English-Thai Dictionary
new
ADJ ใหม่ แบบ ใหม่ ร่วมสมัย fresh inexperienced experienced mai
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
NEW
a. 1. Lately made, invented, produced or come into being; that has existed a short time only; recent in origin; novel; opposed to old, and used of things; as a new coat; a new house; a new book; a new fashion; a new theory; the new chimistry; a new discovery.
2. Lately introduced to our knowledge; not before known; recently discovered; as a new metal; a new species of animals or plants found in foreign countries; the new continent.
3. Modern; not ancient.
4. Recently produced by change; as a new life.
Put on the new man. Ephesians 4:24.
5. Not habituated; not familiar; unaccustomed.
Heretics and such as instill their poison into new minds.
New to the plough, unpracticed in the trace.
6. Renovated; repaired so as to recover the first state.
Men, after long emaciating diets, wax plump, fat and almost new.
7. Fresh after any event.
New from her sickness to that northern air.
8. Not of ancient extraction or a family of ancient distinction.
By superior capacity and extensive knowledge, a new man often mounts to favor.
9. Not before used; strange; unknown.
They shall speak with new tongues. Mark 16:17.
1 . Recently commenced; as the new year.
11. Having passed the change or conjunction with the sun; as the new moon.
12. Not cleared and cultivated, or lately cleared; as new land.
13. That has lately appeared for the first time; as a new star.
New is much used in composition to qualify other words, and always bears its true sense of late, recent, novel, fresh; as in new-born, new-made, new-grown, new-formed, new-found. In this use, new may be considered as adverbial, or as a part of the compound.
NEW
v.t.To make new. [Not used. ]
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
NEW
New, a. [Compar. Newer; superl. Newest.] Etym: [OE. OE. newe, AS. niwe, neowe; akin to D. nieuw, OS. niwi, OHG. niuwi, G. neu, Icel. n, Dan. & Sw. ny, Goth. niujis, Lith. naujas, Russ. novuii, Ir. nua, nuadh, Gael. nuadh, W. newydd, Armor. nevez, L. novus, gr. nava, and prob. to E. now. Now, and cf. Announce, Innovate, Neophyte, Novel. ]
1. Having existed, or having been made, but a short time; having originated or occured lately; having recently come into existence, or into one's possession; not early or long in being; of late origin; recent; fresh; modern; -- opposed to old, as, a new coat; a new house; a new book; a new fashion. "Your new wife. " Chaucer.
2. Not before seen or known, although existing before; lately manifested; recently discovered; as, a new metal; a new planet; new scenes.
3. Newly beginning or recurring; starting anew; now commencing; different from has been; as, a new year; a new course or direction.
4. As if lately begun or made; having the state or quality of original freshness; also, changed for the better; renovated; unworn; untried; unspent; as, rest and travel made him a new man. Steadfasty purposing to lead a new life. Bk. of Com. Prayer. Men after long emaciating diets, fat, and almost new. Bacon.
5. Not of ancient extraction, or of a family of ancient descent; not previously kniwn or famous. Addison.
6. Not habituated; not familiar; unaccustomed. New to the plow, unpracticed in the trace. Pope.
7. Fresh from anything; newly come. New from her sickness to that northern air. Dryden. New birth. See under Birth. -- New Church, or New Jerusalem Church, the church holding the doctrines taught by Emanuel Swedenborg. See Swedenborgian. -- New heart (Theol.), a heart or character changed by the power of God, so as to be governed by new and holy motives. -- New land, land ckeared and cultivated for the first time. -- New light. (Zoöl.) See Crappie. -- New moon. (a ) The moon in its first quarter, or when it first appears after being invisible. (b ) The day when the new moon is first seen; the first day of the lunar month, which was a holy day among the Jews. 2 Kings iv. 23. -- New Red Sandstone (Geol.), an old name for the formation immediately above the coal measures or strata, now divided into the Permian and Trias. See Sandstone. -- New style. See Style. -- New testament. See under Testament. -- New world, the land of the Western Hemisphere; -- so called because not known to the inhabitants of the Eastern Hemisphere until recent times.
Syn. -- Novel; recent; fresh; modern. See Novel.
NEW
NEW New, adv.
Defn: Newly; recently. Chaucer.
Note: New is much used in composition, adverbially, in the sense of newly, recently, to quality other words, as in new-born, new-formed, new-found, new-mown. Of new, anew. [Obs. ] Chaucer.
NEW
NEW New, v. t. & i.
Defn: To make new; to renew. [Obs. ]
New American Oxford Dictionary
new
new |n (y )o͞o n (j )u | ▶adjective 1 not existing before; made, introduced, or discovered recently or now for the first time: new crop varieties | this tendency is not new | (as noun the new ) : a fascinating mix of the old and the new. • not previously used or owned: a secondhand bus cost a fraction of a new one. • of recent origin or arrival: a new baby. • (of food or drink ) freshly or recently produced. • (of vegetables ) dug or harvested early in the season: new potatoes. 2 already existing but seen, experienced, or acquired recently or now for the first time: her new bike. • [ predic. ] (new to ) unfamiliar or strange to (someone ): a way of living that was new to me. • [ predic. ] (new to /at ) (of a person ) inexperienced at or unaccustomed to doing (something ): I'm quite new to gardening. • different from a recent previous one: I have a new assistant | this would be her new home. • in addition to another or others already existing: recruiting new pilots overseas. • (in place names ) discovered or founded later than and named after: New York. 3 just beginning or beginning anew and regarded as better than what went before: starting a new life | the new South Africa. • (of a person ) reinvigorated or restored: a bottle of pills would make him a new man. • superseding another or others of the same kind, and advanced in method or theory: the new architecture. • reviving another or others of the same kind: the New Bohemians. ▶adverb [ usu. in combination ] newly; recently: new-mown hay | new-fallen snow. PHRASES a new one informal an account, idea, or joke not previously encountered by someone: I've heard of lazy, but somebody being too lazy to talk —that's a new one on me. what's new? 1 (said on greeting someone ) what's going on? how are you? 2 (also what else is new? ) that is the usual situation: she and I squabbled —so what's new? | men like to see women's legs. So what else is new? DERIVATIVES new ish adjective, new ness noun ORIGIN Old English nīwe, nēowe, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch nieuw and German neu, from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit nava, Latin novus, and Greek neos ‘new. ’
Oxford Dictionary
new
new |njuː | ▶adjective 1 produced, introduced, or discovered recently or now for the first time; not existing before: the new Madonna album | new crop varieties | this tendency is not new | (as noun the new ) : a fascinating mix of the old and the new. • not previously used or owned: a second-hand bus costs a fraction of a new one. • of recent origin or arrival: a new baby. • (of vegetables ) dug or harvested early in the season: new potatoes. 2 already existing but seen, experienced, or acquired recently or now for the first time: her new bike | a new sensation. • (new to ) unfamiliar or strange to (someone ): a way of living that was new to me. • (new to /at ) inexperienced at or unaccustomed to (an activity ): I'm quite new to gardening. • different from a recent previous one: I have a new assistant | this would be her new home. • in addition to another or others already existing: looking for new business. • [ in place names ] discovered or founded later than and named after: New York. 3 beginning anew and in a transformed way: starting a new life | the new South Africa. • (of a person ) reinvigorated: a bottle of pills would make him a new man. • superseding and more advanced than another or others of the same kind: the new architecture. • reviving another or others of the same kind: the New Bohemians. ▶adverb [ usu. in combination ] newly; recently: new-mown hay | he was enjoying his new-found freedom. PHRASES a new one informal an account, idea, or joke not previously encountered by someone: somebody being too lazy to talk —that's a new one on me . what's new 1 (said on greeting someone ) what's going on? how are you? 2 used to express the fact that a situation is entirely predictable: United were unlucky … so what's new? DERIVATIVES newish adjective, newness noun ORIGIN Old English nīwe, nēowe, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch nieuw and German neu, from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit nava, Latin novus, and Greek neos ‘new ’.
American Oxford Thesaurus
new
new adjective 1 new technology: recently developed, up to date, latest, current, state-of-the-art, contemporary, advanced, recent, modern, cutting-edge, leading-edge. ANTONYMS old, existing. 2 new ideas: novel, original, fresh, imaginative, creative, experimental; contemporary, modernist, up to date; newfangled, ultramodern, avant-garde, futuristic; informal way out, far out. ANTONYMS old-fashioned, hackneyed. 3 is your boat new? unused, brand new, pristine, fresh, in mint condition. ANTONYMS old, secondhand. 4 we have to find a new approach: different, another, alternative; unfamiliar, unknown, strange; unaccustomed, untried. ANTONYMS present. 5 they had a new classroom built: additional, extra, supplementary, further, another, fresh. ANTONYMS existing. 6 I came back a new woman: reinvigorated, restored, revived, improved, refreshed, regenerated, reborn. WORD LINKS neophobia fear or dislike of anything new or unfamiliar 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.WORD TOOLKIT Word Toolkits illustrate the difference between close synonyms by means of words typically used with them.
Oxford Thesaurus
new
new adjective 1 Roger used new techniques of measuring and recording growth: recently developed, newly discovered, brand new, up to the minute, up to date, latest, current, state-of-the-art, contemporary, present-day, advanced, recent, modern; newly arrived, newborn. ANTONYMS old, existing. 2 the committee is generally tolerant of new ideas: novel, fresh, original, unhackneyed, imaginative, creative, experimental, new-fashioned, contemporary, modernist, up to date; newfangled, modish, ultra-modern, avant-garde, futuristic; informal way out, far out. ANTONYMS old-fashioned, stale, hackneyed. 3 you have to decide whether to buy your boat new or second-hand: unused, brand new, as new, pristine, fresh, mint, in mint condition. ANTONYMS second-hand, used. 4 new neighbours had recently moved in | she started her new job on Monday: different, another, alternative, changed, unfamiliar, unknown, strange, unaccustomed, untried. ANTONYMS present. 5 the school has just had a new classroom built: additional, added, extra, increased, more, supplementary, supplemental, further, another, fresh. ANTONYMS existing. 6 I went into hospital feeling very poorly and came out a new woman: reinvigorated, restored, revived, improved, refreshed, regenerated, reborn, renewed, remodelled. PHRASES breathe new life into their visionary clients have successfully breathed new life into old, but steadfast structures | the genre film is injecting new life into the lower end of the market: reinvigorate, revitalize, re-energize, brace, fortify, strengthen, give new strength to, give a boost to, build up, bolster, prop up, help, renew, regenerate, restore, revive, revivify, rejuvenate, reanimate, resuscitate, refresh, reawaken, rekindle, enliven, stimulate, put some spark into, kick-start, uplift; informal give a shot in the arm to, pep up, buck up, get going again. WORD LINKS new neo- related prefix, as in neonatal, neo-Gothic neophobia fear of new things 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.WORD TOOLKIT Word Toolkits illustrate the difference between close synonyms by means of words typically used with them.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
new
new /nuː, njuː |njuː / (! /nuː /は若者に多い; knewと同音 ) (副 )newly 形容詞 ~er ; ~est 1 〈物品 書物 方法 思考などが 〉新しい , 新たに生み出された, 今までになかった (↔old ); 〖the ~; 名詞的に; 集合的に 〗新しい物 [事 ] (!単数扱い ) ▸ his new album [book ]彼の出した新譜 [新刊 ]▸ Toyota's new carトヨタの新型車 (↓7 )▸ What's new ?⦅主に米話 ⦆変わりないですか ; やあ, どう (!How are you? と同等の親しい間柄でのあいさつ表現; 返答は “Nothing much. ”「変わりないよ 」など ) ▸ new potatoes 新ジャガ ▸ a new set of beliefs 新しい一連の信条 ▸ E-mail is the new telephone .Eメールは今やかつての電話に匹敵するものだ ▸ A wonderful combination of the old and the new is seen in his pictures .彼の絵には新旧要素のすばらしい結合が見られる ▸ There's nothing new under the sun .⦅ことわざ ⦆日のもとに新しきものはなし 〘すべてのものにはその元となるものがある; 聖書より 〙2 〈衣料品 家などが 〉買ったばかりの , 新たに入手した ▸ Is it a new dress? その服はおろしたてなの?3 通例比較なし 〈メンバー 社員 学生などが 〉新任の , 新入りの ; 新たに加わった ▸ a new arrival 新参 ▸ be the new kid on the block ⦅米 くだけて ⦆(職場 学校などの )新入りである ▸ the new boy [girl ]新入生 ; ⦅英 おどけて ⦆(会社などの )新人, 新入り 4 〈上司 住所 仕事などが 〉今度の , 新たに代わった ▸ support the new government 新政府を支持する 5 〈天体 鉱物 証拠などが 〉新発見の , 新たに見つかった ▸ New species of virus were detected .新種のウイルスが検出された 6 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗一新した , 新生の, 今までとは違う 〈生活 時代 人など 〉; 始まったばかりの 〈年 日など 〉▸ start a new life [era ]新生活を始める [新時代を開く ]▸ new Russia 新生ロシア ▸ New Labour, New Britain .新しい労働党で新しい英国を 〘党と国政の大改革を訴える1997年選挙時のキャッチフレーズ 〙▸ feel (like ) a new man [woman ]生まれ変わったような気がする ▸ turn (over ) a new leaf 新しいページをめくる ; (心を入れかえて )新生活を始める 7 通例比較なし 〈商品などが 〉新品の , 未使用の (↔used , secondhand )▸ buy a new car 新車を買う (↑1 )▸ look brand new まったく新しく見える ▸ look like [as good as ] new 新品同様に見える 8 〖通例the ~; 名詞 の前で 〗現代 [近代 ]的な 〈考え方 種類 流行など 〉▸ the new Romantics 近代ロマン派 9 〖通例be ~〗〈人が 〉【物などに 】なじみのない , 不慣れな «to , at , on » ; 〈物が 〉【人などに 】目新しい, 知られていない «to » ▸ He is still new to the school .彼はまだその学校に慣れていない ▸ This application is all new to me .このソフトのことは全然知らないんだ ▸ be a new one on A ⦅話 ⦆〈話題 情報などが 〉A 〈人 〉にとって初耳 [初めてのもの ]だ .副詞 1 〖複合語を作って 〗新たに, 最近 ▸ new -born 生まれたばかりの ▸ new- laid 産みたての 2 新品で 〈買うなど 〉▸ I bought a car new .新車を買った N -̀ Á ge ニューエイジ運動 〘20世紀後半から欧米で流行し始めた超自然や精神世界を信奉する思想; しばしば瞑想 (めいそう )禅などに関する活動を行う 〙; =New Age music .N -̀ Á ge m ù sic ニューエイジミュージック .~̀ b í rth 改心 .~̀ bl ó od (組織などを活性化する )新人, 新しい血 .~̀ br ó om (改革を推し進める )新任者, ニューリーダー .N -̀ Cr í ticism 〘文学 〙〖通例the ~〗新批評 〘作家の伝記と切り離して文学テクスト自体を詳細 客観的に分析する 〙.N -̀ D é al 〖the ~〗ニューディール政策 〘1930年代米国でF. D. Roosevelt大統領が主導した経済政策 〙.N -̀ D é aler ニューディール政策の支持者 .~̀ ec ó nomy 〖単数形で 〗ニューエコノミー 〘情報処理技術を基盤とする新しい経済システム; ITの活用により景気循環が縮小するとされる現象 〙.~̀ f á ce 新顔, 新人 .~̀ h í gh [l ó w ]新最高 [低 ]値 .~̀ inform á tion 〘文法 〙新情報 〘読み手 聞き手がすでに知っている旧情報 (old information )ではなく, 初めて伝えられる情報内容 〙.N -̀ Jer ú salem 〖the ~〗天国, 楽園 .~̀ l á d ⦅英 ⦆新若者 〘男性の復権を主張; ↓new man (2 )〙.N -̀ L á tin 〘言 〙近代ラテン語 .N -̀ L é ft [R í ght ]〖the ~〗新左翼 [右翼 ] 〘主に ⦅米 ⦆で1960年代以降に起こった新しい革新 [保守 ]思想 〙.~̀ l ó ok 〖通例the ~〗(最 )新 [流行 ]型, 新様式 .~̀ l ó w →new high .~́ m à n 1 改宗 [改心, 更正 ]した人 .2 〖時にN - M- 〗⦅主に英 時におどけて ⦆新しい男, マイホームパパ 〘子育てや家事に積極的に関与 〙.~̀ m á th ⦅米 ⦆ [m á ths ⦅英 ⦆]新数学 〘1960 --70年代の集合論に基づく数学的概念の指導法 〙.~́ m ò ney 1 にわかの大金 .2 =new rich .~̀ m ó on 新月 (になる日 )(→moon ).~̀ r í ch ⦅主に米 ⦆〖the ~; 複数扱い 〗新興資産家階級 .N -̀ R í ght →New Left .~̀ sch ó ol ⦅くだけて ⦆(音楽 芸術の )新しいスタイル .N -̀ St ý le 〖the ~〗新 [グレゴリオ ]暦 .~̀ techn ó logy (主にコンピュータ関連の )新技術 .N -̀ T é stament 〖the ~〗新約聖書 (⦅略 ⦆NT, N.T.; →Old Testament ).~̀ t ó wn ⦅主に英 ⦆ニュータウン 〘郊外型の新規造成住宅街; ⦅英 ⦆では1946年以降に造られた町をさす 〙.~̀ v à riant C̀ J D́ 新型クロイツフェルトヤコブ病 .~̀ w á ve (音楽 映画 政治などにおける )新思潮 [ニューウェーブ ] (の主導者 ) 〘フランス語nouvelle vagueの英訳 〙.~́ w ò man 〖the ~〗新しい女性 〘20世紀前半に政治的 社会的権利の拡充を主張 〙.N -̀ W ó rld 〖the ~〗新世界 〘主に欧州から南米 北米をさしていう; ↔Old World 〙.n é w ness 名詞 U 新しさ, 新奇さ .