English-Thai Dictionary
Mendel
N บิดา แห่ง พันธุศาสตร์ (Gregor Johann bi-da-hang-pan-ta-sad
mend
N รอย ปะ รอย ชุน roi-pa
mend
VI หาย (จาก เจ็บป่วย ฟื้นตัว remedy cure recover worsen hai
mend
VT แก้ไข ทำให้ ถูกต้อง ซ่อม ทำให้ ดีขึ้น repair improve correct kea-kai
mend
VT แก้ไข ปะชุน ซ่อมแซม repair improve correct kea-kai
mend (one's) fences
IDM ทำให้ กลับมา คืนดี (กับ บางคน ทำให้ กลับ ดีกัน tam-hai-kab-ma-kuan-de
mend one's ways
IDM แก้ไข พฤติกรรม ปรับปรุง ตัว ปรับปรุง ความประพฤติ kea-kai-prued-ti-kam
mendable
ADJ ซึ่ง ซ่อมแซม ได้ curable sueng-som-sam-dai
mendacious
ADJ โกหก lying untrue false dishonest ko-hok
mendaciously
ADV อย่าง โกหก falsely yang-ko-hok
mendacity
N การ โกหก lying falsification deceitfulness kan-ko-hok
mendacity
N การ โกหก lying falsification kan-ko-hok
mendelevium
N ธาตุ กัมมันตรังสี tad-kam-man-ta-rang-se
mender
N ผู้ ซ่อมแซม repairer phu-som-san
mender of shoes
N ช่างทำรองเท้า shoemaker chang-tam-rang-tao
mendicancy
N การ ขอทาน poverty kan-kor-tan
mendicant
ADJ ซึ่ง ดำรงชีวิต ด้วย การ ขอทาน alms-seeking sueng-fam-rang-che-wid-dui-kan-kor-tan
mendicant
N คน ขอทาน ขอทาน panhandler vagabond beggar kan-kor-tan
mendicity
N การ ขอทาน mendicancy
mending
N เสื้อผ้า ซึ่ง เย็บ ซ่อมแซม restoring renovating repairing suea-pa-sueng-yeb-som-sam
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
MEND
v.t.[L. emendo, menda, a fault, spot or blemish. ] 1. To repair, as a breach; to supply a part broken or defective; as, to mend a garment, a road, a mill-dam, a fence, etc.
2. To correct; to set right; to alter for the better; as, to mend the life or manners.
3. To repair; to restore to a sound state; as, to mend a feeble or broken constitution.
4. To help; to advance; to make better.
This plausible apology does not mend the matter.
Though in some lands the grass is but short, yet it mends garden herbs and fruit.
5. To improve; to hasten.
He saw the monster mend his pace.
MEND
v.i.To grow better; to advance to a better state; to improve. We say, a feeble constitution mends daily; a sick man mends, or is convalescent.
MENDABLE
a.Capable of being mended.
MENDACIOUS
a.[L. mendax.] Lying; false. [Little used. ]
MENDACITY
n.[L. mendax, false, lying. ] Falsehood. [The proper signification of this word would be a disposition to lie, or habitual lying. ]
MENDED
pp. Repaired; made better; improved.
MENDER
n.One who mends or repairs.
MENDICANCY
a.[L. medicans.] Beggary; a state of begging.
MENDICANT
a.[L. mendicans, from mendico, to beg; allied to L. mando, to command, demand. ] 1. Begging; poor to a state of beggary; as reduced to a mendicant state.
2. Practicing beggary; as a mendicant friar.
MENDICANT
n.A beggar; one that makes it his business to beg alms; one of the begging fraternity of the Romish church.
MENDICATE
v.t.To beg, or practice begging. [Not used. ]
MENDICITY
n.[L. mendicitas.] The state of begging; the life of a beggar.
MENDMENT
for amendment. [Not in use. ]
MENDS
for amends, not used.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
MEND
Mend, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Mended; p. pr. & vb. n. Mending. ] Etym: [Abbrev. fr. amend. See Amend. ]
1. To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement; to patch up; to put in shape or order again; to re-create; as, to mend a garment or a machine.
2. To alter for the better; to set right; to reform; hence, to quicken; as, to mend one's manners or pace. The best service they could do the state was to mend the lives of the persons who composed it. Sir W. Temple.
3. To help, to advance, to further; to add to. Though in some lands the grass is but short, yet it mends garden herbs and fruit. Mortimer. You mend the jewel by the wearing it. Shak.
Syn. -- To improve; help; better; emend; amend; correct; rectify; reform.
MEND
MEND Mend, v. i.
Defn: To grow better; to advance to a better state; to become improved. Shak.
MENDABLE
MENDABLE Mend "a *ble, a.
Defn: Capable of being mended.
MENDACIOUS
Men *da "cious, a. Etym: [L. mendax, -acis, lying, cf. mentiri to lie. ]
1. Given to deception or falsehood; lying; as, a mendacious person.
2. False; counterfeit; containing falsehood; as, a mendacious statement. -- Men *da "cious *ly, adv. -- Men *da "cious *ness, n.
MENDACITY
Men *dac "i *ty, n.; pl. Mendacities. Etym: [L. mendacitas.]
1. The quality or state of being mendacious; a habit of lying. Macaulay.
2. A falsehood; a lie. Sir T. Browne.
Syn. -- Lying; deceit; untruth; falsehood.
MENDELIAN
MENDELIAN Men *de "li *an, a. [See Mendel's law. ] (Biol.)
Defn: Pert. to Mendel, or to Mendel's law. -- Men *de "li *an *ism (#), Men *del "ism (#), n.
MENDELIAN CHARACTER
MENDELIAN CHARACTER Mendelian character. (Biol.)
Defn: A character which obeys Mendel's law in regard to its hereditary transmission.
MENDEL'S LAW
MENDEL'S LAW Men "del's law.
Defn: A principle governing the inheritance of many characters in animals and plants, discovered by Gregor J. Mendel (Austrian Augustinian abbot, 1822 -84 ) in breeding experiments with peas. He showed that the height, color, and other characters depend on the presence of determinating factors behaving as units. In any given germ cell each of these is either present or absent. The following example (using letters as symbols of the determining factors and hence also of the individuals possessing them ) shows the operation of the law: Tallness being due to a factor T, a tall plant, arising by the union in fertilization of two germ cells both bearing this factor, is TT; a dwarf, being without T, is tt. Crossing these, crossbreeds, Tt, result (called generation F1 ). In the formation of the germ cells of these crossbreeds a process of segregation occurs such that germ cells, whether male or female, are produced of two kinds, T and t, in equal numbers. The T cells bear the factor "tallness, " the t cells are devoid of it. The offspring, generation F2, which arise from the chance union of these germ cells in pairs, according to the law of probability, are therefore on an average in the following proportions:
1 TT: 2 Tt: 1 tt;
and thus plants pure in tallness (TT ) and dwarfness (tt ), as well as crossbreeds (Tt ), are formed by the interbreeding of crossbreeds. Frequently, as in this example, owning to what is called the dominance of a factor, the operation of Mendel's law may be complicated by the fact that when a dominant factor (as T ) occurs with its allelomorph (as t ), called recessive, in the crossbreed Tt, the individual Tt is itself indistinguishable from the pure form TT. Generation F1, containing only the Tt form, consists entirely of dominants (tall plants ) and generation F2 consists of three dominants (2 Tt, 1 TT ) to one dwarf (tt ), which, displaying the feature suppressed in F1, is called recessive. Such qualitative and numerical regularity has been proved to exist in regard to very diverse qualities or characters which compose living things, both wild and domesticated, such as colors of flowers, of hair or eyes, patterns, structure, chemical composition, and power of resisting certain diseases. The diversity of forms produced in crossbreeding by horticulturists and fanciers generally results from a process of analytical variation or recombination of the factors composing the parental types. Purity of type consequently acquires a specific meaning. An individual is pure in respect of a given character when it results from the union of two sexual cells both bearing that character, or both without it.
MENDER
MENDER Mend "er, n.
Defn: One who mends or repairs.
MENDIANT
MENDIANT Men "di *ant, n.
Defn: See Mendinant. [Obs. ]
MENDICANCY
MENDICANCY Men "di *can *cy, n.
Defn: The condition of being mendicant; beggary; begging. Burke.
MENDICANT
Men "di *cant, a. Etym: [L. mendicans, -antis, p. pr. of mendicare to beg, fr. mendicus beggar, indigent. ]
Defn: Practicing beggary; begging; living on alms; as, mendicant friars. Mendicant orders (R. C. Ch. ), certain monastic orders which are forbidden to acquire landed property and are required to be supported by alms, esp. the Franciscans, the Dominicans, the Carmelites, and the Augustinians.
MENDICANT
MENDICANT Men "di *cant, n.
Defn: A beggar; esp. , one who makes a business of begging; specifically, a begging friar.
MENDICATE
Men "di *cate, v. t.& i. Etym: [L. mendicatus, p. p. of mendicare to beg. ]
Defn: To beg. [R.] Johnson.
MENDICATION
MENDICATION Men `di *ca "tion, n.
Defn: The act or practice of begging; beggary; mendicancy. Sir T. Browne.
MENDICITY
Men *dic "i *ty, n. Etym: [L. mendicitas: cf. F. mendicité. See Mendicant. ]
Defn: The practice of begging; the life of a beggar; mendicancy. Rom. of R.
MENDINANT
MENDINANT Men "di *nant, n.
Defn: A mendicant or begging friar. [Obs. ] Chaucer.
MENDMENT
MENDMENT Mend "ment, n.
Defn: Amendment. [Obs. ]
MENDOLE
Men "dole, n. Etym: [Cf. F. mendol, mendole. ] (Zoöl.)
Defn: The cackerel.
MENDREGAL
MENDREGAL Men "dre *gal, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: Medregal.
MENDS
MENDS Mends, n.
Defn: See Amends. [Obs. ] Shak.
New American Oxford Dictionary
mend
mend |mend mɛnd | ▶verb [ with obj. ] repair (something that is broken or damaged ): workmen were mending faulty cabling | a patch was used to mend the garment. • [ no obj. ] return to health; heal: foot injuries can take months to mend. • improve (an unpleasant situation, esp. a disagreement ): quarrels could be mended by talking. ▶noun a repair in a material: the mends were so perfect you could not even tell the board had been damaged. PHRASES mend ( one's ) fences make peace with a person: is it too late to mend fences with your ex-wife? mend one's ways improve one's habits or behavior. on the mend improving in health or condition; recovering: on the mend after a stomach operation | the economy is on the mend. DERIVATIVES mend a ble adjective, mend er noun ORIGIN Middle English: shortening of amend .
mendacious
men da cious |menˈdāSHəs mɛnˈdeɪʃəs | ▶adjective not telling the truth; lying: mendacious propaganda. DERIVATIVES men da cious ly adverb, men da cious ness noun ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from Latin mendax, mendac- ‘lying ’ (related to mendum ‘fault ’) + -ious .
mendacity
men dac i ty |menˈdasitē mɛnˈdæsədi | ▶noun untruthfulness: people publicly castigated for past mendacity. ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from ecclesiastical Latin mendacitas, from mendax, mendac- ‘lying ’ (see mendacious ).
Mende
Men de |ˈmendē ˈmɛndi | ▶noun ( pl. same or Mendes ) 1 a member of a people inhabiting Sierra Leone in West Africa. 2 the Mende language of this people. ▶adjective relating to or denoting this people or their language. ORIGIN the name in Mende.
Mendel, Gregor Johann
Men del, Gregor Johann |ˈmendl ˈmɛndl | (1822 –84 ), Moravian monk; the father of genetics. From systematically breeding peas, he demonstrated the transmission of characteristics in a predictable way by factors (genes ) that remain intact and independent between generations and do not blend, although they may mask one another's effects.
Mendeleev, Dmitri
Men de le ev, Dmitri |ˌmendəˈlāəf, myindiˈleyef ˌmɛndəˈleɪɪv | (1834 –1907 ), Russian chemist; full name Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev. He developed the periodic table.
mendelevium
men de le vi um |ˌmendəˈlēvēəm, -ˈlā -ˌmɛndəˈliviəm ˌmɛndəˈleɪviəm | ▶noun the chemical element of atomic number 101, a radioactive metal of the actinide series. It does not occur naturally and was first made in 1955 by bombarding einsteinium with helium ions. (Symbol: Md ) ORIGIN modern Latin, from the name of D. Mendeleev, Dmitri .
Mendelian
Men de li an |menˈdēlēən mɛnˈdiliən | ▶adjective Biology of or relating to Mendel's theory of heredity: Mendelian genetics. ▶noun a person who accepts or advocates Mendel's theory of heredity.
Mendelism
Men del ism |ˈmendlˌizəm ˈmɛndlɪzəm | ▶noun Biology the theory of heredity as formulated by Mendel.
Mendelssohn, Felix
Men dels sohn, Felix |ˈmendl-sən ˈmɛndlsən | (1809 –47 ), German composer and pianist; full name Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. His romantic music is elegant, light, and melodically inventive. Notable works: Fingal's Cave (1830 –32 ), Elijah (1846 ), and eight volumes of Lieder ohne Worte (Songs Without Words ) for piano.
Menderes
Men de res |ˌmendəˈres ˌmɛndəˈrɛs | a river in southwestern Turkey. It rises in the Anatolian plateau and flows for about 240 miles (384 km ) to the Aegean Sea south of the Greek island of Samos. Known in ancient times as the Maeander —and noted for its winding course —it gave its name to the verb meander .
mendicant
men di cant |ˈmendikənt ˈmɛndəkənt | ▶adjective given to begging. • of or denoting one of the religious orders that originally relied solely on alms: a mendicant friar. ▶noun a beggar. • a member of a mendicant order. DERIVATIVES men di can cy |-kənsē |noun ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin mendicant- ‘begging, ’ from the verb mendicare, from mendicus ‘beggar, ’ from mendum ‘fault. ’
mendicity
men dic i ty |menˈdisitē mɛnˈdɪsədi | ▶noun the condition or activities of a beggar. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French mendicite, from Latin mendicitas, from mendicus ‘beggar. ’
mending
mend ing |ˈmendiNG ˈmɛndɪŋ | ▶noun things to be repaired by sewing or darning: a muddle of books and mending.
Mendip Hills
Mendip Hills |ˈmɛndɪp |(also the Mendips ) a range of limestone hills in SW England.
Mendocino
Men do ci no |ˌmendəˈsēnō ˌmɛndəˈsinoʊ | a resort community in northwestern California, on the Pacific coast. Cape Mendocino, the most western point in the state, is farther to the north.
Mendoza
Men do za |menˈdōzə mɛnˈdoʊzə | a city in western Argentina, located in the foothills of the Andes at the center of a wine-producing region; pop. 112,900 (est. 2008 ).
Mendoza, Antonio de
Men do za, Antonio de |mɛnˈdoʊzə menˈdōzə | ( c. 1490 –1552 ), Spanish colonial administrator; first viceroy of New Spain (1535 –50 ).
Oxford Dictionary
mend
mend |mɛnd | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 repair (something that is broken or damaged ): workmen were mending faulty cabling. • [ no obj. ] return to health; heal: foot injuries can take months to mend. • improve (an unpleasant situation ): quarrels could be mended by talking. 2 add fuel to (a fire ). ▶noun a repair in a material: the mend was barely visible. PHRASES mend ( one's ) fences make peace with a person: is it too late to mend fences with your ex-wife? mend one's manners act more politely. mend one's ways improve one's habits or behaviour. on the mend improving in health or condition; recovering: the economy is on the mend. mend one's pace dated go faster; alter one's pace to match a companion. DERIVATIVES mendable adjective, mender noun ORIGIN Middle English: shortening of amend .
mendacious
mendacious |mɛnˈdeɪʃəs | ▶adjective not telling the truth; lying: mendacious propaganda. DERIVATIVES mendaciously adverb ORIGIN early 17th cent.: from Latin mendax, mendac- ‘lying ’ (related to mendum ‘fault ’) + -ious .
mendacity
men |da ¦city |mɛnˈdasəti | ▶noun [ mass noun ] untruthfulness: people publicly castigated for past mendacity. ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from ecclesiastical Latin mendacitas, from mendax, mendac- ‘lying ’ (see mendacious ).
Mende
Mende |ˈmɛndi | ▶noun ( pl. same ) 1 a member of a people inhabiting Sierra Leone in West Africa. 2 [ mass noun ] the language of the Mende, belonging to the Mande group. It has over 1 million speakers. ▶adjective relating to or denoting the Mende or their language. ORIGIN the name in Mende.
Mendel, Gregor Johann
Mendel, Gregor Johann |ˈmɛnd (ə )l | (1822 –84 ), Moravian monk, the father of genetics. From systematically breeding peas he demonstrated the transmission of characteristics in a predictable way by factors (genes ) which remain intact and independent between generations and do not blend, though they may mask one another's effects.
Mendeleev, Dmitri
Mendeleev, Dmitri |ˌmɛndəˈleɪɛf | (1834 –1907 ), Russian chemist; full name Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev. He developed the periodic table and successfully predicted the discovery of several new elements.
mendelevium
mendelevium |ˌmɛndəˈliːvɪəm, -ˈleɪvɪəm | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the chemical element of atomic number 101, a radioactive metal of the actinide series. It does not occur naturally and was first made in 1955 by bombarding einsteinium with helium ions. (Symbol: Md ) ORIGIN 1950s: modern Latin, from the name of D. Mendeleev, Dmitri .
Mendelian
Mendelian |mɛnˈdiːlɪən | ▶adjective Biology relating to Mendel's theory of heredity: Mendelian genetics. ▶noun a person who accepts or advocates Mendel's theory of heredity.
Mendelism
Mendelism |ˈmɛnd (ə )lɪz (ə )m | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Biology the theory of heredity as formulated by Mendel.
Mendelssohn, Felix
Mendelssohn, Felix |ˈmɛnd (ə )ls (ə )n, German ˈmɛndlzəɔːn | (1809 –47 ), German composer and pianist; full name Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. His romantic music is elegant, light, and melodically inventive. Notable works include the oratorios Fingal's Cave (1830 –2 ) and Elijah (1846 ) and eight volumes of Lieder ohne Worte (Songs Without Words ) for piano.
Menderes
Menderes |ˌmɛndəˈrɛs | a river of SW Turkey. Rising in the Anatolian plateau, it flows for some 384 km (240 miles ), entering the Aegean Sea south of the Greek island of Samos. Known in ancient times as the Maeander, and noted for its winding course, it gave its name to the verb meander .
mendicant
mendicant |ˈmɛndɪk (ə )nt | ▶adjective given to begging. • of or denoting one of the religious orders who originally relied solely on alms: a mendicant friar. ▶noun a beggar. • a member of a mendicant order. DERIVATIVES mendicancy noun ORIGIN late Middle English: from Latin mendicant- ‘begging ’, from the verb mendicare, from mendicus ‘beggar ’, from mendum ‘fault ’.
mendicity
mendicity |mɛnˈdɪsɪti | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the condition or activities of a beggar. ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French mendicite, from Latin mendicitas, from mendicus ‘beggar ’.
mending
mending |ˈmɛndɪŋ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] things to be repaired by sewing or darning: a muddle of books and mending.
Mendip Hills
Mendip Hills |ˈmɛndɪp |(also the Mendips ) a range of limestone hills in SW England.
Mendocino
Men do ci no |ˌmendəˈsēnō ˌmɛndəˈsinoʊ | a resort community in northwestern California, on the Pacific coast. Cape Mendocino, the most western point in the state, is farther to the north.
Mendoza
Mendoza |mɛnˈdəʊzə, Spanish menˈdəɔsa, -θa | a city in western Argentina, situated in the foothills of the Andes at the centre of a wine-producing region; pop. 112,900 (est. 2008 ).
Mendoza, Antonio de
Mendoza, Antonio de |mɛnˈdəʊzə, Spanish menˈdəɔsa, -θa | ( c. 1490 –1552 ), Spanish colonial administrator, the first viceroy of New Spain (1535 –50 ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
mend
mend verb 1 workmen were mending faulty cabling: repair, fix, put back together, piece together, restore; sew (up ), stitch, darn, patch, cobble; rehabilitate, renew, renovate; informal patch up. ANTONYMS break, worsen. 2 they mended their quarrel: put /set right, set straight, straighten out, sort out, rectify, remedy, cure, right, resolve, square, settle, put to rights, correct, retrieve, improve, make better. ANTONYMS break, worsen.
mendacious
mendacious adjective politicians and their mendacious spin doctors: lying, untruthful, dishonest, deceitful, false, dissembling, insincere, disingenuous, hypocritical, fraudulent, double-dealing, two-faced, two-timing, duplicitous, perjured; untrue, fictitious, falsified, fabricated, fallacious, invented, made up; informal full of crap; literary perfidious. ANTONYMS truthful.
mendicant
mendicant noun See beggar.
Oxford Thesaurus
mend
mend verb 1 workmen were mending faulty cabling: repair, fix, put back together, piece together, patch up, restore, sew (up ), stitch, darn, patch, cobble, botch, vamp (up ); rehabilitate, renew, renovate, redevelop, overhaul, recondition, rebuild, refurbish; make whole, make well, cure, heal; N. English fettle, spetch; Scottish & N. English ranter; archaic clout, tinker, beet. ANTONYMS break, tear. 2 ‘How's Walter? ’ ‘He'll mend. ’ | foot injuries can take months to mend: get better, get well, recover, be on the road to recovery, pull through, recuperate, convalesce, improve, be well, be cured, be all right, heal, knit, draw together. ANTONYMS worsen. 3 quarrels could be mended by talking: put /set right, set straight, make up, straighten out, sort out, put in order, rectify, remedy, right, redress, resolve, square, settle, put to rights, correct, amend, emend, retrieve, improve, make better, better, make good, ameliorate, reform. ANTONYMS make worse. 4 he mended the fire: stoke (up ), make up, charge, fuel. ▶noun PHRASES on the mend it was tough for a while, but I'm on the mend: recovering, convalescent, on the road to recovery, making progress, progressing, improving.
mendacious
mendacious adjective mendacious propaganda: lying, untruthful, dishonest, deceitful, false, dissembling, insincere, disingenuous, hypocritical, fraudulent, double-dealing, two-faced, two-timing, duplicitous, perjured, perfidious; untrue, fictitious, falsified, fabricated, fallacious, invented, made up, hollow; humorous economical with the truth, terminologically inexact; rare unveracious. ANTONYMS truthful.
mendacity
mendacity noun lying, untruthfulness, dishonesty, deceit, deceitfulness, deception, dissembling, insincerity, disingenuousness, hypocrisy, fraud, fraudulence, double-dealing, two-timing, duplicity, perjury, perfidy; untruth, fictitiousness, falsity, falsehood, falseness, fallaciousness, hollowness; informal kidology; Irish informal codology; humorous economy with the truth, terminological inexactitude; rare unveracity.
mendicant
mendicant noun beggar, beggarman, beggarwoman, tramp, vagrant, vagabond, cadger; informal scrounger, sponger; N. Amer. hobo; N. Amer. informal schnorrer, mooch, moocher, bum; rare clochard. ▶adjective begging, cadging; informal scrounging, sponging; N. Amer. informal mooching.
Duden Dictionary
Mendel
Men del Eigenname |M e ndel |österreichischer Biologe
Mendelevium
Men de le vi um Substantiv, Neutrum , das |Mendel e vium |nach dem russischen Chemiker D. Mendelejew (1834 –1907 )künstlich hergestelltes Transuran chemisches Element Md
Mendelismus
Men de lis mus Substantiv, maskulin , der |Mendel i smus |Richtung der Vererbungslehre, die sich auf den Forscher Mendel beruft
mendeln
men deln schwaches Verb Biologie |m e ndeln |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « nach dem Namen des österreichischen Vererbungsforschers G. Mendel (1822 –1884 )(von bestimmten Erbmerkmalen ) nach bestimmten Gesetzmäßigkeiten in den nächsten Generationen wieder in Erscheinung treten
mendelsch
men delsch Adjektiv |m e ndelsch |
Mendelssohn Bartholdy
Men dels sohn Bar thol dy Eigenname |M e ndelssohn Barth o ldy …di |als Familienname mit Bindestrich deutscher Komponist
Mendikant
Men di kant Substantiv, maskulin , der |Mendik a nt |lateinisch Angehöriger eines Bettelordens
Mendikantenorden
Men di kan ten or den Substantiv, maskulin , der |Mendik a ntenorden |
Mendikantin
Men di kan tin Substantiv, feminin , die |Mendik a ntin |die Mendikantin; Genitiv: der Mendikantin, Plural: die Mendikantinnen weibliche Form zu Mendikant
French Dictionary
mendiant
mendiant , iante n. m. et f. nom masculin et féminin Personne qui demande la charité. : Ces mendiants ont froid et faim: il faut leur venir en aide.
mendicité
mendicité n. f. nom féminin État d ’indigence qui conduit à mendier.
mendier
mendier v. tr. , intr. verbe transitif 1 Rechercher avec insistance, demander à titre de don. : Mendier de la nourriture. SYNONYME quémander . 2 figuré Solliciter avec trop d ’empressement. : Mendier des suffrages, des appuis. verbe intransitif Demander l ’aumône, la charité. SYNONYME quêter . étudier Conjugaison Redoublement du i à la première et à la deuxième personne du pluriel de l ’indicatif imparfait et du subjonctif présent. (Que ) nous mendiions, (que ) vous mendiiez.
Spanish Dictionary
menda
menda nombre común 1 Esp coloquial Palabra que emplea la persona que habla para designarse a sí misma :¡el menda no piensa moverse, así que largaos y dejadme tranquilo!Se usa con el verbo en tercera persona .2 Esp coloquial Persona cuya identidad y condición se desconocen o no se quieren expresar :en la puerta de la discoteca me sale un menda y me dice que no puedo entrar .SINÓNIMO pavo, tío .
mendacidad
mendacidad nombre femenino 1 formal Hábito o costumbre de mentir .ANTÓNIMO sinceridad .2 formal Mentira o falsedad :no te creo, lo que acabas de decir es una mendacidad .SINÓNIMO engaño .
mendaz
mendaz adjetivo /nombre común formal Mentiroso .
mendelevio
mendelevio nombre masculino Elemento químico de número atómico 101, masa atómica 256 y símbolo Md ; es un metal radiactivo que fue obtenido artificialmente a partir del bombardeo de einsteno con partículas alfa aceleradas en un ciclotrón :el mendelevio es uno de los elementos transuránicos del grupo de los actínidos .
mendeliano, -na
mendeliano, -na adjetivo De Johann Mendel (botánico austríaco, 1822 -1884 ) o relacionado con él o con el mendelismo .
mendelismo
mendelismo nombre masculino biol Teoría genética de la herencia basada en las leyes de Mendel acerca de la transmisión hereditaria de caracteres en los seres vivos .
mendicante
mendicante adjetivo /nombre común 1 Que mendiga .2 adjetivo [orden religiosa ] Que vive únicamente de la limosna de los fieles y del trabajo :los franciscanos pertenecen a una orden mendicante .
mendicidad
mendicidad nombre femenino 1 Situación social de la persona que no posee otros ingresos para vivir que los que le proporcionan las limosnas :cada día son más las personas que viven en la mendicidad .2 Acción de pedir limosna :en algunos países las personas sin trabajo han de recurrir a la mendicidad .
mendigante
mendigante adjetivo /nombre común Que mendiga .SINÓNIMO mendicante .
mendigar
mendigar verbo transitivo /verbo intransitivo 1 Pedir limosna :una familia llamaba a todas las puertas, mendigando un trozo de pan; sin nada para subsistir, no le quedó más remedio que mendigar .SINÓNIMO limosnear .2 Solicitar una cosa con humillación :se presentó ante el director mendigando un trabajo para su hijo . Conjugación [7 ] como llegar .
mendigo, -ga
mendigo, -ga nombre masculino y femenino Persona que habitualmente pide limosna para vivir :un mendigo encorvado se alejaba buscando colillas por los rincones .
méndigo, -ga
méndigo, -ga nombre masculino y femenino /adjetivo Méx col. desp. Forma despectiva de nombrar a algo o alguien :¡qué méndigo calor hace!; la méndiga no hace nada para ayudar a sustentar la casa .
mendrugo
mendrugo nombre masculino 1 Pedazo de pan duro o desechado, especialmente el sobrante :el anciano le echaba un mendrugo al suelo y rápidamente el perro lo recogía .2 adjetivo /nombre masculino Esp coloquial Que tiene dificultad para entender las cosas, aunque sean sencillas :es como lo de ese mendrugo que al final nunca se entera de cómo hemos quedado .SINÓNIMO zoquete .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
mend
mend /mend /〖a mend の語頭が消失 〗動詞 ~s /-dz /; ~ed /-ɪd /; ~ing 他動詞 1 a. 〈衣服など (の穴 やぶれなど )〉を繕う ▸ Emily mended my torn dress .エミリーは私の破れたドレスを繕ってくれた b. ⦅英 ⦆〈壊れたもの 〉を修理する (repair, fix ) (!特に簡単な修理 穴をふさぐ修理に用いる; ⦅米 ⦆では衣服の修繕が中心で, 時計 家具などにはrepairを用いる ) ▸ mend a puncture [broken saucer ]パンクを修理する [割れた皿を修復する ]2 〈けんか 困難な状況など 〉を終わらせる , 改善する ; 〈行いなど 〉を改める ; 〈けがなど 〉を治す ▸ mend one's ways (悪かった )行いを改める ▸ mend racial divisions 人種の対立を改善する 3 (燃料を加えて )〈火 〉を強くする .自動詞 ⦅くだけて ⦆1 〈骨折 傷などが 〉治る (heal )▸ Anne couldn't cook until her arm mended .アンは腕が治るまで料理ができなかった 2 ⦅やや古 ⦆〈病人が 〉回復する , 治る (recover ).3 〈事態などが 〉良くなる .4 〈人が 〉改心する ▸ It is never too late to mend .⦅ことわざ ⦆改めるのに遅すぎることはない .5 直し [修繕 ]がきく .名詞 C 修繕 (された )箇所 ; U 修繕 ; 改善 .(be ) on the m é nd ⦅くだけて ⦆〈病気 病人などが 〉快方に向かって (いる ); 〈困難な状況などが 〉好転して (いる ).m é nd er 名詞 C ⦅英 ⦆修理 [修繕 ]する人 .
mendacious
men da cious /mendéɪʃəs /形容詞 ⦅かたく ⦆真実でない, 偽りの .~ly 副詞
mendacity
men dac i ty /mendǽsəti /名詞 U ⦅かたく ⦆偽り, 虚偽, 正直でないこと .
Mendel
Men del /ménd (ə )l /名詞 メンデル 〘Gregor Johann /ɡréɡə r -jóʊhɑːn /~, 1822 --84; オーストリアの修道士 植物学者 〙.~̀ 's l á ws 〘生物 〙メンデルの (遺伝の )法則 .
Mendelssohn
Men dels sohn /ménd (ə )ls (ə )n /名詞 メンデルスゾーン 〘Felix /fíːlɪks /~, 1809 --47; ドイツの作曲家 〙.
mendicant
men di cant /méndɪk (ə )nt /形容詞 物乞いをする ; 乞食のような ; 〈修道士が 〉托鉢 (たくはつ )をする .名詞 C 乞食, 物乞い (beggar ); 托鉢修道士 .
mending
m é nd ing 名詞 U ⦅やや古 ⦆繕い物 .