English-Thai Dictionary
jade
N สี เขียว สว่าง แบบห ยก jade green se-kiao-sa-wang-beab-yok
jade
N ห ยก yok
jaded
ADJ เหนื่อย อ่อนเพลีย เบื่อ tired exhausted bored fresh strong refreshed nuai
jadeite
N แร่ห ยกช นิดหนึ่ง
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
JADE
n. 1. A mean or poor horse; a tired horse; a worthless nag.
Tired as a jade in overloaden cart.
2. A mean woman; a word of contempt, noting sometimes age, but generally vice.
She shines the first of battered jades.
3. A young woman; in irony or slight contempt.
JADE
n.A mineral called also nephrite or nephritic stone, remarkable for its hardness and tenacity, of a color more or less green, and of a resinous or oily aspect when polished. It is fusible into a glass or enamel. Cleveland divides jade into three subspecies, nephrite, saussurite, and axestone. It is found in detached masses or inhering in rocks.
JADE
v.t.To tire; to fatigue; to weary with hard service; as, to jade a horse. 1. To weary with attention or study; to tire.
The mind once jaded by an attempt above its power, is very hardly brought to exert its force again.
2. To harass; to crush.
3. To tire or wear out in mean offices; as a jaded groom.
4. To ride; to rule with tyranny.
I do not now fool myself, to let imagination jade me.
JADE
v.i.To become weary; to lose spirit; to sink. They are promising in the beginning, but they fail and jade and tire in the prosecution.
JADED
pp. Tired; wearied; fatigued; harassed.
JADERY
n.The tricks of a jade.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
JADE
Jade, n. Etym: [F., fr. Sp. jade, fr. piedra de ijada stone of the side, fr. ijada flank, side, pain in the side, the stone being so named because it was supposed to cure this pain. Sp. ijada is derived fr. L. ilia flanks. Cf. Iliac. ] (Min. )
Defn: A stone, commonly of a pale to dark green color but sometimes whitish. It is very hard and compact, capable of fine polish, and is used for ornamental purposes and for implements, esp. in Eastern countries and among many early peoples.
Note: The general term jade includes nephrite, a compact variety of tremolite with a specific gravity of 3, and also the mineral jadeite, a silicate of alumina and soda, with a specific gravity of 3.3. The latter is the more highly prized and includes the feitsui of the Chinese. The name has also been given to other tough green minerals capable of similar use.
JADE
Jade, n. Etym: [OE. jade; cf. Prov. E. yaud, Scot. yade, yad, yaud, Icel. jalda a mare. ]
1. A mean or tired horse; a worthless nag. Chaucer. Tired as a jade in overloaden cart. Sir P. Sidney.
2. A disreputable or vicious woman; a wench; a quean; also, sometimes, a worthless man. Shak. She shines the first of battered jades. Swift.
3. A young woman; -- generally so called in irony or slight contempt. A souple jade she was, and strang. Burns.
JADE
Jade, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Jaded; p. pr. & vb. n. Jading. ]
1. To treat like a jade; to spurn. [Obs. ] Shak.
2. To make ridiculous and contemptible. [Obs. ] I do now fool myself, to let imagination jade me. Shak.
3. To exhaust by overdriving or long-continued labor of any kind; to tire or wear out by severe or tedious tasks; to harass. The mind, once jaded by an attempt above its power, ... checks at any vigorous undertaking ever after. Locke.
Syn. -- To fatigue; tire; weary; harass. -- To Jade, Fatigue, Tire, Weary. Fatigue is the generic term; tire denotes fatigue which wastes the strength; weary implies that a person is worn out by exertion; jade refers to the weariness created by a long and steady repetition of the same act or effort. A little exertion will tire a child or a weak person; a severe or protracted task wearies equally the body and the mind; the most powerful horse becomes jaded on a long journey by a continual straining of the same muscles. Wearied with labor of body or mind; tired of work, tired out by importunities; jaded by incessant attention to business.
JADE
JADE Jade, v. i.
Defn: To become weary; to lose spirit. They. .. fail, and jade, and tire in the prosecution. South.
JADEITE
JADEITE Jade "ite, n. (Min. )
Defn: See Jade, the stone.
JADERY
JADERY Jad "er *y, n.
Defn: The tricks of a jade.
New American Oxford Dictionary
jade
jade 1 |jād ʤeɪd | ▶noun a hard, typically green stone used for ornaments and implements and consisting of the minerals jadeite or nephrite. • an ornament made of this. • (also jade green ) a light bluish-green: [ as modifier ] : a baggy jade T-shirt. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from French le jade (earlier l'ejade ), from Spanish piedra de ijada ‘stone of the flank ’ (i.e., stone for colic, which it was believed to cure ).
jade
jade 2 |ʤeɪd jād | ▶noun archaic 1 a bad-tempered or disreputable woman. 2 an inferior or worn-out horse. ORIGIN late Middle English: of unknown origin.
jaded
jad ed |ˈjādid ʤeɪdɪd | ▶adjective tired, bored, or lacking enthusiasm, typically after having had too much of something: meals to tempt the most jaded appetites. DERIVATIVES jad ed ly adverb, jad ed ness noun ORIGIN late 16th cent. (in the sense ‘disreputable ’): from jade 2 .
jadeite
jade ite |ˈjādˌīt ˈʤeɪdaɪt | ▶noun a green, blue, or white mineral that is one of the forms of jade. It is a silicate of sodium, aluminum, and iron and belongs to the pyroxene group.
Oxford Dictionary
jade
jade 1 |dʒeɪd | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a hard, typically green stone used for ornaments and implements and consisting of the minerals jadeite or nephrite. • [ count noun ] an ornament made of jade. • (also jade green ) a light bluish-green. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from French le jade (earlier l'ejade ), from Spanish piedra de ijada ‘stone of the flank ’ (i.e. stone for colic, which it was believed to cure ).
jade
jade 2 |dʒeɪd | ▶noun archaic 1 a bad-tempered or disreputable woman. 2 an old or worn-out horse. ORIGIN late Middle English: of unknown origin.
jaded
jaded |ˈdʒeɪdɪd | ▶adjective bored or lacking enthusiasm, typically after having had too much of something: meals to tempt the most jaded appetites. • Irish informal physically tired; exhausted. DERIVATIVES jadedly adverb, jadedness noun ORIGIN late 16th cent. (in the sense ‘disreputable ’): from jade 2 .
jadeite
jadeite |ˈdʒeɪdʌɪt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a green, blue, or white mineral which is one of the forms of jade. It is a silicate of sodium, aluminium, and iron and belongs to the pyroxene group.
American Oxford Thesaurus
jaded
jaded adjective a taste exotic enough for the most jaded palate | the uninspired writing of a jaded journalist: surfeited, sated, satiated, glutted; dulled, blunted, deadened, inured; tired, weary, wearied; unmoved, blasé, apathetic. ANTONYMS fresh.
Oxford Thesaurus
jaded
jaded adjective 1 there are soups exotic enough for the most jaded palate: satiated, sated, surfeited, glutted, cloyed, gorged; dulled, blunted, deadened, benumbed. 2 she has an eye for the detail that a more jaded journalist might overlook: tired, weary, tired out, wearied, worn out, exhausted, fatigued, overtired, sleepy, drowsy, sapped, dog-tired, spent, drained, jet-lagged, debilitated, prostrate, enervated, low; informal all in, done (in /up ), dead, dead beat, dead tired, dead on one's feet, asleep on one's feet, ready to drop, played out, fagged out, bushed, pooped, worn to a frazzle, shattered, burnt out; Brit. informal knackered, whacked; N. Amer. informal tuckered out. ANTONYMS fresh.
Duden Dictionary
jade
ja de Adjektiv |j a de |lateinisch-spanisch-französisch blassgrün
Jade
Ja de Substantiv, maskulin oder Substantiv, feminin , der oder die |J a de |der Jade; Genitiv: des Jade [s ], auch: die Jade; Genitiv: der Jade französisch jade < spanisch (piedra de la ) ijada = (Stein für die ) Weiche 2 ; Jadestücke wurden als Heilmittel gegen Nierenkoliken angesehen blassgrüner, durchscheinender Schmuckstein
Jade
Ja de Substantiv, feminin , die |J a de |die Jade; Genitiv: der Jade kleiner Zufluss der Nordsee in Niedersachsen
Jadebusen
Ja de bu sen Substantiv, maskulin , der |J a debusen |Nordseebucht, in die die Jade mündet
jadegrün
ja de grün Adjektiv |j a degrün |grün wie Jade , blassgrün
Jadeit
Ja de it Substantiv, maskulin , der |Jade i t auch …ˈɪt |der Jadeit; Genitiv: des Jadeits, Plural: die Jadeite weißlich grünes, dichtes, körniges bis faseriges Mineral, das in der Jungsteinzeit zu geschliffenen Beilen und Äxten verarbeitet wurde und das als Schmuckstein verwendet wird
jaden
ja den Adjektiv |j a den |aus Jade bestehend
French Dictionary
jade
jade n. m. nom masculin Pierre très dure dont la couleur varie du blanc au vert. : De beaux jades. Amélie a reçu un bracelet en jade. Note Technique Attention au genre masculin de ce nom: un jade. Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec le nom jaspe, pierre tachetée de rouge.
Spanish Dictionary
jade
jade nombre masculino Mineral duro, compacto, blanquecino o verdoso, formado esencialmente por silicato de calcio y magnesio; es apreciado como joya o material ornamental :los jeroglíficos pueden aparecer grabados en cerámica o inscritos en jade y obsidiana .ETIMOLOGÍA Préstamo (s. xviii ) del francés jade y este del antiguo ejade. El término francés es a su vez préstamo del español (piedra de la ) ijada ; término aplicado a la piedra por los conquistadores españoles de América por la creencia indígena de que curaba el cólico nefrítico o el dolor de la ijada .
jadeante
jadeante adjetivo Que jadea :respiración jadeante .
jadear
jadear verbo intransitivo Respirar anhelosamente por efecto del cansancio, la excitación, el calor excesivo o alguna dificultad debida a enfermedad :oí que la mujer daba unos pasos y que se detenía, jadeando de miedo .
jadeíta
jadeíta nombre femenino Variedad de jade de aspecto fibroso o granulado, muy apreciado en la fabricación de objetos de adorno .
jadeo
jadeo nombre masculino Respiración anhelosa por efecto del cansancio, la excitación, el calor excesivo o alguna dificultad debida a enfermedad :el jadeo después de una carrera .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
jade
jade /dʒeɪd /名詞 U 1 翡翠 (ひすい ); 翡翠の装飾品 .2 翡翠色, (明るい )緑色 (jade green ).
jaded
j á d ed /-ɪd /形容詞 うんざり [あきあき ]した ; (熱意の )冷めた ; 疲れ果てた .