; black English big up; dated cry up; archaic emblazon; rare laud, panegyrize. ANTONYMS criticize, condemn. 4 the band's twenty-six members all hail from Wales: come from, be from, be a native of, have been born in, originate in, have one's roots in; be … (by birth ); live in, have one's home in, inhabit, be an inhabitant of, be settled in, reside in, be a resident of. noun a hearty hail greeted me: greeting, hello, hallo, halloo, call, cry, shout, salutation; acknowledgement, welcome, salute. ANTONYMS farewell.

 

hail

hail 2 noun 1 frequent heavy showers of rain and hail: frozen rain, hailstones, sleet, precipitation; hailstorm, hail shower. 2 a hail of bullets: barrage, volley, shower, deluge, torrent, burst, stream, storm, flood, spate, rain, tide, avalanche, blaze, onslaught; bombardment, cannonade, battery, blast, broadside, salvo. verb tons of dust hailed down on us: beat, shower, rain, fall, pour, drop; pelt, pepper, batter, bombard, volley, assail.

 

hail-fellow-well-met

hail-fellow-well-met adjective he was a hail-fellow-well-met type of guy: convivial, sociable, outgoing, gregarious, companionable, friendly, genial, affable, amiable, congenial, agreeable, good-humoured, extrovert, extroverted, uninhibited; Scottish couthy; informal backslapping, chummy, pally, clubbable, clubby, buddy-buddy; Brit. informal matey; rare conversable. ANTONYMS unsociable.

 

French Dictionary

haillon

haillon n. m. nom masculin généralement pluriel Vêtement très usé. : Il portait des haillons.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

hail

hail 1 /heɪl /〖語源は 「丸い小石 」〗名詞 1 U あられ , ひょう (!1粒はhailstone /a pellet of ~) .2 〖a of A 〗大量の [おびただしい ]A 弾丸 非難など 〉; Aの雨 [あらし ]a hail of bullets 銃弾の雨 a hail of criticism あらしのような批判 .動詞 自動詞 1 〖itを主語にして 〗あられ [ひょう ]が降る .2 〈物 事が 〉【人に 】大量に降る [のしかかる ](down ) «on » .他動詞 【人に 】〈物 事 〉を大量に浴びせる «on , upon » hail curses upon A Aに悪口を浴びせる .

 

hail

hail 2 /heɪl /〖語源は 「(歓迎を表す言葉 )万歳 」〗動詞 s /-z /; ed /-d /; ing 他動詞 1 かたく 〈人など 〉に呼びかける , 合図する , 声をかける , …を呼びとめる They are hailing us .私たちに交信してきている hail a taxi タクシーを呼びとめる .2 〈人が 〉 «…として » 〈人 〉を迎える , 認める ; «…として » 〈物 事 〉を認める «as » (!しばしば受け身で ) hail A as a genius Aは天才だと認める .3 かたく 〈人が 〉〈人 〉を歓呼して迎える , 歓迎する ; 〈物 事 〉を受け入れる hail the winner 勝利者を歓迎する .自動詞 1 かたく やや古 ⦆〈人が 〉 «…の » 出身 [育ち ]である ; 〈物が 〉 «…に » 起源がある ; 〈船が 〉 «…から » 来ている «from » .2 〘海 〙 «…に » 合図を送る «to » .within h iling d stance «…が » 呼べば声の届く距離に «of » .名詞 U C ⦅やや古 ⦆あいさつ ; 歓呼 , 呼び声 , 呼びかけ .within [out of ] h il 声の届く [届かない ]所に, すぐ近く [遠く ]に .間投詞 〖H-!〗⦅古 ⦆万歳 , ようこそ .H M ry 1 Ave Maria .2 アメフト (試合終了間際の一か八かの )エンドゾーンへのロングパス .

 

hail-fellow-well-met

h il-fellow-well-m t 形容詞 名詞 hail-fellows- C (過度に )愛想のいい (人 ); (表面的に )打ち解けた (仲間 ); なれなれしい (人 ).

 

hailstone

h il st ne 名詞 C 通例 s 〗あられ [ひょう ](の粒 ).

 

hailstorm

h il st rm 名詞 C ひょう [あられ ]を伴うあらし .