English-Thai Dictionary
Limburger
N ชีสช นิดหนึ่ง ที่ มี กลิ่น แรง chis-cha-nid-nuang-ti-me-kiln-rang
limb
N กิ่ง ก้าน แขนง branch king
limb
N ขอบ ริม edge kob
limb
N สมาชิก member sa-ma-chik
limb
N แขน ขา หรือ ปีก kan-ka-rue-pik
limbate
A ที่ มี ขอบ รอบ เกี่ยวกับ ขอบ โค้ง ที่ สี แตกต่าง
limber
ADJ งอ ได้ ยืดหยุ่น flexible pliant ngo-dai
limber
N รถ สอง ล้อ ที่ ใช้ ลาก ปืนใหญ่ และ กระสุนปืน chai-rod-song-lor-ti-chai-lak-puen-yai-lea-kra-sun-puean-lak
limber
VI ที่ งอ ได้ ti-ngo-dai
limber
VI ใช้ รถ สอง ล้อ ที่ ใช้ ลาก ปืนใหญ่ chai-rod-song-lor-ti-chai-lak-puen-yai
limber
VT ทำให้ งอ ได้ ทำให้ ดัด ได้ tam-hai-ngo-dai
limber
VT ใช้ รถ สอง ล้อ ที่ ใช้ ลาก ปืนใหญ่ และ กระสุนปืน ลาก chai-rod-song-lor-ti-chai-lak-puen-yai-lea-kra-sun-puean-lak
limber up
PHRV เตรียมพร้อม loosen up triam-prom
limbo
N การ เต้นระบำ ลอด ไม้ ขวาง kan-ten-ra-bao-lod-mai-kwang
limbo
N สถานที่ ที่ ถูก ลืม สถานที่ ที่ ถูก ทอดทิ้ง sa-tan-ti-ti-tuk-luam
limburger
N เนย นิ่ม รส และ กลิ่น แรง
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
LIMB
n.lim. [L. limbus, edge or border, extremity; limes, limit. The sense of limb is from shooting or extending. ] 1. Edge or border. This is the proper signification of the word; but in this sense it is limited chiefly to technical use, and applied to the sun, moon, or a star, to a leaf, to a quadrant, etc. We say, the sun or moon is eclipsed on its northern limb. But we never say, the limb of a board, of a tract of land or water, etc.
2. In anatomy, and in common use, an extremity of the human body; a member; a projecting part; as the arm or leg; that is, a shoot.
3. The branch of a tree; applied only to a branch of some size, and not to a small twig.
4. In botany, the border or upper spreading part of a monopetalous corol.
LIMB
v.t.lim. 1. To supply with limbs.
2. To dismember; to tear off the limbs.
LIMBAT
n.A cooling periodical wind in the isle of Cyprus, blowing from the north west from eight o'clock, A.M. to the middle of the day or later.
LIMBEC
n.[contracted from alembic. ] A still; a word not now used.
LIMBEC
v.t.To strain or pass through a still. Obs.
LIMBED
a.In composition, formed with regard to limbs; as well-limbed; large-limbed; short-limbed.
LIMBER
a.Easily bent; flexible; pliant; yielding. In America, it is applied to material things; as a limber rod; a limber joint.
LIMBER
n.In a ship, a square hole cut through the floor timbers, as a passage for water to the pump-well.
LIMBERNESS
n.The quality of being easily bent; flexibleness; pliancy.
LIMBERS
n. 1. A two-wheeled carriage, having boxes for ammunition.
2. Thills; shafts of a carriage. [Local. ]
LIMBILITE
n.A mineral from Limbourg, in Swabia, of a honey yellow color, and compact texture.
LIMBLESS
a.Destitute of limbs.
LIMB-MEAL
a.Piece-meal.
LIMBO, LIMBUS
n.[L. limbus. ] 1. A region bordering on hell, or hell itself.
Among catholics, a place where the souls of persons are lodged after death.
2. A place of restraint.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
LIMB
Limb, n. Etym: [OE. lim, AS. lim; akin to Icel. limr limb, lim branch of a tree, Sw. & Dan. lem limb; cf. also AS. li, OHG. lid, gilid, G. glied, Goth. lipus. Cf. Lith, Limber. ]
1. A part of a tree which extends from the trunk and separates into branches and twigs; a large branch.
2. An arm or a leg of a human being; a leg, arm, or wing of an animal. A second Hector for his grim aspect, And large proportion of his strong-knit limbs. Shak.
3. A thing or person regarded as a part or member of, or attachment to, something else. Shak. That little limb of the devil has cheated the gallows. Sir W. Scott.
4. An elementary piece of the mechanism of a lock. Limb of the law, a lawyer or an officer of the law. [Colloq. ] Landor.
LIMB
LIMB Limb, v. t.
1. To supply with limbs. [R.] Milton.
2. To dismember; to tear off the limbs of.
LIMB
Limb, n. Etym: [L. limbus border. Cf. Limbo, Limbus. ]
Defn: A border or edge, in certain special uses. (a ) (Bot. ) The border or upper spreading part of a monopetalous corolla, or of a petal, or sepal; blade. (b ) (Astron.) The border or edge of the disk of a heavenly body, especially of the sun and moon. (c ) The graduated margin of an arc or circle, in an instrument for measuring angles.
LIMBAT
Lim "bat, n. Etym: [Etymol. uncertain. ]
Defn: A cooling periodical wind in the Isle of Cyprus, blowing from the northwest from eight o'clock, A. M., to the middle of the day or later.
LIMBATE
Lim "bate, a. Etym: [L. limbatus, fr. limbus border, edge. See Limbus. ] (Bot. & Zoöl.)
Defn: Bordered, as when one color is surrounded by an edging of another.
LIMBEC
Lim "bec, n. Etym: [Abbrev. of alembic. ]
Defn: An alembic; a still. [Obs. ] Spenser. Shak.
LIMBEC
LIMBEC Lim "bec, v. t.
Defn: To distill. [Obs. ] Dryden.
LIMBED
LIMBED Limbed, a.
Defn: Having limbs; -- much used in composition; as, large-limbed; short-limbed. Innumerous living creatures, perfect forms, Limbed and full grown. Milton.
LIMBER
Lim "ber, n. Etym: [For limmer, Icel. limar branches, boughs, pl. of lim; akin to E. limb. See Limb a branch. ]
1. pl.
Defn: The shafts or thills of a wagon or carriage. [Prov. Eng. ]
2. (Mil. )
Defn: The detachable fore part of a gun carriage, consisting of two wheels, an axle, and a shaft to which the horses are attached. On top is an ammunition box upon which the cannoneers sit.
3. pl. (Naut. )
Defn: Gutters or conduits on each side of the keelson to afford a passage for water to the pump well. Limber boards (Naut. ), short pieces of plank forming part of the lining of a ship's floor immediately above the timbers, so as to prevent the limbers from becoming clogged. -- Limber box or chest (Mil. ), a box on the limber for carrying ammunition. -- Limber rope, Limber chain or Limber clearer (Naut. ), a rope or chain passing through the limbers of a ship, by which they may be cleared of dirt that chokes them. Totten. -- Limber strake (Shipbuilding ), the first course of inside planking next the keelson.
LIMBER
Lim "ber v. t. [imp. & p. p. Limbered; p. pr. & vb. n. Limbering.](Mil. )
Defn: To attach to the limber; as, to limber a gun. To limber up, to change a gun carriage into a four-wheeled vehicle by attaching the limber.
LIMBER
Lim "ber, a. Etym: [Akin to lim, a. Limp, a.]
Defn: Easily bent; flexible; pliant; yielding. Milton. The bargeman that doth row with long and limber oar. Turbervile.
LIMBER
LIMBER Lim "ber, v. t.
Defn: To cause to become limber; to make flexible or pliant. Richardson.
LIMBERNESS
LIMBERNESS Lim "ber *ness, n.
Defn: The quality or state of being limber; flexibleness. Boyle.
LIMBLESS
LIMBLESS Limb "less, a.
Defn: Destitute of limbs.
LIMBMEAL
Limb "meal `, adv. Etym: [See Limb, and Piecemeal. ]
Defn: Piecemeal. [Obs. ] "To tear her limbmeal. " Shak.
LIMBO; LIMBUS
Lim "bo, Lim "bus, n. Etym: [L. limbus border, edge in limbo on the border. Cf. Limb border. ]
1. (Scholastic Theol.)
Defn: An extramundane region where certain classes of souls were supposed to await the judgment. As far from help as Limbo is from bliss. Shak. A Limbo large and broad, since called The Paradise of fools. Milton.
Note: The limbus patrum was considered as a place for the souls of good men who lived before the coming of our Savior. The limbus infantium was said to be a similar place for the souls of unbaptized infants. To these was added, in the popular belief, the limbus fatuorum, or fool's paradise, regarded as a receptacle of all vanity and nonsense.
2. Hence: Any real or imaginary place of restraint or confinement; a prison; as, to put a man in limbo.
3. (Anat. )
Defn: A border or margin; as, the limbus of the cornea. Etym: Jamaican E limba to bend, fr. E. limber (195 )]. Often performed at celebrations, such as weddings. (195 -1996 )
LIMBOUS
Lim "bous, a. Etym: [See Limbus. ] (Anat. )
Defn: With slightly overlapping borders; -- said of a suture.
LIMBURG CHEESE; LIMBURGER; LIMBURGER CHEESE
LIMBURG CHEESE; LIMBURGER; LIMBURGER CHEESE Lim "burg cheese, Lim "burg *er, n., Lim "burg *er cheese.
Defn: A soft cheese made in the Belgian province of Limburg (Limbourg ), and usually not eaten until the curing has developed a peculiar and, to most people, unpleasant odor.
New American Oxford Dictionary
limb
limb 1 |lim lɪm | ▶noun an arm or leg of a person or four-legged animal, or a bird's wing. • a large branch of a tree. • a projecting landform such as a spur of a mountain range, or each of two or more such projections as in a forked peninsula or archipelago. • a projecting section of a building. • a branch of a cross. • each half of an archery bow. PHRASES life and limb life and all bodily faculties: a reckless disregard for life and limb. out on a limb in or into a dangerous or uncompromising position, where one is not joined or supported by anyone else; vulnerable: she's prepared to go out on a limb and do something different. tear someone limb from limb violently dismember someone. DERIVATIVES limbed adjective [ in combination ] : long-limbed, limb less adjective ORIGIN Old English lim (also in the sense ‘organ or part of the body ’), of Germanic origin.
limb
limb 2 |lɪm lim | ▶noun 1 Astronomy the edge of the disk of a celestial object, esp. the sun or moon. 2 Botany the blade or broad part of a leaf or petal. • the spreading upper part of a tube-shaped flower. 3 the graduated arc of a quadrant or other scientific instrument, used for measuring angles. ORIGIN late Middle English: from French limbe or Latin limbus ‘hem, border. ’
Limba
Lim ba |ˈlimbə ˈlɪmbə | ▶noun ( pl. same or Limbas ) 1 a member of a people of Sierra Leone and Guinea. 2 the Niger –Congo language of this people. ▶adjective of or relating to the Limbas or their language. ORIGIN the name in Limba.
limber
lim ber 1 |ˈlimbər ˈlɪmbər | ▶adjective (of a person or body part ) lithe; supple. • (of a thing ) flexible: limber graphite fishing rods. ▶verb [ no obj. ] warm up in preparation for exercise or activity, esp. sports: the acrobats were limbering up for the big show. DERIVATIVES lim ber ness noun ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (as an adjective ): perhaps from limber 2 in the dialect sense ‘cart shaft, ’ with allusion to a to-and-fro motion.
limber
lim ber 2 |ˈlɪmbər ˈlimbər | ▶noun the detachable front part of a gun carriage, consisting of two wheels and an axle, a pole, and a frame holding one or more ammunition boxes. ▶verb [ with obj. ] attach a limber to (a gun ). ORIGIN Middle English lymour, apparently related to medieval Latin limonarius from limo, limon- ‘shaft. ’
limberneck
lim ber neck |ˈlimbərˌnek ˈlɪmbərnɛk | ▶noun a kind of botulism affecting poultry.
limber pine
lim ber pine ▶noun a small pine tree with tough pliant branches, native to the Rocky Mountains. [Pinus flexilis, family Pinaceae. ]
limbi
lim bi |ˈlimˌbī, -ˌbē ˈlɪmbaɪ | plural form of limbus.
limbic system
lim bic sys tem |ˈlimbik ˈlɪmbɪk ˌsɪstəm | ▶noun a complex system of nerves and networks in the brain, involving several areas near the edge of the cortex concerned with instinct and mood. It controls the basic emotions (fear, pleasure, anger ) and drives (hunger, sex, dominance, care of offspring ). ORIGIN late 19th cent.: limbic from French limbique, from Latin limbus ‘edge. ’
limbo
lim bo 1 |ˈlimbō ˈlɪmboʊ | ▶noun 1 (also Limbo ) (in some Christian beliefs ) the supposed abode of the souls of unbaptized infants, and of the just who died before Christ's coming. 2 an uncertain period of awaiting a decision or resolution; an intermediate state or condition: the fate of the Contras is now in limbo . • a state of neglect or oblivion: children left in an emotional limbo. ORIGIN late Middle English: from the medieval Latin phrase in limbo, from limbus ‘hem, border, limbo. ’
limbo
lim bo 2 |ˈlɪmboʊ ˈlimbō | ▶noun ( pl. limbos ) a West Indian dance in which the dancer bends backward to pass under a horizontal bar that is progressively lowered to a position just above the ground. ▶verb [ no obj. ] dance in such a way. ORIGIN 1950s: from limber 1 .
Limburg
Limburg |ˈlɪmbəːg | a former duchy of Lorraine, divided in 1839 between Belgium and the Netherlands. It now forms a province of NE Belgium (capital, Hasselt ) and a province of the SE Netherlands (capital, Maastricht ). French name Limbourg |lɛ̃buʀ |.
Limburger
Lim burg er |ˈlimˌbərgər ˈlɪmbərɡər | ▶noun a soft white cheese with a characteristic strong smell, originally made in Limburg, a former duchy of Lorraine.
limbus
lim bus |ˈlimbəs ˈlɪmbəs | ▶noun ( pl. limbi |-ˌbī, -ˌbē | ) Anatomy the border or margin of a structure, esp. the junction of the cornea and sclera in the eye. ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting limbo ): from Latin, ‘edge, border. ’ The current sense dates from the late 17th cent.
Oxford Dictionary
limb
limb 1 |lɪm | ▶noun 1 an arm or leg of a person or four-legged animal, or a bird's wing. 2 a large branch of a tree. • a branch of a cross. • each half of an archery bow. 3 a projecting landform such as a spur of a mountain range, or each of two or more such projections as in a forked peninsula or archipelago. • a projecting section of a building. PHRASES life and limb life and all bodily faculties: a burglar risking life and limb to scramble into an open third-floor window. out on a limb 1 isolated: Aberdeen is rather out on a limb. 2 in or into a position where one is not joined or supported by anyone else: I wouldn't go out on a limb like this if I didn't have the data to justify it. tear someone limb from limb violently dismember someone. DERIVATIVES limbed adjective [ in combination ] : long-limbed, limbless adjective ORIGIN Old English lim (also in the sense ‘organ or part of the body ’), of Germanic origin.
limb
limb 2 |lɪm | ▶noun 1 Astronomy the edge of the disc of a celestial object, especially the sun or moon. 2 Botany the blade or broad part of a leaf or petal. • the spreading upper part of a tube-shaped flower. 3 the graduated arc of a quadrant or other scientific instrument, used for measuring angles. ORIGIN late Middle English: from French limbe or Latin limbus ‘hem, border ’.
Limba
Limba |ˈlɪmbə | ▶noun ( pl. same or Limbas ) 1 a member of a West African people of Sierra Leone and Guinea. 2 [ mass noun ] the Niger –Congo language of the Limba, with about 300,000 speakers. ▶adjective relating to the Limba or their language. ORIGIN the name in Limba.
limba
limba |ˈlɪmbə | ▶noun another term for afara. ORIGIN 1930s: from limbo, the name used in Gabon.
limber
limber 1 |ˈlɪmbə | ▶adjective (of a person or body part ) lithe or supple: I have to practise to keep myself limber. • (of a thing ) flexible: limber graphite fishing rods. ▶verb [ no obj. ] warm up in preparation for exercise or activity, especially sport or athletics: the acrobats were limbering up for the big show. DERIVATIVES limberness noun ORIGIN mid 16th cent. (as an adjective ): perhaps from limber 2 in the dialect sense ‘cart shaft ’, with allusion to the to-and-fro motion.
limber
limber 2 |ˈlɪmbə | ▶noun the detachable front part of a gun carriage, consisting of two wheels and an axle, a pole, and a frame holding one or more ammunition boxes. ▶verb [ with obj. ] attach a limber to (a gun ). ORIGIN Middle English lymour, apparently related to medieval Latin limonarius from limo, limon- ‘shaft ’.
limberneck
lim ¦ber |neck |ˈlɪmbənɛk | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a kind of botulism affecting poultry.
limber pine
lim ¦ber pine ▶noun a small pine tree with tough pliant branches, which is native to the Rocky Mountains of North America. ●Pinus flexilis, family Pinaceae.
limbic system
limbic system |ˈlɪmbɪk | ▶noun a complex system of nerves and networks in the brain, involving several areas near the edge of the cortex concerned with instinct and mood. It controls the basic emotions (fear, pleasure, anger ) and drives (hunger, sex, dominance, care of offspring ). ORIGIN late 19th cent.: limbic from French limbique, from Latin limbus ‘edge ’.
limbo
limbo 1 |ˈlɪmbəʊ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] 1 (in some Christian beliefs ) the supposed abode of the souls of unbaptized infants, and of the just who died before Christ's coming. 2 an uncertain period of awaiting a decision or resolution; an intermediate state or condition: the legal battle could leave the club in limbo until next year. • a state of neglect or oblivion: these prisoners are in limbo: no one is responsible for their welfare. ORIGIN late Middle English: from the medieval Latin phrase in limbo, from limbus ‘hem, border, limbo ’.
limbo
limbo 2 |ˈlɪmbəʊ | ▶noun ( pl. limbos ) a West Indian dance in which the dancer bends backwards to pass under a horizontal bar which is progressively lowered to a position just above the ground. ▶verb [ no obj. ] perform the limbo. ORIGIN 1950s: from limber 1 .
Limburg
Limburg |ˈlɪmbəːg | a former duchy of Lorraine, divided in 1839 between Belgium and the Netherlands. It now forms a province of NE Belgium (capital, Hasselt ) and a province of the SE Netherlands (capital, Maastricht ). French name Limbourg |lɛ̃buʀ |.
Limburger
Lim |burg ¦er |ˈlɪmbəːgə | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a soft white cheese with a characteristic strong smell, originally made in Limburg.
limbus
limbus |ˈlɪmbəs | ▶noun ( pl. limbi |-bʌɪ | ) Anatomy the border or margin of a structure, especially the junction of the cornea and sclera in the eye. ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting limbo ): from Latin, ‘edge, border ’. The current sense dates from the late 17th cent.
American Oxford Thesaurus
limb
limb noun 1 his sore limbs: arm, leg, appendage; archaic member. 2 the limbs of the tree: branch, bough, offshoot, shoot. PHRASES go out on a limb the government would not go out on a limb: be put in a precarious position, become vulnerable, be put in a risky situation; informal be sticking one's neck out.
limber
limber adjective I have to practice to keep myself limber: lithe, supple, nimble, lissome, flexible, fit, agile, acrobatic, loose-jointed, loose-limbed. ANTONYMS stiff. PHRASES limber up they're limbering up for the marathon: warm up, loosen up, get into condition, get into shape, practice, train, stretch. CHOOSE THE RIGHT WORD See flexible . These notes show fine distinctions in meaning between closely related synonyms to help you find the best word.
limbo
limbo noun PHRASES in limbo our mortgage approval is in limbo: in abeyance, unattended to, unfinished; suspended, deferred, postponed, put off, pending, on ice, in cold storage; unresolved, undetermined, up in the air, uncertain; informal on the back burner, on hold, treading water, in the balance.
Oxford Thesaurus
limb
limb noun 1 he was stretching his sore limbs: arm, leg; wing; extremity, appendage, protuberance, projection; archaic member. 2 the bare limbs of a high tree: branch, bough. 3 local job centres act as limbs of the Ministry of Employment: section, branch, offshoot, arm, wing, part, subdivision; department, division, office, member. PHRASES out on a limb 1 the portrayal of Scotland as being out on a limb from the rest of Britain: isolated, stranded, segregated, set apart, separate, marooned, cut off; solitary, sequestered, high and dry. ANTONYMS a central part of. 2 I don't think the government would be prepared to go out on a limb on his behalf: in a precarious position, in a weak position, in a risky situation, vulnerable; informal sticking one's neck out. ANTONYMS in a safe position /situation. WORD LINKS limb appendicular relating to a limb Word Links sections supply words that are related to the headword but do not normally appear in a thesaurus because they are not actual synonyms.
limber
limber adjective I have to practise to keep myself limber: lithe, supple, nimble, lissom, flexible, fit, spry, sprightly, agile, acrobatic, quick-moving, deft, willowy, graceful, loose-jointed, loose-limbed; active, lively, in good condition; informal in good nick. ANTONYMS stiff, unfit. ▶verb PHRASES limber up they had been limbering up for their evening's training schedule: warm up, loosen up, get into condition, get into shape, get ready, prepare, practise, train, drill; stretch, exercise, work out.
limbo
limbo noun unbaptized infants are thought to live in limbo: oblivion, void, non-existence, neither heaven nor hell. PHRASES in limbo the measure has been in limbo since Congress took a 10 -day break: in abeyance, unattended to, unfinished, incomplete; suspended, deferred, postponed, put off, pending, in a state of suspension, awaiting action, on ice, in cold storage; unresolved, undetermined, in a state of uncertainty, up in the air, betwixt and between; ongoing, outstanding, hanging fire; abandoned, forgotten, left out, neglected; informal on the back burner, on hold. ANTONYMS in hand, under way, continuing.
Duden Dictionary
Limba
Lim ba Substantiv, Neutrum , das |L i mba |afrikanisch aus dem tropischen Westafrika stammendes gelbbraunes bis grünlich braunes Holz, das häufig als Furnierholz verwendet wird
Limbi
Lim bi |L i mbi |Plural von Limbus
limbisch
lim bisch Adjektiv |l i mbisch |zu Limbus in der Fügung limbisches System Medizin Randgebiet zwischen Großhirn und Gehirnstamm, das die hormonale Steuerung und das vegetative Nervensystem beeinflusst und von dem gefühlsmäßige Reaktionen auf Umweltreize ausgehen
Limbo
Lim bo Substantiv, maskulin , der |L i mbo |karibisch Wort akrobatischer Tanz westindischer Herkunft, bei dem der Tänzer, die Tänzerin den Körper von den Knien an zurückbeugt und sich mit schiebenden Tanzschritten unter einer Querstange hindurchbewegt
Limburg
Lim burg Eigenname |L i mburg |1 hessische Stadt an der Lahn 2 belgische und niederländische Landschaft
Limburg a. d. Lahn
Lim burg a. d. Lahn Eigenname |L i mburg a. d. L a hn |Stadt in Hessen
Limburger
Lim bur ger Adjektiv |L i mburger |indeklinables Adjektiv Limburger Käse
Limburger
Lim bur ger Substantiv, maskulin , der |L i mburger |der Limburger; Genitiv: des Limburgers, Plural: die Limburger Einwohnerbezeichnung
Limburger
Lim bur ger Substantiv, maskulin , der |L i mburger |der Limburger; Genitiv: des Limburgers, Plural: die Limburger ursprünglich nur in der belgischen Landschaft Limburg hergestellt stark riechender, pikanter Weichkäse mit etwas schmieriger, rötlich gelber Oberfläche
Limburgerin
Lim bur ge rin Substantiv, feminin , die |L i mburgerin |weibliche Form zu Limburger
Limburger Käse
Lim bur ger Kä se Substantiv, maskulin , der |L i mburger K ä se |der Limburger Käse; Genitiv: des Limburger Käses, Limburger Käse Limburger
Limbus
Lim bus Substantiv, maskulin , der |L i mbus |der Limbus; Genitiv: des Limbus, Plural: die Limbi 1 ohne Plural kirchenlateinisch limbus < lateinisch limbus = Rand, Saum katholische Religion Vorhölle 2 Technik Grad-, Teilkreis an Winkelmessinstrumenten 3 Botanik oberer, nicht verwachsener Teil, Saum einer Blüte
French Dictionary
limbes
limbes n. m. pl. nom masculin pluriel 1 Séjour des âmes des justes avant la venue du Christ, des enfants morts sans baptême. 2 figuré Endroit mal défini. : Les limbes des rêves inachevés. Note Technique Attention au genre masculin de ce nom. Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec le nom nimbe, auréole.
Spanish Dictionary
límbico, -ca
límbico, -ca sistema límbico .
limbo
limbo nombre masculino 1 Parte ancha de las hojas de las plantas :el limbo de las hojas es una parte rica en clorofila .2 En el cristianismo, lugar al que van las almas de los justos que mueren sin bautizar, especialmente las de los niños :en teología no hay acuerdo sobre la existencia del limbo y no hay declaración doctrinal de la Iglesia sobre este tema .3 astr Cerco de un astro .estar en el limbo Estar distraído y como ajeno a lo que sucede a alrededor o a aquello de lo que se está tratando .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
limb
limb 1 /lɪm / (! 語末 -mbのbは発音しない; →lamb 語源 ) 〖語源は 「臓器の一部 」〗名詞 複 ~s /-z /C 1 〖通例 ~s 〗(人間 動物の )肢 , 手足 (の 1 本 ) (!arm, legをさす ) ; (鳥の )翼 (wing ); (魚の )ひれ ▸ an artificial limb 義手 [足 ]▸ move [stretch ] one's limbs 手足を動かす [伸ばす ].2 ⦅文 ⦆大枝 (branch )(→tree ); 十字架の腕木 ; ⦅英 ⦆(文の )節 (!その他 「突き出た部分 」をさす ) .3 (手足として働く ) (悪魔 法などの )子分 , 手先 .4 ⦅古 ⦆いたずら小僧 , 腕白 .ò ut on a l í mb ⦅くだけて ⦆困難 [不利 危険 ]な立場 [状況 ]で ; 〈議論などが 〉支持されない ; (議論などで )孤立無援で ▸ go out on a limb 危険を冒す, 窮地に陥る t è ar [r ì p ] A l ì mb from l í mb ⦅おどけて ⦆A 〈人 〉をこてんぱんにやっつける, 八つ裂きにする .動詞 他動詞 …の手足を切る , …をばらばらにする .l í mb less 形容詞
limb
limb 2 名詞 C 1 〘天 〙(太陽 月などの )縁 .2 (四分儀などの )目盛りのついた縁の部分 .3 花びらの広がった部分 ; 葉身 .
limber
lim ber 1 /lɪ́mbə r /形容詞 しなやかな, 柔軟な ; 機敏な (→flexible ).動詞 自動詞 (運動によって )体をしなやかにする, 柔軟体操をする (up ).他動詞 …を柔軟にする .
limber
lim ber 2 名詞 C 〘軍 〙(砲車の )前車 .
limbo
lim bo 1 /lɪ́mboʊ /名詞 複 ~s 1 U 〖しばしばL -〗〘宗 〙リンボ, 地獄の辺土 〘天国と地獄の間で, 洗礼を受けなかった幼児やキリスト降誕以前の善人などの霊魂のとどまる所 〙.2 U 不確定な状態, 忘却 [無視 ]されている状態 ; C (忘却 [無視 ]された人 [物 ]の )行き場, (忘却の )ふち ; 刑務所, 監獄 ▸ in limbo どっちつかずの [忘れられた ]状態で
limbo
lim bo 2 名詞 複 ~s C 〖通例the ~〗リンボーダンス .