English-Thai Dictionary
qualify
VI มีอำนาจ มี สิทธิ me-am-nad
qualify
VI เหมาะสม มี คุณ สมบัติ เหมาะสม suit fit fail be unsuited mor-som
qualify
VT ดัดแปลง แก้ไข modify dad-plang
qualify
VT ทำให้ มี คุณ สมบัติ ทำให้ มี คุณ วุฒิ tam-hai-me-kun-na-som-bud
qualify as
PHRV มี คุณ สมบัติ เป็น มีความรู้ เป็น me-kun-na-som-bud
qualify for
PHRV เหมาะสม กับ ทำให้ เหมาะสม กับ mor-som-kab
qualifying
ADJ ซึ่ง มี คุณ สมบัติ qualificative sueng-me-kun-na-som-bud
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
QUALIFY
v.t.[L. qualis, such, and facio, to make. ] 1. To fit for any place, office, occupation or character; to furnish with the knowledge, skill or other accomplishment necessary for a purpose; as, to qualify a man for a judge, for a minister of state or of the gospel, for a general or admiral. Holiness alone can qualify men for the society of holy beings.
2. To make capable of any employment or privilege; to furnish with legal power or capacity; as, in England, to qualify a man to kill game.
3. To abate; to soften; to diminish; as, to qualify the rigor of a statute.
I do no seek to quench your love's hot fire, but qualify the fire's extreme rage.
4. To ease; to assuage.
5. To modify; to restrain; to limit by exceptions; as, to qualify words or expressions, or to qualify the sense of words or phrases.
6. To modify; to regulate; to vary; as, to qualify sounds.
QUALIFYING
ppr. Furnishing with the necessary qualities, properties or accomplishments for a place, station or business; furnishing with legal power; abating; tempering; modifying; restraining.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
QUALIFY
Qual "i *fy, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Qualified; p. pr. & vb. n.Qualifying. ] Etym: [F. qualifier, LL. qualificare, fr. L. qualis how constituted, as + -ficare (in comp. ) to make. See Quality, and -Fy. ]
1. To make such as is required; to give added or requisite qualities to; to fit, as for a place, office, occupation, or character; to furnish with the knowledge, skill, or other accomplishment necessary for a purpose; to make capable, as of an employment or privilege; to supply with legal power or capacity. He had qualified himself for municipal office by taking the oaths to the sovereigns in possession. Macaulay.
2. To give individual quality to; to modulate; to vary; to regulate. It hath no larynx. .. to qualify the sound. Sir T. Browne.
3. To reduce from a general, undefined, or comprehensive form, to particular or restricted form; to modify; to limit; to restrict; to restrain; as, to qualify a statement, claim, or proposition.
4. Hence, to soften; to abate; to diminish; to assuage; to reduce the strength of, as liquors. I do not seek to quench your love's hot fire, But qualify the fire's extreme rage. Shak.
5. To soothe; to cure; -- said of persons. [Obs. ] In short space he has them qualified. Spenser.
Syn. -- To fit; equip; prepare; adapt; capacitate; enable; modify; soften; restrict; restrain; temper.
QUALIFY
QUALIFY Qual "i *fy, v. i.
1. To be or become qualified; to be fit, as for an office or employment.
2. To obtain legal power or capacity by taking the oath, or complying with the forms required, on assuming an office.
New American Oxford Dictionary
qualify
qual i fy |ˈkwäləˌfī ˈkwɑləˌfaɪ | ▶verb ( qualifies, qualifying, qualified ) 1 [ no obj. ] be entitled to a particular benefit or privilege by fulfilling a necessary condition: they do not qualify for compensation payments. • become eligible for a competition or its final rounds, by reaching a certain standard or defeating a competitor: he failed to qualify for the Olympic team | (as adj. qualifying ) : a World Cup qualifying game. • be or make properly entitled to be classed in a particular way: he qualifies as a genuine political refugee. 2 [ no obj. ] become officially recognized as a practitioner of a particular profession or activity by satisfying the relevant conditions or requirements, typically by undertaking a course of study and passing examinations: after the war he qualified as a lawyer | I've only just qualified. • [ with obj. ] officially recognize or establish (someone ) as a practitioner of a particular profession or activity: the courses qualify you as an instructor of the sport. • [ with obj. and infinitive ] make (someone ) competent or knowledgeable enough to do something: I'm not qualified to write on the subject. 3 [ with obj. ] make (a statement or assertion ) less absolute; add reservations to: she felt obliged to qualify her first short answer. • archaic make (something extreme or undesirable ) less severe or extreme: his sincere piety and his large heart always qualify his errors. • archaic alter the strength or flavor of (something, esp. a liquid ): he qualified his mug of water with a plentiful infusion of the liquor. • (qualify something as ) archaic attribute a specified quality to something; describe something as: the propositions have been qualified as heretical. • [ with obj. ] Grammar (of a word or phrase ) attribute a quality to (another word, esp. a preceding noun ). DERIVATIVES qual i fi a ble adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘describe in a particular way ’): from French qualifier, from medieval Latin qualificare, from Latin qualis ‘of what kind, of such a kind ’ (see quality ).
Oxford Dictionary
qualify
qual |ify |ˈkwɒlɪfʌɪ | ▶verb ( qualifies, qualifying, qualified ) 1 [ no obj. ] be entitled to a particular benefit or privilege by fulfilling a necessary condition: a pensioner who does not qualify for income support. • become eligible for a competition or its final rounds, by reaching a certain standard or defeating a competitor: England are in danger of failing to qualify. • be or make properly entitled to be classed in a particular way: [ no obj. ] : he qualifies as a genuine political refugee. 2 [ no obj. ] become officially recognized as a practitioner of a particular profession or activity, typically by undertaking a course and passing examinations: the training necessary to qualify as a solicitor | I've only just qualified. • [ with obj. ] officially recognize or establish (someone ) as a practitioner of a particular profession or activity: the courses qualify you as an instructor of the sport. • [ with obj. and infinitive ] make (someone ) competent or knowledgeable enough to do something: I'm not qualified to write on the subject. 3 [ with obj. ] make (a statement or assertion ) less absolute; add reservations to: she felt obliged to qualify her first short answer. • archaic make (something ) less severe or extreme: his sincere piety, his large heart always qualify his errors. • archaic alter the strength or flavour of (something, especially a liquid ): he qualified his mug of water with a plentiful infusion of the liquor. 4 [ with obj. ] Grammar (of a word or phrase ) attribute a quality to (another word, especially a preceding noun ). • (qualify something as ) archaic attribute a specified quality to something; describe something as: the propositions have been qualified as heretical. DERIVATIVES qualifiable adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘describe in a particular way ’): from French qualifier, from medieval Latin qualificare, from Latin qualis ‘of what kind, of such a kind ’ (see quality ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
qualify
qualify verb 1 I qualify for free prescriptions: be eligible for, meet the requirements for; be entitled to, be permitted. 2 they qualify as refugees: count, be considered, be designated, be eligible. 3 she qualified as a doctor: be certified, be licensed; pass, graduate, make the grade, succeed, pass muster. 4 the course qualified them to teach: authorize, empower, allow, permit, license; equip, prepare, train, educate, teach. 5 they qualified their findings: modify, limit, restrict, make conditional; moderate, temper, modulate, mitigate.
Oxford Thesaurus
qualify
qualify verb 1 you may qualify for free prescriptions: be eligible, meet the requirements; be entitled to, be allowed, be permitted. 2 to qualify as tourists they are required to carry at least the equivalent of $1500 in spending money: count, be counted, be considered, be designated, be characterizable, be eligible; meet the requirements of. 3 she qualified as a doctor: gain qualifications, gain certification, be certified, be licensed, be authorized; pass, graduate, make the grade, succeed, get through, come through with flying colours, pass muster. 4 the students had taken a course which qualified them to teach children: authorize, allow, permit, license, empower, fit, equip, prepare, arm, make ready, train, upskill, educate, coach, teach. ANTONYMS disqualify. 5 the authors later qualified their findings: modify, limit, make conditional, restrict, add reservations to, add to, make additions to, add a rider to; moderate, temper, soften, tone down, modulate, mitigate, reduce, lessen, decrease, diminish, lower, abate.
Duden Dictionary
Qualifying
Qua li fy ing Substantiv, Neutrum Rennsport , das |ˈkwɔlɪfa͜iɪŋ |das Qualifying; Genitiv: des Qualifyings, Plural: die Qualifyings englisch qualifying = das (Sich )qualifizieren Qualifikation 3b und Festlegung der Startreihenfolge für ein [Auto ]rennen
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
qualify
qual i fy /kwɑ́lɪfàɪ |kwɔ́l -/〖語源は 「ある方法で性格づける 」〗(名 )qualification 動詞 -fies /-z /; -fied /-d /; ~ing 自動詞 1 〈人が 〉 «…のための /…する » 資格 [権利 ]を持つ «for /to do » ▸ They don't qualify for social security .彼らは社会保障を受ける権利がない 2 〈人が 〉【地位 職業人としての 】資格を得る , 基準を満たす «as » ▸ I qualified as a doctor in the 1960s .私は1960年代に医師の資格を得た 3 〈物 事が 〉 «…に » ふさわしい , « …の » 条件を備える «as » ▸ His photographs qualify as art .彼の写真は芸術にふさわしい 4 〘スポーツ 〙 «…への » 出場権を得る «for » .他動詞 (!be -fiedなど分詞形容詞用法については →qualified ) 1 〖qualify A for B /as B 〗〈講習 試験 条件などが 〉A 〈人 〉にB 〈事 〉の [B 〈地位 〉としての ]資格 [技能, 権利 ]を与える ; 〖~ A to do 〗A 〈人 〉に … する資格を与える ▸ This course qualifies you for the job .このコースを取ればその仕事に就けます 2 〈表現 〉を制限する, 〈意見 〉を修正する ;⦅ やや古 ⦆…を和らげる ▸ qualify the statement by saying ...…と言い足して表現を弱める .3 〘文法 〙〈他の品詞 〉を修飾する, 限定する .4 ⦅古 ⦆ «…として » …をみなす, 批評する «as » .
qualifying
qu á l i fy ing 形容詞 資格にかかわる ▸ a qualifying match [game ]予選 .