English-Thai Dictionary
stake
N การ ประหารชีวิต แบบ ผูก ติดกับ เสา แล้ว เผา kan-pra-han-che-wid-beab-puk-tid-kan
stake
N ดอกเบี้ย หรือ ส่วนแบ่ง ผลประโยชน์ interest share dok-bia-rue-suan-bang
stake
N เงินเดิมพัน bet wager ngen-doem-pan
stake
N เสาหลัก เสาเข็ม pole post stick sao-lak
stake
VI ปักเขต ล้อม เขต picket tether pak-sao
stake
VT ปัก เสา ลง เสา pole stick pak-sao
stake
VT ผูก ไว้ กับ เสา ผูก ไว้ กับ หลัก hitch tie puk-wai-kab-sao
stake
VT วางเดิมพัน พนัน พนันขันต่อ bet wager wang-doem-pan
stake off
PHRV ปักเขต แบ่ง stake out pak-ked-bang
stake on
PHRV วางเดิมพัน พนัน เดิมพัน ใน เรื่อง be on bet on gamble on stake upon wager on wang-doem-pan
stake out
PHRV ปักเขต วาง หลักเขต stake off pak-ked
stake out
PHRV อ้างสิทธิ์ ประกาศ สิทธิ ang-sid
stake upon
PHRV วางเดิมพัน พนัน เดิมพัน ใน เรื่อง be on bet on gamble on stake on wager on wang-doem-pan
stakeboat
N เรือ ที่ จอด ไว้ เป็นหลัก เลี้ยว ใน การ แข่ง เรือ ruea-ti-jod-wai-pen-lak
stakeholder
N คนกลาง ที่ ถือ เงินเดิมพัน สำหรับ การพนัน kon-klang-ti-tue-ngen-doem-pan
stakeholder
N ผู้ ถือ ผลประโยชน์ ร่วม consignee trustee phu-tue-pra-yod-ruam
stakeout
N การตรวจตรา เป็นพิเศษ โดย ตำรวจ surveillance kan-truad-tra-pi-sed-doi-tam-ruad
stakeout
N สถานที่ ซึ่ง ตำรวจ ตรวจตรา เป็นพิเศษ sa-tan-ti-sueng-tam-ruad-trud-pen-pi-sed
stakes
N เงิน รางวัล ใน การแข่งม้า ngen-rang-wan-nai-kan-kang-ma
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
STAKE
n.[The primary sense is to shoot, to thrust, hence to set or fix. ] 1. A small piece of wood or timber, sharpened at one end and set in the ground, or prepared for setting, as a support to something. Thus stakes are used to support vines, to support fences, hedges and the like. A stake is not to be confounded with a post, which is a larger piece of timber.
2. A piece of long rough wood.
A sharpend stake strong Dryas found.
3. A palisade, or something resembling it.
4. The piece of timber to which a martyr is fastened when he is to be burnt. Hence, to perish at the stake, is to die a martyr, or to die in torment. Hence,
5. Figuratively, martyrdom. The stake was prepared for those who were convicted of heresy.
6. That which is pledged and wagered; that which is set, thrown down or laid, to abide the issue of a contest, to be gained by victory or lost by defeat.
7. The state of being laid or pledged as a wager. His honor is at stake.
8. A small anvil to straighten cold word, or to cut and punch upon.
STAKE
v.t. 1. To fasten, support or defend with stakes; as, to stake vines or plants.
2. To mark the limits by stakes; with out; as, to stake out land; to stake out a new road, or the ground for a canal.
3. To wager; to pledge; to put at hazard upon the issue of competition, or upon a future contingency.
Ill stake yon lamb that near the fountain plays.
4. To point or sharpen stakes. [Not used in America. ]
5. To pierce with a stake.
STAKED
pp. Fastened or supported by stakes; set or marked with stakes; wagered; put at hazard.
STAKE-HEAD
n.In rope-making, a stake with wooden pins in the upper side to keep the strands apart.
STAKING
ppr. 1. Supporting with stakes; marking with stakes; wagering; putting at hazard.
2. Sharpening; pointing.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
STAKE
Stake, n. Etym: [AS. staca, from the root of E. stick; akin to OFries. & LG. stake, D. staak, Sw. stake, Dan. stage. See Stick, v. t., and cf. Estacade, Stockade. ]
1. A piece of wood, usually long and slender, pointed at one end so as to be easily driven into the ground as a support or stay; as, a stake to support vines, fences, hedges, etc. A sharpened stake strong Dryas found. Dryden.
2. A stick inserted upright in a lop, eye, or mortise, at the side or end of a cart, a flat car, or the like, to prevent goods from falling off.
3. The piece of timber to which a martyr was affixed to be burned; hence, martyrdom by fire.
4. A small anvil usually furnished with a tang to enter a hole in a bench top, -- used by tinsmiths, blacksmiths, etc. , for light work, punching upon, etc.
5. That which is laid down as a wager; that which is staked or hazarded; a pledge. At stake, in danger; hazarded; pledged. "I see my reputation is at stake. " Shak.
STAKE
Stake, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Staked; p. pr. & vb. n. Staking. ]
1. To fasten, support, or defend with stakes; as, to stake vines or plants.
2. To mark the limits of by stakes; -- with out; as, to stake out land; to stake out a new road.
3. To put at hazard upon the issue of competition, or upon a future contingency; to wager; to pledge. I'll stake yon lamb, that near the fountain plays. Pope.
4. To pierce or wound with a stake. Spectator.
STAKE-DRIVER
STAKE-DRIVER Stake "-driv `er, n. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The common American bittern (Botaurus lentiginosus ); -- so called because one of its notes resembles the sound made in driving a stake into the mud. Called also meadow hen, and Indian hen.
STAKEHEAD
STAKEHEAD Stake "head `, n. (Rope making )
Defn: A horizontal bar on a stake, used for supporting the yarns which are kept apart by pins in the bar.
STAKEHOLDER
STAKEHOLDER Stake "hold `er, n.
Defn: The holder of a stake; one with whom the bets are deposited when a wager is laid.
STAKTOMETER
Stak *tom "e *ter, n. Etym: [Gr. -meter. ]
Defn: A drop measurer; a glass tube tapering to a small orifice at the point, and having a bulb in the middle, used for finding the number of drops in equal quantities of different liquids. See Pipette. Sir D. Brewster.
New American Oxford Dictionary
stake
stake 1 |stāk steɪk | ▶noun 1 a strong wooden or metal post with a point at one end, driven into the ground to support a tree, form part of a fence, act as a boundary mark, etc. • a long vertical rod used in basket-making. • a metalworker's small anvil, typically with a projection for fitting into a socket on a bench. 2 (the stake ) historical a wooden post to which a person was tied before being burned alive as a punishment. 3 a territorial division of the Mormon Church under the jurisdiction of a president. ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 support (a tree or plant ) with a stake or stakes. 2 (stake something out ) mark an area with stakes so as to claim ownership of it: the boundary between the two ranches was properly staked out | figurative : the local dog staked out his territory. • be assertive in defining and defending a position or policy: Elena was staking out a role for herself as a formidable political force. PHRASES pull up stakes move or go to live elsewhere. stake a claim assert one's right to something. PHRASAL VERBS stake someone /something out informal continuously watch a place or person in secret: they'd staked out Culley's house for half a day. ORIGIN Old English staca; related to Dutch staak, also to stick 2 .
stake
stake 2 |steɪk stāk | ▶noun (usu. stakes ) a sum of money or something else of value gambled on the outcome of a risky game or venture: playing dice for high stakes | figurative : the mayor raised the stakes in the battle for power | the stakes are high with a six-figure bonanza in television rights in the balance. • a share or interest in a business, situation, or system: GM acquired a 50 percent stake in Saab. • (stakes ) prize money, esp. in horse racing. • [ in names ] (stakes ) a horse race in which all the owners of the racehorses running contribute to the prize money: the horse is to run in the Lexington Stakes. • [ with modifier ] (stakes ) a situation involving competition in a specified area: we will keep you one step ahead in the fashion stakes. ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 gamble (money or something else of value ) on the outcome of a game or race: one gambler staked everything he'd got and lost | figurative : it was risky to stake his reputation on one big success. 2 informal give financial or other support to: he staked him to an education at the École des Beaux-Arts. PHRASES at stake 1 to be won or lost; at risk: people's lives could be at stake. 2 at issue or in question: the logical response is to give up, but there's more at stake than logic. ORIGIN late Middle English: perhaps a specialized usage of stake 1, from the notion of an object being placed as a wager on a post or stake.
stake boat
stake boat ▶noun an anchored boat used to mark the course for a boat race.
stake body
stake bod y ▶noun a body for a truck having a flat open platform with removable posts along the sides.
stakebuilding
stake |build ¦ing |ˈsteɪkbɪldɪŋ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Finance the building up of a holding of shares in a company.
stakeholder
stake hold er |ˈstākˌhōldər ˈsteɪkˌhoʊldər | ▶noun 1 (in gambling ) an independent party with whom each of those who make a wager deposits the money or counters wagered. 2 a person with an interest or concern in something, esp. a business. • [ as modifier ] denoting a type of organization or system in which all the members or participants are seen as having an interest in its success: a stakeholder economy.
stakeholder pension
stake |hold ¦er pen |sion |ˈsteɪkhəʊldə (r )pɛnʃn | ▶noun (in the UK ) a pension plan, intended primarily for those who do not belong to a company pension scheme or who are self-employed, which invests the money a person saves and uses the fund on retirement to buy a pension from a pension provider.
stake net
stake net ▶noun a fishing net hung on stakes.
stakeout
stake out |ˈstākˌout ˈsteɪkaʊt | ▶noun informal a period of secret surveillance of a building or an area by police in order to observe someone's activities.
staker
staker |ˈsteɪkə (r )| ▶noun 1 a person who gambles money on the outcome of a game or race. 2 Canadian a person who makes a mining claim.
Stakhanovite
Sta kha nov ite |stəˈkänəˌvīt stəˈkɑnəvaɪt | ▶noun a worker in the former Soviet Union who was exceptionally hardworking and productive. • an exceptionally hardworking or zealous person. DERIVATIVES Sta kha nov ism |-ˌvizəm |noun, Sta kha nov ist |-vist |noun & adjective ORIGIN 1930s: from the name of Aleksei Grigorevich Stakhanov (1906 –77 ), Russian coal miner.
Oxford Dictionary
stake
stake 1 |steɪk | ▶noun 1 a strong wooden or metal post with a point at one end, driven into the ground to support a plant, form part of a fence, mark a boundary, etc. • (the stake ) historical a wooden post to which a person was tied before being burned alive as a punishment. • a long vertical rod used in basket-making. 2 a metalworker's small anvil, typically with a projection for fitting into a socket on a bench. 3 a territorial division of the Mormon Church under the jurisdiction of a president. ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 support (a plant ) with a stake or stakes. 2 (stake something out ) mark an area with stakes so as to claim ownership of it: the boundary between the two manors was properly staked out. • be assertive in defining and defending a position or policy: Elena was staking out a role for herself as a formidable political force. PHRASES go to the stake for used to emphasize that one would do anything to defend a particular belief, opinion, or person. pull up stakes N. Amer. move or go to live elsewhere. stake a claim assert one's right to something. PHRASAL VERBS stake someone /thing out informal keep a person or place under surveillance: they'd staked out Culley's flat for a day. ORIGIN Old English staca, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch staak, also to stick 2 .
stake
stake 2 |steɪk | ▶noun a sum of money or something else of value gambled on the outcome of a risky game or venture: playing dice for high stakes | figurative : the opposition raised the stakes in the battle for power | the stakes are high with a six-figure bonanza in television rights in the balance. • a share or interest in a business, situation, or system: GM acquired a 50 per cent stake in Saab. • (stakes ) prize money, especially in horse racing. • [ in names ] (Stakes ) a horse race in which all the owners of the racehorses running contribute to the prize money: the horse is to run in the Craven Stakes. • (with modifier stakes ) a situation involving competition in a specified area: we will keep you one step ahead in the fashion stakes. ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 gamble (money or something else of value ) on the outcome of a game or race: one gambler staked everything he'd got and lost | figurative : it was risky to stake his reputation on one big success. 2 N. Amer. informal give financial or other support to: he staked him to an education at the École des Beaux-Arts. PHRASES at stake 1 at risk: people's lives could be at stake. 2 at issue or in question: the logical response is to give up, but there's more at stake than logic. ORIGIN late Middle English: perhaps a specialized usage of stake 1, from the notion of an object being placed as a wager on a post or stake.
stake boat
stake boat ▶noun an anchored boat used to mark the course for a boat race.
stake body
stake body ▶noun US a body for a lorry having a flat open platform with removable posts along the sides.
stakebuilding
stake |build ¦ing |ˈsteɪkbɪldɪŋ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Finance the building up of a holding of shares in a company.
stakeholder
stake |hold ¦er |ˈsteɪkhəʊldə | ▶noun 1 (in gambling ) an independent party with whom each of those who make a wager deposits the money or counters wagered. 2 a person with an interest or concern in something, especially a business. • [ as modifier ] denoting a type of organization or system in which all the members or participants are seen as having an interest in its success: a stakeholder economy. DERIVATIVES stakeholding noun & adjective
stakeholder pension
stake |hold ¦er pen |sion |ˈsteɪkhəʊldə (r )pɛnʃn | ▶noun (in the UK ) a pension plan, intended primarily for those who do not belong to a company pension scheme or who are self-employed, which invests the money a person saves and uses the fund on retirement to buy a pension from a pension provider.
stake net
stake net ▶noun a fishing net hung on stakes.
stake-out
stake-out ▶noun informal a period of secret surveillance of a building or an area by police in order to observe someone's activities.
staker
staker |ˈsteɪkə (r )| ▶noun 1 a person who gambles money on the outcome of a game or race. 2 Canadian a person who makes a mining claim.
Stakhanovite
Stakhanovite |stəˈkɑːnəvʌɪt, -ˈkanə -| ▶noun a worker in the former Soviet Union who was exceptionally hard-working and productive. • an exceptionally hard-working or zealous person. DERIVATIVES Stakhanovism |-vɪz (ə )m |noun, Stakhanovist |-vɪst |noun & adjective ORIGIN 1930s: from the name of Aleksei Grigorevich Stakhanov (1906 –1977 ), Russian coal miner.
American Oxford Thesaurus
stake
stake 1 noun a stake in the ground: post, pole, stick, spike, upright, support, prop, strut, pale, paling, picket, pile, piling, cane. ▶verb 1 the plants have to be staked: prop up, tie up, tether, support, hold up, brace, truss. 2 he staked his claim: assert, declare, proclaim, state, make, lay, put in. PHRASES stake out 1 builders staked out the plot: mark off /out, demarcate, measure out, delimit, fence off, section off, close off, shut off, cordon off. 2 informal the police staked out his apartment: observe, watch, keep an eye on, keep under observation, keep watch on, monitor, keep under surveillance, surveil; informal keep tabs on, keep a tab on, case.
stake
stake 2 noun 1 playing dice for high stakes: bet, wager, ante. 2 they are racing for record stakes: prize money, purse, pot, winnings. 3 low down in the popularity stakes: competition, contest, battle, challenge, rivalry, race, running, struggle, scramble. 4 a 40 -percent stake in the business: share, interest, ownership, involvement. ▶verb he staked all his week's pay: bet, wager, lay, put on, gamble, chance, venture, risk, hazard.
Oxford Thesaurus
stake
stake 1 noun he was replacing broken stakes in a barbed-wire fence: post, pole, stick, spike, upright, support, prop, strut, stave, pale, paling, picket, pile, piling, stanchion, shaft, cane, beanpole, rod, mast; historical palisade. ▶verb 1 the plants have to be staked: prop up, tie up, tether, support, hold up, bolster up, brace, buttress, reinforce, truss, stay. 2 British governments staked their claim to disputed areas by formalizing imperial control: assert, declare, proclaim, state, make, lay, establish, put on record, put in. PHRASES stake something out 1 the slaves were made to stake out canefields in the rainforest: mark off, mark out, demarcate, mark the boundaries /limits of, outline, measure out, define, delimit, fence off, section off, close off, shut off, cordon off, bound, circumscribe. 2 informal they'd staked out Culley's flat for half a day: observe, watch, keep an eye on, keep under observation, keep watch on, keep under surveillance, survey, monitor, keep under scrutiny, watch like a hawk, keep a weather eye on, spy on, check out; informal keep tabs on, keep a tab on, case, keep a beady eye on; rare surveil.
stake
stake 2 noun 1 if the horse wins, you get five times your stake back: bet, wager, ante, pledge, hazard. 2 they are racing for record stakes this year: prize money, purse, pot, winnings. 3 he had just knocked another competitor out of the promotion stakes: competition, contest, battle, challenge, rivalry, race, running, struggle, scramble. 4 he retains a 40 \% stake in the business: share, interest, financial interest, investment, involvement, concern. ▶verb one gambler staked everything he'd got and lost: bet, wager, place a bet of, lay, put on, gamble, pledge, chance, venture, risk, hazard.
Duden Dictionary
stak
stak |st a k | stecken 5 5, 6, 7
stäke
stä ke stecken |st ä ke |
Stake
Sta ke Substantiv, feminin oder Substantiv, maskulin norddeutsch , die oder der |St a ke |die Stake; Genitiv: der Stake, Plural: die Staken, Staken, der Stake; Genitiv: des Stakes, Plural: die Stake mittelniederdeutsch stake, wohl verwandt mit Stecken lange Holzstange (besonders zum Abstoßen und Vorwärtsbewegen eines Bootes oder als Stütze beim Fachwerkbau )
Stakeholder
Stake hol der Substantiv, maskulin Wirtschaft , der |ˈsteɪkhoʊldɐ |der Stakeholder; Genitiv: des Stakeholders, Plural: die Stakeholder englisch stakeholder = interessierte Person Person, für die es aufgrund ihrer Interessenlage von Belang ist, wie ein bestimmtes Unternehmen sich verhält (z. B. Aktionär, Mitarbeiter, Kunde, Lieferant )
staken
sta ken schwaches Verb norddeutsch |st a ken |mittelniederdeutsch staken, zu Stake (n ) 1 a Perfektbildung mit »hat « (ein Boot o. Ä.) durch Abstoßen und weiteres Stemmen mit einer langen Stange gegen den Grund oder das Ufer vorwärtsbewegen den Kahn, das Boot [durch das Schilf, über den Teich ] staken b Perfektbildung mit »ist « sich durch Staken 1a in einem Boot o. Ä. irgendwohin bewegen wir stakten ans Ufer 2 Perfektbildung mit »ist « selten staksen über den Hof staken 3 Perfektbildung mit »hat « landschaftlich mit einer Heugabel o. Ä. aufspießen und irgendwohin befördern
Staken
Sta ken , der Stake |St a ken |
Stakes
Stakes Pluralwort , die |steːks ʃt …englisch steɪks |die Stakes (Plural ) englisch 1 Einsätze bei Pferderennen, die den Pferden die Startberechtigung sichern 2 Pferderennen, die aus Einsätzen bestritten werden
Staket
Sta ket Substantiv, Neutrum , das |Stak e t |germanisch-italienisch-französisch -niederländisch Staketenzaun, Lattenzaun
Stakete
Sta ke te Substantiv, feminin besonders österreichisch , die |Stak e te |[Zaun ]latte
Staketenzaun
Sta ke ten zaun Substantiv, maskulin , der |Stak e tenzaun |
Stakkato
Stak ka to , Stac ca to Substantiv, Neutrum Musik , das Staccato |Stakk a to Stacc a to ʃt … st …ʃt … st …|das Stakkato; Genitiv: des Stakkatos, Plural: die Stakkatos und Stakkati das Staccato; Genitiv: des Staccatos, Plural: die Staccatos und Staccati italienisch staccato musikalischer Vortrag, bei dem die Töne staccato gespielt werden
staksen
stak sen schwaches Verb umgangssprachlich |st a ksen |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »ist « Intensivbildung zu staken 2 sich ungelenk, mit steifen Beinen fortbewegen, irgendwohin bewegen sie staksten über die feuchte Wiese | mit staksenden Schritten
staksig
stak sig Adjektiv umgangssprachlich |st a ksig |ungelenk staksend auf staksigen Beinen, mit staksigen Schritten | sie hat einen etwas staksigen Gang | sie ging staksig hinaus
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
stake
stake /steɪk / (! steakと同音 ) 〖語源は 「刺すもの 」〗名詞 複 ~s /-s /C 1 (境界線 支えなどに用いる )杭 (くい ), 棒 ▸ pull up a stake 杭を抜く ▸ drive wooden stakes into the ground 地面に木の杭を打ち込む 2 〖the ~〗(火刑用の )はりつけ柱 ; 火あぶりの刑 ▸ be burned at the stake 火あぶりの刑に処せられる 3 «…への » 投資 [出資 ](金 ); 関与 , 利害関係 «in » ▸ have [hold ] a 30 \% stake in the company その会社の株の30 \%をもっている ▸ have a stake in the community 地域社会にかかわり合いを持つ 4 〖通例単数形で 〗(特に競馬などの )賭 (か )け (bet ).5 〖通例 ~s 〗賭け金, 元手 ▸ play for high stakes 大金を賭ける ; 一か八かの手段に出る ▸ raise the stakes 賭け金を上げる ; (事態などの )緊急性 [関心度 ]を高める 6 〖~s 〗(競馬などの ) (懸 )賞金, 配当金 ; 〖~s; 主にレース名で 〗ステークス 〘出走馬の馬主が出した金を賞金とするレース 〙.7 〖~s 〗(特定分野での )競争, …争い ▸ be high in the popularity stakes 人気が高い 8 (事業などへの )供与金 [物 ].be at st á ke 1 危険にさらされている ; 賭けられている ▸ Millions of lives are at stake .数百万もの命が失われようとしている 2 問題となっている .g ò to the st á ke ⦅主に英 ⦆ «…について » (どんな目に遭おうが )自らの考え [信念 ]を通す, 自己を貫く «for, over » .pull ù p st á kes ⦅くだけて ⦆転居する ; 仕事をやめる .動詞 ~s /-s /; ~d /-t /; staking 他動詞 1 «…に » 〈金 命 名声など 〉を賭ける «on » ▸ stake one's whole fortune on the horse race 競馬に全財産を賭ける ▸ I'd stake my life on it .それに命を賭けてもいいほどだ ; 絶対にそうだって 2 〈植物など 〉を杭で支える [固定する ](up ); 〈動物 〉を杭につなぐ .3 〈土地など 〉を杭で仕切る [囲む ](out, off ).4 〈権利など 〉を (正式に )主張する (out ).5 ⦅米 くだけて ⦆ «…に対して » 〈人など 〉に (経済的 )支援をする, 援助をする «to » .st à ke A ó ut [ó ut A ]1 ↑他動詞 3 , 4 .2 ⦅くだけて ⦆A 〈場所 容疑者など 〉を見張る ; A 〈警官 〉を張り込ませる (→stakeout ).3 ⦅くだけて ⦆A 〈場所 〉を確保する ; A 〈意見 立場 責任範囲など 〉を明確にする ; A 〈市場など 〉を占有する, 勝ち取る .
stakeholder
st á ke h ò lder 名詞 C 1 賭 (か )け金の預かり人 .2 〘法 〙係争物受寄 (じゆき )者 .3 (事業の )出資者 .~́ ec ò nomy ⦅英 ⦆ステークホルダーエコノミー 〘従業員 取引先 消費者など株主以外の利害関係人の利益に配慮した資本主義 〙.
stakeout
st á ke ò ut 名詞 C ⦅主に米 ⦆警察の張り込み (場所 ).