English-Thai Dictionary
hull
N ตัว เรือ ลำ เรือ ลำ เครื่องบิน tua-ruea
hull
N เปลือก ผลไม้ เปลือก ถั่ว plueak-pon-la-mai
hull
VI ปอกเปลือก เอา เปลือก ออก pok-plueak
hullabaloo
N เสียง เอะอะโวยวาย hubbub racket calm quiet
huller
N เครื่องมือ กำจัด เปลือก เมล็ดข้าว
hullo
INT ฮัลโหล hallo hello
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
HULL
n. 1. The outer covering of any thing, particularly of a nut or of grain. Johnson says, the hull of a nut covers the shell.
2. The frame or body of a ship, exclusive of her masts, yards and rigging.
To lie a hull, in seamen's language, is to lie as a ship without any sail upon her, and her helm lashed a-lee.
To strike a hull, in a storm, is to take in the sails, and lash the helm on the lee-side of a ship.
HULL
v.t.To strip off or separate the hull or hulls; as, to hull grain. 1. To pierce the hull of a ship with a cannon-ball.
HULL
v.i.To float or drive on the water without sails.
HULLY
a.Having husks or pods; siliquous.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
HULL
Hull, n. Etym: [OE. hul, hol, shell, husk, AS. hulu; akin to G. hülle covering, husk, case, hüllen to cover, Goth. huljan to cover, AS. helan to hele, conceal. sq. root17. See Hele, v. t., Hell. ]
1. The outer covering of anything, particularly of a nut or of grain; the outer skin of a kernel; the husk.
2. Etym: [In this sense perh. influenced by D. hol hold of a ship, E. hold. ] (Naut. )
Defn: The frame or body of a vessel, exclusive of her masts, yards, sails, and rigging. Deep in their hulls our deadly bullets light. Dryden. Hull down, said of a ship so distant that her hull is concealed by the convexity of the sea.
HULL
Hull, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Hulled; p. pr. & vb. n. Hulling.]
1. To strip off or separate the hull or hulls of; to free from integument; as, to hull corn.
2. To pierce the hull of, as a ship, with a cannon ball.
HULL
HULL Hull, v. i.
Defn: To toss or drive on the water, like the hull of a ship without sails. [Obs. ] Shak. Milton.
HULLABALOO
Hul `la *ba *loo ", n. Etym: [Perh. a corruption of hurly-burly. ]
Defn: A confused noise; uproar; tumult. [Colloq. ] Thackeray.
HULLED
HULLED Hulled, a.
Defn: Deprived of the hulls. Hulled corn, kernels of maize prepared for food by removing the hulls.
HULLER
HULLER Hull "er, n.
Defn: One who, or that which, hulls; especially, an agricultural machine for removing the hulls from grain; a hulling machine.
HULLO
HULLO Hul *lo ", interj.
Defn: See Hollo.
HULLY
HULLY Hull "y, a.
Defn: Having or containing hulls.
New American Oxford Dictionary
Hull
Hull |həl həl | a city and port in northeastern England, situated at the junction of the Hull and Humber rivers; pop. 263,200 (est. 2009 ). Official name Kingston upon Hull.
hull
hull 1 |həl həl | ▶noun the main body of a ship or other vessel, including the bottom, sides, and deck but not the masts, superstructure, rigging, engines, and other fittings. ▶verb [ with obj. ] (usu. be hulled ) hit and pierce the hull of (a ship ) with a shell or other missile. DERIVATIVES hulled adjective [ in combination ] : a wooden-hulled narrowboat ORIGIN Middle English: perhaps the same word as hull 2, or related to hold 2 .
hull
hull 2 |həl həl | ▶noun the outer covering of a fruit or seed, esp. the pod of peas and beans, or the husk of grain. • the green calyx of a strawberry or raspberry. ▶verb [ with obj. ] (usu. as adj. hulled ) remove the hulls from (fruit, seeds, or grain ). ORIGIN Old English hulu, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch huls, German Hülse ‘husk, pod, ’ and German Hülle ‘covering, ’ also to heel 3 .
Hull, Bobby
Hull, Bobby |həl həl | (1939 –), Canadian hockey player; full name Robert Marvin Hull, Jr. He played for the Chicago Blackhawks 1957 –72, the Winnipeg Jets 1972 –79, and the Hartford Whalers 1980 –81. Hockey Hall of Fame (1983 ).
Hull, Cordell
Hull, Cordell |həl həl | (1871 –1955 ), US statesman. His tenure as US secretary of state 1933 –44 is the longest in US history. A Tennessee Democrat, he had earlier served in the US House of Representatives 1907 –21, 1923 –31, and the US Senate 1931 –33. Nobel Peace Prize (1945 ).
hullabaloo
hul la ba loo |ˈhələbəˌlo͞o, ˌhələbəˈlo͞o ˌhələbəˈlu | ▶noun [ in sing. ] informal a commotion; a fuss: remember all the hullabaloo over the golf ball? ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: reduplication of hallo, hullo, etc.
hullo
hul lo |həˈlō həˈloʊ | ▶exclam. variant spelling of hello. ORIGIN first recorded, in this form, in T. Hughes' Tom Brown's Schooldays (1857 ).
Oxford Dictionary
Hull
Hull |hʌl | a city and port in NE England, situated at the junction of the Hull and Humber Rivers; pop. 263,000 (est. 2009 ). Official name Kingston upon Hull.
hull
hull 1 |hʌl | ▶noun the main body of a ship or other vessel, including the bottom, sides, and deck but not the masts, superstructure, rigging, engines, and other fittings. ▶verb [ with obj. ] hit and pierce the hull of (a ship ) with a missile. DERIVATIVES hulled adjective [ in combination ] : a wooden-hulled narrowboat ORIGIN Middle English: perhaps the same word as hull 2, or related to hold 2 .
hull
hull 2 |hʌl | ▶noun the outer covering of a fruit or seed, especially the pod of peas and beans, or the husk of grain. • the green calyx of a strawberry or raspberry. ▶verb [ with obj. ] remove the hulls from (fruit, seeds, or grain ). ORIGIN Old English hulu, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch huls, German Hülse ‘husk, pod ’, and German Hülle ‘covering ’, also to heel 3 .
Hull, Bobby
Hull, Bobby |həl həl | (1939 –), Canadian hockey player; full name Robert Marvin Hull, Jr. He played for the Chicago Blackhawks 1957 –72, the Winnipeg Jets 1972 –79, and the Hartford Whalers 1980 –81. Hockey Hall of Fame (1983 ).
Hull, Cordell
Hull, Cordell |həl həl | (1871 –1955 ), US statesman. His tenure as US secretary of state 1933 –44 is the longest in US history. A Tennessee Democrat, he had earlier served in the US House of Representatives 1907 –21, 1923 –31, and the US Senate 1931 –33. Nobel Peace Prize (1945 ).
hullabaloo
hul ¦la |ba ¦loo |ˌhʌləbəˈluː | ▶noun [ in sing. ] informal a commotion; a fuss: remember all the hullabaloo over the golf ball? ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: reduplication of hallo, hullo, etc.
hullo
hullo ▶exclamation variant spelling of hello. ORIGIN first recorded, in this form, in T. Hughes's Tom Brown's Schooldays (1857 ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
hull
hull noun 1 the ship's hull: framework, body, shell, frame, skeleton, structure; fuselage. 2 seed hulls: shell, husk, pod, case, covering, integument, calyx, shuck; Botany pericarp, legume.
hullabaloo
hullabaloo noun informal the hullabaloo outside the police station attracted reporters by the dozen: fuss, commotion, hue and cry, uproar, outcry, clamor, storm, furor, hubbub, ruckus, brouhaha; pandemonium, mayhem, tumult, turmoil, hurly-burly, rumpus, palaver; informal hoo-ha, to-do, song and dance, stink.
Oxford Thesaurus
hull
hull 1 noun the wooden hull of the ship: framework, body, frame, skeleton, shell, structure, basic structure; exterior.
hull
hull 2 noun shell, husk, pod, case, casing, covering, seed case; rind, skin, peel; N. Amer. shuck; technical pericarp, capsule, legume; rare integument. ▶verb a beak which the bird uses effectively in hulling seeds: shell, husk, peel, pare, skin; N. Amer. shuck; technical decorticate.
hullabaloo
hullabaloo noun informal there was a terrific hullabaloo over the by-election: fuss, commotion, uproar, hubbub, outcry, furore, ruckus, ado, palaver, brouhaha, hue and cry; pandemonium, mayhem, tumult, turmoil, hurly-burly; roar, racket, din, noise, clamour, bedlam, babel; informal rumpus, ruction, hoo-ha, to-do, song and dance; Brit. informal kerfuffle, carry-on, row.
Duden Dictionary
Hüllblatt
Hüll blatt Substantiv, Neutrum Botanik , das |H ü llblatt |meist im Plural Blatt, das zusammen mit anderen die Fortpflanzungsorgane bei Moosen und Blütenpflanzen umschließt oder die Knospen schützt
Hülle
Hül le Substantiv, feminin , die |H ü lle |die Hülle; Genitiv: der Hülle, Plural: die Hüllen mittelhochdeutsch hülle = Umhüllung; Mantel; Kopftuch, althochdeutsch hulla = Kopftuch, zu hüllen 1 a etwas, worin etwas (zum Schutz o. Ä.) verpackt, womit etwas bedeckt, verhüllt ist die Hülle von etwas abstreifen b etwas, was für die Aufbewahrung o. Ä. von Gegenständen vorgesehen ist und in der Form diesen angepasst ist, sie fest umschließt eine Hülle für einen Ausweis | figurativ dichterisch die fleischliche, leibliche, irdische Hülle der Körper des Menschen [im Gegensatz zu der nicht materiellen Seele ]die sterbliche Hülle gehoben verhüllend der Leichnam eines Menschen 2 a umgangssprachlich scherzhaft Kleidungsstück [das jemand anhat ] seine, die Hülle abstreifen (sich entkleiden ) | seine, die Hüllen fallen lassen (sich [fast ] nackt ausziehen 2b ) | sich aus seinen Hüllen schälen sich entkleiden b in Hülle und Fülle, (gehoben : ) die Hülle und Fülle in großer Menge, im Überfluss ursprünglich: Kleidung [= Hülle ] und Nahrung [= Füllung des Magens ], bezogen auf das Allernotwendigste zum Lebensunterhalt; »Fülle « später umgedeutet zu »Überfluss «3 Botanik Hüllkelch
hüllen
hül len schwaches Verb gehoben |h ü llen |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « mittelhochdeutsch hüllen, althochdeutsch hullan, verwandt mit hehlen a jemanden, sich, etwas zum Schutz gegen äußere Einflüsse, gegen Kälte o. Ä. in etwas [ein ]wickeln, mit einer Umhüllung versehen, mit etwas ganz bedecken sich in eine Decke hüllen | Blumen in Zellophan hüllen | figurativ der Hergang des Unglücks blieb für alle Zeit in Dunkel gehüllt (blieb verborgen, klärte sich nicht auf )b schützend, wärmend o. ä. um jemanden, sich, etwas herumlegen eine Zeltplane war um das Denkmal gehüllt
hüllenlos
hül len los Adjektiv |h ü llenlos |1 unverhüllt, unverdeckt; in seinem ganzen Ausmaß erkennbar die Fehler und Schwächen traten in dieser Beleuchtung hüllenlos zutage 2 scherzhaft ohne jegliche Bekleidung; nackt hüllenlos stand er vor ihr
Hüllkelch
Hüll kelch Substantiv, maskulin Botanik , der |H ü llkelch |rosettenartig angeordnete Blätter, die die Knospe eines Korbblütlers umschließen
Hüllwort
Hüll wort Substantiv, Neutrum Sprachwissenschaft , das |H ü llwort |das Hüllwort < Plural: Hüllwörter > Euphemismus
Hully-Gully
Hul ly-Gul ly Substantiv, maskulin , der |ˈhaliˈgali |englisch hully gully, Herkunft ungeklärt 1 (in den Sechzigerjahren ) Reihentanz mit unterschiedlichen Schrittkombinationen 2 Halligalli
Spanish Dictionary
hulla
hulla nombre femenino Carbón mineral de color negro y brillo mate o graso, que procede de sedimentos enterrados de grandes masas vegetales; se emplea como combustible y para la obtención de gas :todavía existen reservas de hulla y de hierro que son la base del desarrollo siderúrgico de estos países .
hullera
hullera nombre femenino Mina de hulla en explotación .
hullero, -ra
hullero, -ra adjetivo De la hulla o relacionado con ella .
hullificación
hullificación nombre femenino Transformación de restos vegetales en hulla .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
hull
hull 1 /hʌl /動詞 ~s /-z /; ~ed /-d /; ~ing 他動詞 …の皮をむく , 外皮を除去する , 殻 [さや ]を取る ▸ hull rice もみすりをする ▸ Lightly crush the hulled strawberries with a fork .⦅レシピ ⦆へたを取ったイチゴをフォークで軽くつぶします 名詞 C (穀粒 種子 果実などの )外皮 , 殻 ; (豆の )さや ; (イチゴなどの )へた ; (一般に )覆い (covering ).
hull
hull 2 名詞 C (船などの )船体 〘煙突 帆柱などを除く 〙.h ú ll d ò wn (船体が )遠く沖合い [水平線下 ]に [を ].
hullabaloo
hul la ba loo /hʌ̀ləbəlúː, -́---̀ /名詞 複 ~s C ⦅くだけて ⦆〖通例a ~〗大騒ぎ, がやがや .
hullo
hul lo -loa /həlóʊ, hʌ -/間投詞 名詞 複 ~s 動詞 ⦅主に英 ⦆=hello .