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English-Thai Dictionary

muller

N เครื่อง สำหรับ เจียระไน หิน  Hermann Joseph นัก พันธุ์ ศาสตร์ ชาว อเมริกา 

 

mullered

SL เมาเหล้า  mao-lao

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

MULLER

n.[L. molaris, from mola, a mill-stone.] 1. A stone held in the hand with which colors and other matters are ground on another stone; used by painters and apothecaries.
2. An instrument used by glass grinders, being a piece of wood with the piece of glass to be ground cemented to one end, either convex in a basin, or concave in a sphere or bowl.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

MULLER

MULLER Mull "er, n.

 

1. One who, or that which, mulls.

 

2. A vessel in which wine, etc. , is mulled over a fire.

 

MULLER

Mull "er, n. Etym: [OE. mullen to pulverize, bruise; cf. Icel. mylja;prob. akin to E. mold soil. See Mold soil, and cf. Mull dirt. ]

 

Defn: A stone or thick lump of glass, or kind of pestle, flat at the bottom, used for grinding pigments or drugs, etc. , upon a slab of similar material.

 

MULLERIAN; MUELLERIAN

MULLERIAN; MUELLERIAN Mül *le "ri *an, a. (Anat. )

 

Defn: Of, pertaining to, or discovered by, Johannes Müller. Müllerian ducts (Anat. ), a pair of embryonic ducts which give rise to the genital passages in the female, but disappear in the male. -- Müllerian fibers (Anat. ), the sustentacular or connective-tissue fibers which form the framework of the retina.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

muller

mull er |ˈmələr ˈmələr | noun a stone or other heavy weight used for grinding artists' pigments or other material on a slab. ORIGIN late Middle English: perhaps from Anglo-Norman French moldre to grind.

 

muller

muller 2 |ˈmʌlə | verb [ with obj. ] Brit. informal wreck or destroy (something ). beat or defeat (an opponent ) comprehensively: we absolutely mullered Huddersfield in the second half. ORIGIN 1990s: of unknown origin.

 

Muller, Hermann Joseph

Mul ler, Hermann Joseph |ˈmələr, ˈmyo͞o -ˈmələr | (1890 –1967 ), US geneticist. He discovered that X-rays induce mutations in the genetic material of the fruit fly Drosophila and thus recognized the danger of X-radiation to living things. Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1946 ).

 

Müller, Johannes Peter

Mül ler, Johannes Peter |ˈm (y )o͝olər ˈmjʊlər | (1801 –58 ), German anatomist and zoologist. He was a pioneer of comparative and microscopical methods in biology. His investigations included the physiology of respiration, the nervous and sensory systems, and the glandular system, as well as a method for the classification of marine animals.

 

Müller, Max

Müller, Max |ˈmʊlə, German ˈmylɐ | (1823 –1900 ), German-born British philologist; full name Friedrich Max Müller. He is remembered for his edition of the Sanskrit Rig-veda (1849 –75 ).

 

Müller, Paul Hermann

Mül ler, Paul Hermann |ˈmjʊlər ˈm (y )o͝olər | (1899 –1965 ), Swiss chemist. He synthesized DDT in 1939 and patented it as an insecticide. It was immediately successful, but was withdrawn by most countries in the 1970s when its environmental persistence and toxicity in higher animals was realized. Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine (1948 ).

 

mullered

mullered |ˈmʌləd | adjective Brit. informal extremely drunk. we both got absolutely mullered at a work do.

 

Müllerian mimicry

Mül le ri an mim ic ry |myo͞oˈli (ə )rēən, milˈi (ə )r- mjuˌlɪəriən ˈmɪmɪkri | noun Zoology a form of mimicry in which two or more noxious animals develop similar appearances as a shared protective device, the theory being that if a predator learns to avoid one of the noxious species, it will avoid the mimic species as well. Compare with Batesian mimicry. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: named after Johann F. T. Müller (1821 –97 ), German zoologist.

 

Müller-Thurgau

Müller -Thurgau |ˌmʊləˈtʊəgaʊ, German ˌmylɐˈtuːɐgaʊ | noun [ mass noun ] a variety of white grape used for making wine, developed as a cross between the Sylvaner and the Riesling vines. a wine made from the Müller -Thurgau grape. ORIGIN named after Hermann Müller (1850 –1927 ), Swiss viniculturist + Thurgau, the name of the Swiss canton where he was born.

 

Oxford Dictionary

muller

muller 1 |ˈmʌlə | noun a stone or other heavy weight used for grinding artists' pigments or other material on a slab. ORIGIN late Middle English: perhaps from Anglo-Norman French moldre to grind .

 

muller

muller 2 |ˈmʌlə | verb [ with obj. ] Brit. informal wreck or destroy (something ). beat or defeat (an opponent ) comprehensively: we absolutely mullered Huddersfield in the second half. ORIGIN 1990s: of unknown origin.

 

Muller, Hermann Joseph

Muller, Hermann Joseph |ˈmʌlə | (1890 –1967 ), American geneticist. He discovered that X-rays induce mutations in the genetic material of the fruit fly Drosophila and thus recognized the danger of X-radiation to living things. Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1946 ).

 

Müller, Johannes Peter

Müller, Johannes Peter |ˈmʊlə, German ˈmylɐ | (1801 –58 ), German anatomist and zoologist. He was a pioneer of comparative and microscopical methods in biology.

 

Müller, Max

Müller, Max |ˈmʊlə, German ˈmylɐ | (1823 –1900 ), German-born British philologist; full name Friedrich Max Müller. He is remembered for his edition of the Sanskrit Rig-veda (1849 –75 ).

 

Müller, Paul Hermann

Müller, Paul Hermann |ˈmʊlə, German ˈmylɐ | (1899 –1965 ), Swiss chemist. He synthesized DDT in 1939 and soon patented it as an insecticide. Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1948 ).

 

mullered

mullered |ˈmʌləd | adjective Brit. informal extremely drunk. we both got absolutely mullered at a work do.

 

Müllerian mimicry

Müllerian mimicry |mʊˈlɪərɪən | noun [ mass noun ] Zoology a form of mimicry in which two or more harmful or unpalatable animals develop similar appearances as a shared protective device. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: named after Johann F. T. Müller (1821 –97 ), German zoologist.

 

Müller-Thurgau

Müller -Thurgau |ˌmʊləˈtʊəgaʊ, German ˌmylɐˈtuːɐgaʊ | noun [ mass noun ] a variety of white grape used for making wine, developed as a cross between the Sylvaner and the Riesling vines. a wine made from the Müller -Thurgau grape. ORIGIN named after Hermann Müller (1850 –1927 ), Swiss viniculturist + Thurgau, the name of the Swiss canton where he was born.

 

Duden Dictionary

Müller

Mül ler Substantiv, maskulin , der |M ü ller |der Müller; Genitiv: des Müllers, Plural: die Müller mittelhochdeutsch müller, älter: mülner, mülnære, althochdeutsch mulināri < spätlateinisch molinarius, zu spätlateinisch molina, Mühle Handwerker, der in einer Mühle [mithilfe automatischer Anlagen ] besonders Getreide mahlt Berufsbezeichnung

 

Müllerei

Mül le rei Substantiv, feminin , die |Müller ei |1 a ohne Plural Gewinnung von Mehl in der Mühle b ohne Plural die Müllerei 1a umfassende Fachrichtung 2 Mühlenbetrieb 1

 

Müllerin

Mül le rin Substantiv, feminin , die |M ü llerin |die Müllerin; Genitiv: der Müllerin, Plural: die Müllerinnen 1 weibliche Form zu Müller 2 veraltet Frau eines Müllers, Mühlenbesitzers

 

Müllerinart

Mül le rin art |M ü llerinart |in der Verbindung auf /nach Müllerinart Gastronomie [von Fischen ] in Mehl gewendet, in Butter gebraten und mit brauner Butter übergossen

 

Müller-Thurgau

Mül ler-Thur gau Substantiv, maskulin , der |M ü ller-Th u rgau auch …ˈtuːɐ̯ …|der Müller -Thurgau; Genitiv: des Müller -Thurgau, Plural: die Müller -Thurgau nach dem Schweizer Pflanzenphysiologen H. Müller aus dem Thurgau (1850 –1927 )a ohne Plural Rebsorte aus einer Kreuzung zwischen Riesling und Gutedel, die einen milden, säurearmen Wein liefert b Wein der Rebsorte Müller -Thurgau a