English-Thai Dictionary
nautch
N การแสดง โดย นัก เต้นระบำ หญิง ใน อินเดีย
nautical
ADJ ทางทะเล ทาง การเดินเรือ ทาง นาวิกโยธิน seafaring oceanic tang-ta-le
nautical mile
N ระยะทาง ทะเล (ประมา ณ 1852 เมตร sea mile ra-ya-tamg-ta-la
nautical slang
N คำ สแลง ของ ชาว ทะเล kam-sa-lang-chow-ta-le
nautically
ADV ทาง การเดินเรือ tang-kan-doen-ruea
nautilus
N หอย ทะเล ซึ่ง มี เปลือก ขด เป็นเกลียว hoi-ta-le-sueng-me-plueak-kod-pen-kiao
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
NAUTIC
a.[L. A seaman, a ship, See Navy. ] Pertaining to seamen or navigation; as nautical skill; a nautical almanack.
NAUTICAL
a.[L. A seaman, a ship, See Navy. ] Pertaining to seamen or navigation; as nautical skill; a nautical almanack.
NAUTILITE
n.A fossil nautilus.
NAUTILUS
n.[L., Gr. A ship ] A genus of marine animals, whose shell consists of one spiral valve divided into several apartments by partitions. There are many species. This animal, when it sails, extends two of its arms, and between these supports a membrane that serves as a sail. With two other arms it rows or steers. Learn of the little nautilus to sail.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
NAUTCH
Nautch, n. Etym: [Hind. nach, fr. Skr. n dance. ]
Defn: An entertainment consisting chiefly of dancing by professional dancing (or Nautch ) girls. [India ]
NAUTIC
Nau "tic, a. Etym: [See Nautical. ]
Defn: Nautical.
NAUTICAL
Nau "tic *al, a. Etym: [L. nauticus, Gr. nautique. See Nave of a church. ]
Defn: Of or pertaining to seamen, to the art of navigation, or to ships; as, nautical skill.
Syn. -- Naval; marine; maritime. See Naval. Nautical almanac. See under Almanac. -- Nautical distance, the length in nautical miles of the rhumb line joining any two places on the earth's surface. -- nautical mile. see under Mile.
NAUTICALLY
NAUTICALLY Nau "tic *al *ly, adv.
Defn: In a nautical manner; with reference to nautical affais.
NAUTIFORM
Nau "ti *form, a. Etym: [Gr. -form. ]
Defn: Shaped like the hull of a ship.
NAUTILITE
NAUTILITE Nau "ti *lite, n. (paleon.)
Defn: A fossil nautilus.
NAUTILOID
Nau "ti *loid, a. Etym: [Nautilus + -oid: cf. F. nautiloïde.] (Zoöl.)
Defn: Like or pertaining to the nautilus; shaped like a nautilus shell. -- n.
Defn: A mollusk, or shell, of the genus Nautilus or family Nautilidæ.
NAUTILUS
Nau "ti *lus, n.; pl. E. Nautiluses, L. Nautili. Etym: [L., fr. gr. Nave of a church. ]
1. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The only existing genus of tetrabranchiate cephalopods. About four species are found living in the tropical Pacific, but many other species are found fossil. The shell is spiral, symmetrical, and chambered, or divided into several cavities by simple curved partitions, which are traversed and connected together by a continuous and nearly central tube or siphuncle. See Tetrabranchiata.
Note: The head of the animal bears numerous simple tapered arms, or tentacles, arranged in groups, but not furnished with suckers. The siphon, unlike, that of ordinary cephalopods, is not a closed tube, and is not used as a locomotive organ, but merely serves to conduct water to and from the gill cavity, which contains two pairs of gills. The animal occupies only the outer chamber of the shell; the others are filled with gas. It creeps over the bottom of the sea, not coming to the surface to swim or sail, as was formerly imagined.
2. The argonaut; -- also called paper nautilus. See Argonauta, and Paper nautilus, under Paper.
3. A variety of diving bell, the lateral as well as vertical motions of which are controlled, by the occupants.
New American Oxford Dictionary
naut.
naut. ▶abbreviation nautical.
nautch
nautch |nôCH nɔtʃ | ▶noun (in South Asia ) a traditional dance performed by professional dancing girls. ORIGIN from Hindi nāc, from Prakrit nachcha, from Sanskrit nṛtya ‘dancing. ’
nautical
nau ti cal |ˈnôtikəl ˈnɔdəkəl | ▶adjective of or concerning sailors or navigation; maritime: nautical charts. DERIVATIVES nau ti cal ly |-ik (ə )lē |adverb ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from French nautique, or via Latin from Greek nautikos, from nautēs ‘sailor, ’ from naus ‘ship. ’
nautical almanac
nau ti cal al ma nac ▶noun a yearbook containing astronomical and sometimes also tidal and other information for navigators.
nautical mile
nau ti cal mile |ˌnɔdəkəl ˈmaɪl | ▶noun a unit used in measuring distances at sea, equal to approximately 2,025 yards (1,852 m ). Compare with sea mile.
nautiloid
nau ti loid |ˈnôtlˌoid ˈnɔdəlɔɪd | ▶noun Zoology a mollusk of a group of mainly extinct marine mollusks that includes the pearly nautilus. [Subclass Nautiloidea, class Cephalopoda: Nautilus is the only surviving genus. ] ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from the modern Latin genus name Nautilus (from Greek nautilos ‘sailor ’) + -oid .
Nautilus
Nau ti lus |ˈnôtl -əs ˈnɔdləs | the first nuclear-powered submarine, launched in 1954. This US Navy vessel made a historic journey (August 1 –5, 1958 ) under the ice of the North Pole. • trademark an exercise machine that matches resistance with output of force. ORIGIN a name previously given to Robert Fulton's “diving boat ” (1800 ), also to the fictitious submarine in Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea .
nautilus
nau ti lus |ˈnôtl -əs ˈnɔːtɪləs | ▶noun ( pl. nautiluses or nautili |ˈnôtl -ī | ) 1 a cephalopod mollusk with a light external spiral shell and numerous short tentacles around the mouth. Nautiluses swim with the buoyant gas-filled shell upright and descend to greater depths during the day. [Genus Nautilus, the only surviving genus of the subclass Nautiloidea: several species, in particular the common chambered nautilus (Nautilus pompilius ) of the Indo-Pacific, with a shell that is white with brownish bands on the outside and lined with mother-of-pearl on the inside. ] 2 (also paper nautilus ) another term for argonaut. ORIGIN modern Latin, from Latin, from Greek nautilos, literally ‘sailor. ’
Oxford Dictionary
naut.
naut. ▶abbreviation nautical.
nautch
nautch |nɔːtʃ | ▶noun (in South Asia ) a traditional dance performed by professional dancing girls. ORIGIN from Hindi nāc, from Prakrit nachcha, from Sanskrit nṛtya ‘dancing ’.
nautical
naut |ical |ˈnɔːtɪk (ə )l | ▶adjective of or concerning navigation, sailors, or the sea; maritime: nautical charts. DERIVATIVES nautically adverb ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from French nautique, or via Latin from Greek nautikos, from nautēs ‘sailor ’, from naus ‘ship ’.
nautical almanac
naut |ical al |manac ▶noun a yearbook containing astronomical and tidal information for navigators.
nautical mile
naut |ical mile ▶noun a unit used in measuring distances at sea, equal to 1,852 metres (approximately 2,025 yards ). Compare with sea mile.
nautiloid
nautiloid |ˈnɔːtɪlɔɪd | ▶noun Zoology a mollusc of a group of mainly extinct marine molluscs which includes the pearly nautilus. ●Subclass Nautiloidea, class Cephalopoda: Nautilus is the only surviving genus. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from the modern Latin genus name Nautilus (see nautilus ).
Nautilus
Nautilus |ˈnɔːtɪləs | the first nuclear-powered submarine, launched in 1954. This US navy vessel made a historic journey (1 –5 August 1958 ) under the ice of the North Pole. ORIGIN a name previously given to Robert Fulton's ‘diving boat ’ (1800 ), also to the fictitious submarine in Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea .
nautilus
nautilus |ˈnɔːtɪləs | ▶noun ( pl. nautiluses or nautili |-lʌɪ, -liː | ) 1 a cephalopod mollusc with a light external spiral shell and numerous short tentacles around the mouth. ●Genus Nautilus, the only surviving genus of the subclass Nautiloidea: several species, in particular the pearly nautilus. 2 (also paper nautilus ) another term for argonaut. ORIGIN modern Latin, from Latin, from Greek nautilos, literally ‘sailor ’.
American Oxford Thesaurus
nautical
nautical adjective a library of nautical history and literature: maritime, marine, naval, seafaring; boating, sailing.
Oxford Thesaurus
nautical
nautical adjective maritime, marine, naval, seafaring, seagoing, ocean-going; yachting, boating, sailing.
Duden Dictionary
Naute
Nau te Substantiv, feminin , die |N au te |die Naute; Genitiv: der Naute hebräisch -jiddisch in jüdischen Familien am Purimfest gegessenes Konfekt aus Mohn, Nüssen und Honig
Nautik
Nau tik Substantiv, feminin , die |N au tik |(wohl über englisch nautics, französisch (art, science ) nautique < lateinisch nauticus < ) griechisch nautikḗ (téchnē )Schifffahrtskunde
Nautiker
Nau ti ker Substantiv, maskulin Seewesen , der |N au tiker |Schiffsoffizier, der die Navigation beherrscht
Nautikerin
Nau ti ke rin Substantiv, feminin , die |N au tikerin |die Nautikerin; Genitiv: der Nautikerin, Plural: die Nautikerinnen weibliche Form zu Nautiker
Nautilus
Nau ti lus Substantiv, maskulin , der |N au tilus |der Nautilus; Genitiv: des Nautilus, Plural: die Nautilus und Nautilusse lateinisch nautilus < griechisch nautílos, eigentlich = Seefahrer, zu: naũs = Schiff (in den tropischen Meeren lebender ) Kopffüßer mit spiraligem Gehäuse und zahlreichen Fangarmen
nautisch
nau tisch Adjektiv Seewesen |n au tisch |lateinisch nauticus < griechisch nautikós, zu: naũs = Schiff die Nautik betreffend, zu ihr gehörend nautische Instrumente
French Dictionary
nautile
nautile n. m. nom masculin Mollusque céphalopode des mers tropicales.
nautique
nautique adj. adjectif Relatif à la navigation de plaisance et aux sports pratiqués sur l ’eau. : Du ski nautique. Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec les mots suivants: • aquatique, qui vit dans l ’eau ou au bord de l ’eau; • aqueux, qui contient de l ’eau; • marin, qui se rapporte à la mer; • maritime, relatif à la navigation en mer. Prononciation Les lettres au se prononcent comme un o fermé, [notik ]
nautisme
nautisme n. m. nom masculin Ensemble des sports qui se pratiquent sur l ’eau et, tout particulièrement, la navigation de plaisance.
Spanish Dictionary
nauta
nauta nombre masculino formal Hombre que navega .SINÓNIMO marinero, navegante .ETIMOLOGÍA Préstamo (s. xv ) del latín nauta ‘marinero ’, ‘navegante ’. Voz usada solo como cultismo que recientemente ha entrado a formar parte de derivados y compuestos (V. astronauta , internauta ) por extensión del concepto de navegación a otras áreas .
náutica
náutica nombre femenino 1 Ciencia o técnica de navegar :escuela de náutica .SINÓNIMO marina, navegación .2 Náutico (zapato ).
náutico, -ca
náutico, -ca adjetivo 1 De la navegación o relacionado con ella :escuela náutica; club náutico; señalizador náutico; turismo náutico .2 nombre masculino Zapato tipo mocasín, de cuero aceitado, con suela antideslizante de goma y un cordón alrededor que se ata con un lazo sobre el empeine :entre los zapatos deportivos están los mocasines clásicos y los del tipo náutico .SINÓNIMO náutica . VÉASE esquí náutico; moto náutica .
nautilo
nautilo nombre masculino 1 Molusco marino de la misma clase que el pulpo, con una gran concha en espiral dividida en cámaras, la última de las cuales es ocupada por el animal, y un pie dividido en decenas de tentáculos sin ventosas; es un animal muy primitivo y habita en las profundidades de los océanos Índico y Pacífico .SINÓNIMO nautilus .2 Molusco marino sin concha, de la misma clase que el pulpo, que tiene el cuerpo comprimido y ocho tentáculos; la hembra, de tamaño varias veces superior al del macho, deposita sus huevos en un bello receptáculo calcáreo similar a una concha, a la que se mantiene unida con los tentáculos dorsales; habita en mares cálidos, como el Mediterráneo y el océano Atlántico .SINÓNIMO argonauta .
nautilus
nautilus nombre masculino Nautilo .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
naut
naut .nautical .
nautical
nau ti cal /nɔ́ːtɪk (ə )l /形容詞 比較なし 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗船舶の ; 航海 (術 )の ; 船員の ▸ nautical charts 海図 ▸ a nautical [sea ] mile 海里 〘約1,852m 〙▸ nautical terms 航海 [海事 ]用語 ~ly 副詞
nautilus
nau ti lus /nɔ́ːt (ə )ləs, -tɪləs /名詞 複 nautili /-laɪ /, ~es C 1 〖the N- 〗ノーチラス号 〘世界初の米国製原子力潜水艦 〙.2 〘貝 〙オウムガイ ; アオイガイ .