English-Thai Dictionary
populate
VT อาศัย อยู่ พำนัก อยู่ ตั้งถิ่นฐาน ใน inhabit reside ar-sai-yu
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
POPULATE
v.i.[L. populus.] To breed people; to propagate. When there be great shoals of people which go on to populate.
POPULATE
v.t.To people; to furnish with inhabitants, either by natural increase, or by immigration or colonization.
POPULATE
for populous, is not now in use.
POPULATED
pp. Furnished with inhabitants; peopled.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
POPULATE
Pop "u *late, a. Etym: [L. populus people. See People. ]
Defn: Populous. [Obs. ] Bacon.
POPULATE
Pop "u *late, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Populated; p. pr. & vb. n.Populating. ]
Defn: To furnish with inhabitants, either by natural increase or by immigration or colonization; to cause to be inhabited; to people.
POPULATE
POPULATE Pop "u *late, v. i.
Defn: To propagate. [Obs. ] Great shoals of people which go on to populate. Bacon.
New American Oxford Dictionary
populate
pop u late |ˈpäpyəˌlāt ˈpɑpjəˌleɪt | ▶verb [ with obj. ] form the population of (a town, area, or country ): the island is populated by scarcely 40,000 people | (as adj., with submodifier populated ) : a densely populated area. • cause people to settle in (an area or place ): Finland pursues a policy designed to populate its Russian borders. • fill or be present in (a place, environment, or domain ): the spirit of the book and the characters who populate its pages. • add data to a previously empty section of (an electronic form, document, etc. ): use scripts to populate the graph with data. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from medieval Latin populat- ‘supplied with people, ’ from the verb populare, from populus ‘people. ’
Oxford Dictionary
populate
popu |late |ˈpɒpjʊleɪt | ▶verb [ with obj. ] form the population of (a place ): the island is populated by scarcely 40,000 people | a cosy rural town populated with friendly folk. • cause people to settle in (a place ). • fill or be present in (a place or sphere ): the film is an epic fantasy populated by grotesque weirdos. • Computing fill in (data ). ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from medieval Latin populat- ‘supplied with people ’, from the verb populare, from populus ‘people ’.
populated
popu |lated |ˈpɒpjuleɪtɪd | ▶adjective 1 [ often with submodifier ] inhabited: a densely populated area | populated countries. 2 Electronics (of a printed circuit board ) having components fitted.
American Oxford Thesaurus
populate
populate verb 1 the town is populated by 40,000 people: inhabit, occupy, people; live in, reside in. 2 an attempt to populate the island: settle, colonize, people, occupy, move into, make one's home in.
Oxford Thesaurus
populate
populate verb 1 the island is populated by some 40,000 people: inhabit, live /reside in, occupy, people; formal dwell in. 2 we are trying to populate a land which has been derelict: settle (in ), colonize, people, move into, occupy, take up residence in, make one's home in, open up, pioneer, overrun.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
populate
pop u late /pɑ́pjəlèɪt |pɔ́pju -/動詞 他動詞 ⦅かたく ⦆1 〖通例be ~d 〗〈特定の場所などに 〉【人 動物の集団などが 】住む, 棲息 (せいそく )する «by , with » ; 〈特定の集団が 〉〈場所 社会階級 ランキング上位など 〉を満たす ; 〈登場人物が 〉〈作品中 〉に現れる .2 【場所などに 】〈人 〉を入植させる, 住まわせる «with » .
populated
p ó p u l à t ed /-ɪd /形容詞 〖通例 名詞 の前で 〗(多くの )人の住む 〈地域など 〉 (!しばしばdensely, heavily, sparselyなどの 副詞 を前に置き人口の密集度を示す; またハイフンで複合語も作る ) .