English-Thai Dictionary
hood
N ขนบน หัว ของ นก หรือ สัตว์ บาง ชนิด kon-bon-hua-kong-nok-rue-sad-bang-cha-nid
hood
N ผ้าคลุมไหล่ ของ เสื้อ รับปริญญา pa-klum-lai-kong-suea-rab-pa-rin-ya
hood
N ฝา กระโปรง รถยนต์ fa-kra-prong-rod-yon
hood
N ฝาครอบ อุปกรณ์ ต่างๆ ที่ มี ช่อง เปิด fa-krob-u-pa-kon-tang-tang-ti-me-chong-poed
hood
N หมวก คลุม ศีรษะ ที่ ติด อยู่ กับ เสื้อ ผ้าคลุม ศีรษะ ที่ ติด อยู่ กับ เสื้อ muak-klum-se-sa-ti-tid-yu-kab-suea
hood
VT คลุม ด้วย หมวก คลุม ศีรษะ คลุม ด้วย ผ้าคลุม ศีรษะ cover klum-duai-muak-klum-se-sa
hooded
A ที่ มี ฝาครอบ ที่ มี ผ้าคลุม ศรี ษะ หรือ หลังคา
hoodlum
N นักเลง พวก อันธพาล กุ๊ย พวก หัวไม้ hooligan rowdy ruffian nak-lang
hoodoo
N โชคร้าย ผู้ ที่ นำ โชคร้าย เข้ามา
hoodwink
VT ตบตา หลอกลวง deceive dupe trick tob-ta
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
HOOD
[L. fraternitas.]
HOOD
n. 1. A covering for the head used by females, and deeper than a bonnet.
2. A covering for the head and shoulders used by monks; a cowl.
3. A covering for a hawk's head or eyes; used in falconry.
4. Any thing to be drawn over the head to cover it.
5. An ornamental fold that hangs down the back of a graduate to mark his degree.
6. A low wooden porch over the ladder which leads to the steerage of a ship; the upper part of a galley-chimney; the cover of a pump.
HOOD
v.t.To dress in a hood or cowl; to put on a hood. The friar hooded, and the monarch crowned.
1. To cover; to blind.
I'll hood my eyes.
2. To cover.
And hood the flames.
HOODMAN BLIND
n.A play in which a person blinded is to catch another and tell his name; blindman's bluff.
HOODED
pp. Covered with a hood; blinded.
HOOD-WINK
v.t.[hood and wink. ] To blind by covering the eyes. We will blind and hood-wink him.
1. To cover; to hide.
For the prize I'll bring thee to,
Shall hood-wink this mischance.
2. To deceive by external appearances of disguise; to impose on.
HOOD-WINKED
pp. Blinded; deceived.
HOOD-WINKING
ppr. Blinding the eyes; covering; hiding; deceiving.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
HOOD
Hood, n. Etym: [OE. hood, hod, AS. hod; akin to D. hoed hat, G. hut, OHG. huot, also to E. hat, and prob. to E. heed. sq. root13.]
1. State; condition. [Obs. ] How could thou ween, through that disguised hood To hide thy state from being understood Spenser.
2. A covering or garment for the head or the head and shoulders, often attached to the body garment; especially: (a ) A soft covering for the head, worn by women, which leaves only the face exposed. (b ) A part of a monk's outer garment, with which he covers his head; a cowl. "All hoods make not monks." Shak. (c ) A like appendage to a cloak or loose overcoat, that may be drawn up over the head at pleasure. (d ) An ornamental fold at the back of an academic gown or ecclesiastical vestment; as, a master's hood. (e ) A covering for a horse's head. (f ) (Falconry ) A covering for a hawk's head and eyes. See Illust. of Falcon.
3. Anything resembling a hood in form or use; as: (a ) The top or head of a carriage. (b ) A chimney top, often contrived to secure a constant draught by turning with the wind. (c ) A projecting cover above a hearth, forming the upper part of the fireplace, and confining the smoke to the flue. (d ) The top of a pump. (e ) (Ord. ) A covering for a mortar. (f ) (Bot. ) The hood-shaped upper petal of some flowers, as of monkshood; -- called also helmet. Gray. (g ) (Naut. ) A covering or porch for a companion hatch.
4. (Shipbuilding )
Defn: The endmost plank of a strake which reaches the stem or stern.
HOOD
Hood, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Hooded; p. pr. & vb. n. Hooding.]
1. To cover with a hood; to furnish with a hood or hood-shaped appendage. The friar hooded, and the monarch crowned. Pope.
2. To cover; to hide; to blind. While grace is saying, I'll hood mine eyes Thus with my hat, and sigh and say, "Amen. " Shak. Hooding end (Shipbuilding ), the end of a hood where it enters the rabbet in the stem post or stern post.
HOODCAP
HOODCAP Hood "cap `, n.
Defn: See Hooded seal, under Hooded.
HOODED
HOODED Hood "ed, a.
1. Covered with a hood.
2. Furnished with a hood or something like a hood.
3. Hood-shaped; esp. (Bot. ), rolled up like a cornet of paper; cuculate, as the spethe of the Indian turnip.
4. (Zoöl.) (a ) Having the head conspicuously different in color from the rest of the plumage; -- said of birds. (b ) Having a hoodlike crest or prominence on the head or neck; as, the hooded seal; a hooded snake. Hooded crow, a European crow (Corvus cornix ); -- called also hoody, dun crow, and royston crow. -- Hooded gull, the European black-headed pewit or gull. -- Hooded merganser. See Merganser. -- Hooded seal, a large North Atlantic seal (Cystophora cristata ). The male has a large, inflatible, hoodlike sac upon the head. Called also hoodcap. -- Hooded sheldrake, the hooded merganser. See Merganser. -- Hooded snake. See Cobra de capello, Asp, Haje, etc. -- Hooded warbler, a small American warbler (Sylvania mitrata ).
HOODLESS
HOODLESS Hood "less, a.
Defn: Having no hood.
HOODLUM
HOODLUM Hood "lum, n.
Defn: A young rowdy; a rough, lawless fellow. [Colloq. U.S.]
HOODMAN
HOODMAN Hood "man, n.
Defn: The person blindfolded in the game called hoodman-blind. [Obs. ] Shak.
HOODMAN-BLIND
HOODMAN-BLIND Hood "man-blind `, n.
Defn: An old term for blindman's buff. Shak.
HOOD MOLDING; HOOD MOULDING
HOOD MOLDING; HOOD MOULDING Hood " mold `ing Hood " mould `ing. (Arch. )
Defn: A projecting molding over the head of an arch, forming the outermost member of the archivolt; -- called also hood mold.
HOODOO
Hoo "doo, n. Etym: [Perh. a var. of voodoo. ]
Defn: One who causes bad luck. [Colloq. ]
HOODWINK
Hood "wink, v. t. Etym: [Hood + wink. ]
1. To blind by covering the eyes. We will blind and hoodwink him. Shak.
2. To cover; to hide. [Obs. ] Shak.
3. To deceive by false appearance; to impose upon. "Hoodwinked with kindness. " Sir P. Sidney.
HOODY
HOODY Hood "y, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The hooded crow; also, in Scotland, the hooded gull.
New American Oxford Dictionary
hood
hood 1 |ho͝od hʊd | ▶noun 1 a covering for the head and neck with an opening for the face, typically forming part of a coat or sweatshirt. • a separate garment similar to this worn over a college gown or a surplice to indicate the wearer's degree. • Falconry a leather covering for a hawk's head. 2 a thing resembling a hood in shape or use, in particular: • a metal part covering the engine of an automobile. • a canopy to protect users of machinery or to remove fumes from it. • a hoodlike structure or marking on the head or neck of an animal. • the upper part of the flower of a plant such as a dead-nettle. • Brit. a folding waterproof cover of an automobile, baby carriage, etc. ▶verb [ with obj. ] put a hood on or over. DERIVATIVES hood less adjective, hood like |-ˌlīk |adjective ORIGIN Old English hōd; related to Dutch hoed, German Hut ‘hat, ’ also to hat .
hood
hood 2 |hʊd ho͝od | ▶noun informal a gangster or similar violent criminal. ORIGIN 1930s: abbreviation of hoodlum .
hood
hood 3 |hʊd ho͝od |(also 'hood ) ▶noun informal a neighborhood, esp. one's own neighborhood: I've lived in the hood for 15 years. ORIGIN 1970s: shortening of neighborhood .
Hood, Mount
Hood, Mount |ho͝od maʊnt hʊd | a peak in the Cascade Range in northwest Oregon, east of Portland, 11,239 feet (3,426 m ), the highest point in the state.
Hood, Thomas
Hood |hʊd | (1799 –1845 ), English poet and humorist. He wrote much humorous verse but is chiefly remembered for serious poems such as ‘The Song of the Shirt ’.
hooded
hood ed |ˈho͝odid ˈhʊdəd | ▶adjective (of an article of clothing ) having a hood: a hooded cape in violet silk. • (of a person ) wearing a hood: a hooded figure. • (of eyes ) having thick, drooping upper eyelids resembling hoods: a dark man with hooded eyes.
hooded crow
hood ed crow ▶noun a bird of the northern and eastern European race of the carrion crow, having a gray body with a black head, wings, and tail. [Corvus corone cornix, family Corvidae. ]
hooded seal
hood ed seal ▶noun a seal with a gray and white blotched coat, found in the Arctic waters of the North Atlantic. The male has a nasal sac that is inflated into a hood during display. [Cystophora cristata, family Phocidae. ]
hoodia
hood i a |ˈho͝odēə ˈhʊdiə | ▶noun a southern African cactus from which a compound that acts as an appetite suppressant is derived. [Genus Hoodia, family Asclepiadaceae; about 20 species. ] ORIGIN from modern Latin Hoodia, from Hood, the name of an English plant grower.
hoodie
hood ie |ˈho͝odē ˈhʊdi |(also hoody ) ▶noun ( pl. hoodies ) a hooded sweatshirt or jacket: outerwear is either a denim jacket or a hoodie. ORIGIN from hood + -ie or -y.
hoodlum
hood lum |ˈho͞odləm, ˈho͝od -ˈhudləm | ▶noun a person who engages in crime and violence; a hooligan or gangster. ORIGIN late 19th cent. (originally US ): of unknown origin.
hood mold
hood mold (also hood molding ) ▶noun Architecture another term for dripstone ( sense 1 ).
hoodoo
hoo doo |ˈho͞oˌdo͞o ˈhuˌdu | ▶noun 1 voodoo; witchcraft. • a run of bad luck associated with a person or activity: when is this hoodoo going to end? • a person or thing that brings or causes bad luck. 2 a column or pinnacle of weathered rock: a towering sandstone hoodoo. ▶verb ( hoodoos, hoodooing, hoodooed ) [ with obj. ] bewitch: she's hoodooed you. • bring bad luck to: a fine player, but repeatedly hoodooed. ORIGIN late 19th cent. (originally US ): apparently an alteration of voodoo. It originally denoted a person who practiced voodoo, hence a hidden cause of bad luck ( sense 1 of the noun ). Sense 2 of the noun is apparently due to the resemblance of the rock column to a strange human form, often topped by an overhanging “hat ” of harder rock.
hoodwink
hood wink |ˈho͝odˌwiNGk ˈhʊˌdwɪŋk | ▶verb [ with obj. ] deceive or trick (someone ): an attempt to hoodwink the public. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (originally in the sense ‘to blindfold ’): from the noun hood 1 + an obsolete sense of wink ‘close the eyes. ’
hoody
hood y |ˈho͝odi ˈhʊdɪ | ▶noun variant spelling of hoodie.
Oxford Dictionary
hood
hood 1 |hʊd | ▶noun 1 a covering for the head and neck with an opening for the face, typically forming part of a coat or cloak. • a large hood-shaped piece of fabric, typically trimmed with fur or a similar material, worn over the shoulders of a university gown or a surplice to indicate the wearer's degree. • Falconry a leather covering for a hawk's head. 2 a thing resembling a hood in shape or use, in particular: • Brit. a folding waterproof cover of a car, pram, etc. • N. Amer. the bonnet of a motor vehicle. • a canopy to protect users of machinery or to remove fumes from it. • a hood-like structure or marking on the head or neck of an animal. • the upper part of the flower of a plant such as a dead-nettle. ▶verb [ with obj. ] put a hood on or over. DERIVATIVES hoodless adjective, hood-like adjective ORIGIN Old English hōd, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch hoed, German Hut ‘hat ’, also to hat .
hood
hood 2 |hʊd | ▶noun informal, chiefly N. Amer. a gangster or similar violent criminal. ORIGIN 1930s: abbreviation of hoodlum .
hood
hood 3 |hʊd |(also 'hood ) ▶noun informal, chiefly US a neighbourhood, especially one in an urban area: I've lived in the hood for 15 years. ORIGIN 1970s: shortening of neighbourhood .
Hood, Mount
Hood, Mount |ho͝od maʊnt hʊd | a peak in the Cascade Range in northwest Oregon, east of Portland, 11,239 feet (3,426 m ), the highest point in the state.
Hood, Thomas
Hood |hʊd | (1799 –1845 ), English poet and humorist. He wrote much humorous verse but is chiefly remembered for serious poems such as ‘The Song of the Shirt ’.
hooded
hood ¦ed |ˈhʊdɪd | ▶adjective (of a garment ) having a hood: a hooded cloak. • (of a person ) wearing a hood: a hooded figure. • (of eyes ) having thick, drooping upper eyelids resembling hoods: a dark man with hooded eyes.
hooded crow
hood ¦ed crow ▶noun a bird of the North and East European race of the carrion crow, having a grey body with a black head, wings, and tail. ●Corvus corone cornix, family Corvidae.
hooded seal
hood ¦ed seal ▶noun a seal with a grey and white blotched coat, found in the Arctic waters of the North Atlantic. The male has a nasal sac that is inflated into a hood during display. ●Cystophora cristata, family Phocidae.
hoodia
hoodia |ˈhʊdɪə | ▶noun 1 a cactus-like succulent plant native to southern Africa. ●Genus Hoodia, family Asclepiadaceae: several species, in particular H. gordonii. 2 [ mass noun ] a compound derived from hoodia which acts as an appetite suppressant. ORIGIN early 20th cent.: modern Latin (genus name ), from Hood, the surname of an English plant grower.
hoodie
hoodie |ˈhʊdi | ▶noun 1 Scottish term for hooded crow. 2 variant spelling of hoody.
hoodlum
hoodlum |ˈhuːdləm | ▶noun a person who engages in crime and violence; a hooligan or gangster. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: of unknown origin.
hood mould
hood mould (also hood moulding ) ▶noun Architecture another term for dripstone ( sense 1 ).
hoodoo
hoo ¦doo |ˈhuːduː | ▶noun 1 [ mass noun ] voodoo or witchcraft. • [ count noun ] a run of bad luck associated with a person or activity: when is this hoodoo going to end? • [ count noun ] a person or thing that brings or causes bad luck. 2 chiefly N. Amer. a column or pinnacle of weathered rock: a towering sandstone hoodoo. ▶verb ( hoodoos, hoodooing, hoodooed ) [ with obj. ] bewitch: she's hoodooed you. • bring bad luck to: a fine player, but repeatedly hoodooed. ORIGIN late 19th cent. (originally US ): apparently an alteration of voodoo. It originally denoted a person who practised voodoo, hence a hidden cause of bad luck ( sense 1 of the noun ). Sense 2 of the noun is apparently due to the resemblance of the rock column to a strange human form, often topped by an overhanging ‘hat ’ of harder rock.
hoodwink
hood |wink |ˈhʊdwɪŋk | ▶verb [ with obj. ] deceive or trick: staff were hoodwinked into thinking the cucumber was a sawn-off shotgun. ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (originally in the sense ‘to blindfold ’): from the noun hood 1 + an obsolete sense of wink ‘close the eyes ’.
hoody
hoody |ˈhʊdi |(also hoodie ) ▶noun ( pl. hoodies ) a hooded sweatshirt, jacket, or other top. • informal a person, especially a youth, wearing a hooded top.
American Oxford Thesaurus
hood
hood noun they wore sunglasses and hoods to disguise themselves: head covering, cowl, snood, headscarf, amice.
hoodlum
hoodlum noun he was roughed up by a bunch of hoodlums: thug, lout, delinquent, vandal, ruffian, hooligan, lowlife; gangster, crook, mobster, criminal; informal tough, bruiser, goon, hood, punk, rowdy.
hoodwink
hoodwink verb Jimmy was hoodwinked by his own brother: deceive, trick, dupe, outwit, fool, delude, inveigle, cheat, take in, hoax, mislead, lead on, defraud, double-cross, swindle, gull, scam; informal con, bamboozle, hornswoggle, fleece, do, have, sting, gyp, shaft, rip off, lead up the garden path, pull a fast one on, put one over on, take for a ride, pull the wool over someone's eyes, sucker, snooker; literary cozen.
Oxford Thesaurus
hood
hood noun head covering, cowl, snood, scarf, head scarf.
hoodlum
hoodlum noun 1 a bunch of hoodlums just looking for trouble: hooligan, thug, lout, delinquent, tearaway, vandal, ruffian, rowdy; Austral. /NZ larrikin; informal tough, rough, bruiser, roughneck; Brit. informal yob, yobbo, bovver boy, lager lout, chav, hoodie; Scottish & N. English informal keelie, ned; Austral. /NZ informal roughie, hoon. 2 Pesci plays a hoodlum for whom killing is a pleasure: gangster, gang member, mobster, criminal, gunman, thug, racketeer, ruffian, member of a criminal gang, member of the Mafia, Mafioso, Yardie; in Japan yakuza; informal hitman, hatchet man, heavy, gorilla; N. Amer. informal hood, goon.
hoodoo
hoodoo noun she's working some hoodoo on us: witchcraft, magic, black magic, sorcery, wizardry, devilry, voodoo, necromancy; N. Amer. mojo; NZ makutu; S. African muti; rare witchery, demonry, thaumaturgy, theurgy.
hoodwink
hoodwink verb he kept on the lookout for the young man who had hoodwinked him: deceive, trick, dupe, outwit, fool, delude, cheat, take in, bluff, hoax, mislead, misguide, lead on, defraud, double-cross, swindle, gull, finagle, get the better of; informal con, bamboozle, do, have, sting, gyp, diddle, fiddle, swizzle, shaft, bilk, rook, rip off, lead up the garden path, pull a fast one on, put one over on, take for a ride, pull the wool over someone's eyes, throw dust in someone's eyes, sell a pup to, take to the cleaners; N. Amer. informal sucker, snooker, stiff, euchre, bunco, hornswoggle, make a sucker of; Austral. informal pull a swifty on; archaic cozen, sharp, befool; rare mulct.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
hood
hood 1 /hʊd /〖hatと同源 〗名詞 複 ~s /-dz /C 1 フード , ずきん ; 覆面 (ふくめん ).2 (レンジの上の煙 臭気抜きの )覆い .3 ⦅米 ⦆(自動車のエンジンを覆う )ボンネット (⦅英 ⦆bonnet )(→car ).4 フード状の物 〘オープンカー 馬車 乳母車などのほろ, 器械類の上部の覆い, 煙突 電灯などのかさなど 〙▸ a lens hood (光量を抑えるための )レンズフード 5 (大学式服の背の )ずきん状のたれ布 〘学位を色で示す 〙.6 (タカの )頭被 〘猟をしないときにかぶせる 〙; 馬の頭の覆い .7 (鳥 動物のずきん状の )冠毛 , 冠頂 .動詞 他動詞 1 …にずきん (状の物 )をかぶせる .2 …にフード (状の物 )を付ける .
hood
hood 2 /hʊd |huːd /名詞 ⦅米俗 ⦆=hoodlum .
hood
hood 3 /hʊd /名詞 ⦅米俗 ⦆=neighborhood .
hooded
hood ed /hʊ́dɪd /形容詞 1 〖名詞 の前で 〗フード [覆面 ]を (深く )かぶった .2 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗フード [覆い ]の付いた 〈衣服 家具など 〉▸ a hooded anorak フード付き防寒用ジャケット 3 〖名詞 の前で 〗半分閉じているような 〈目 〉.
hoodlum
hood lum /hʊ́dləm |húːd -/名詞 C ⦅くだけて ⦆1 犯罪者, ちんぴら .2 ⦅くだけて ⦆乱暴でうるさい若者, ワル .
hoodoo
hoo doo /húːduː /名詞 複 ~s ⦅米 ⦆1 =voodoo .2 C ⦅くだけて ⦆縁起の悪いもの [人 ]; 厄病神, 不運 .動詞 他動詞 ⦅くだけて ⦆〈人など 〉を不運にする .
hoodwink
h ó od w ì nk /hʊ́d -/動詞 他動詞 〈人 〉をだます, …をごまかす ; 〖~ A into doing 〗A 〈人 〉をだまして …させる .