English-Thai Dictionary
style
N ความนิยม สมัยนิยม แฟชั่น fashion vogue kwam-ni-yom
style
N ความ เก๋ไก๋ ความงดงาม รสนิยม elegance flair smartness taste kwam-kea-kai
style
N รูปแบบ ลีลา ท่าทาง วิธีการ manner method way rub-beab
style
N สำนวน ท่วงทำนอง โวหาร form technique sam-nuan
style
VT ขนานนาม (คำ เป็นทางการ ตั้งชื่อ call entitle name ka-nan-nam
style
VT ทำให้ เป็น รูปแบบ ออกแบบ arrange design fashion shape tam-hai-pen-rub-beab
stylebook
N หนังสือ แบบแผน ใน การ พิมพ์หนังสือ publishing guide nang-sue-beab-pan-nai-kan-pim
stylet
N ลวด หรือ เหล็ก แยง มีด แหลม เล็ก เครื่องมือ ปลาย แหลม เหล็ก ไน
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
STYLE
n.[L., Gr. , a column, a pen or bodkin; from the root of the Teutonic stellen, to set or place. ] 1. Manner of writing with regard to language, or the choice and arrangement of words; as a harsh style; a dry style; a tumid or bombastic style; a loose style; a terse style; a laconic or verbose style; a flowing style; a lofty style; an elegant style; an epistolary style. The character of style depends chiefly on a happy selection and arrangement of words.
Proper words in proper places, make the true definition of style.
Let some lord but own the happy lines, how the wit brightens and the style refines!
2. Manner of speaking appropriate to particular characters; or in general, the character of the language used.
Not style is held for base, where love well named is.
According to the usual style of dedications.
So we say, a person addresses another in a style of haughtiness, in a style or rebuke.
3. Mode of painting; any manner of painting which is characteristic or peculiar.
The ornamental style also possesses its own peculiar merit.
4. A particular character of music; as a grave style.
5. Title; appellation; as the style of majesty.
Propitious hear our prayr, whether the style of Titan please thee more--
6. Course of writing. [Not in use. ]
7. Style of court, is properly the practice observed by any court in its way of proceeding.
8. In popular use, manner; form; as, the entertainment was prepared in excellent style.
9. A pointed instrument formerly used in writing on tables of wax; an instrument of surgery.
1 . Something with a sharp point; a graver; the pin of a dial; written also stile.
11. In botany, the middle portion of the pistil, connecting the stigma with the germ; sometimes called the shaft. The styles of plants are capillary, filiform, cylindric, subulate, or clavate.
12. In chronology, a mode of reckoning time, with regard to the Julian and Gregorian calendar. Style is Old or New. The Old Style follows the Julian manner of computing the months and days, or the calendar as established by Julius Cesar, in which the year consists of 365 days and 6 hours. This is something more than 11 minutes too much, and in the course of time, between Cesar and pope Gregory XIII, this surplus amounted to 11 days. Gregory reformed the calendar by retrenching 11 days; this reformation was adopted by act of parliament in Great Britain in 1751, by which act eleven days in September, 1752 were retrenched, and the 3rd day was reckoned the 14th. This mode of reckoning is called New Style.
STYLE
v.t.To call; to name; to denominate; to give a title to in addressing. The emperor of Russia is styled autocrat; the king of Great Britain is styled defender of the faith.
STYLED
pp. Named; denominated; called.
STYLET
n.[from style. ] A small poniard or dagger.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
STYLE
Style, n. Etym: [OE. stile, F. style, Of. also stile, L. stilus a style or writing instrument, manner or writing, mode of expression; probably for stiglus, meaning, a pricking instrument, and akin to E. stick. See Stick, v. t., and cf. Stiletto. The spelling with y is due to a supposed connection with Gr.
1. An instrument used by the ancients in writing on tablets covered with wax, having one of its ends sharp, and the other blunt, and somewhat expanded, for the purpose of making erasures by smoothing the wax.
2. Hence, anything resembling the ancient style in shape or use. Specifically: -- (a ) A pen; an author's pen. Dryden. (b ) A sharp-pointed tool used in engraving; a graver. (c ) A kind of blunt-pointed surgical instrument. (d ) (Zoöl.) A long, slender, bristlelike process, as the anal styles of insects. (e ) Etym: [Perhaps fr. Gr.
Defn: The pin, or gnomon, of a dial, the shadow of which indicates the hour. See Gnomon. (f ) Etym: [Probably fr. Gr. (Bot. )
Defn: The elongated part of a pistil between the ovary and the stigma. See Illust. of Stamen, and of Pistil.
3. Mode of expressing thought in language, whether oral or written; especially, such use of language in the expression of thought as exhibits the spirit and faculty of an artist; choice or arrangement of words in discourse; rhetorical expression. High style, as when that men to kinges write. Chaucer. Style is the dress of thoughts. Chesterfield. Proper words in proper places make the true definition of style. Swift. It is style alone by which posterity will judge of a great work. I. Disraeli.
4. Mode of presentation, especially in music or any of the fine arts; a characteristic of peculiar mode of developing in idea or accomplishing a result. The ornamental style also possesses its own peculiar merit. Sir J.Reynolds.
5. Conformity to a recognized standard; manner which is deemed elegant and appropriate, especially in social demeanor; fashion. According to the usual style of dedications. C. Middleton.
6. Mode or phrase by which anything is formally designated; the title; the official designation of any important body; mode of address; as, the style of Majesty. One style to a gracious benefactor, another to a proud, insulting foe. Burke.
7. (Chron.)
Defn: A mode of reckoning time, with regard to the Julian and Gregorian calendars.
Note: Style is Old or New. The Old Style follows the Julian manner of computing the months and days, or the calendar as established by Julius Cæsar, in which every fourth year consists of 366 days, and the other years of 365 days. This is about 11 minutes in a year too much. Pope Georgy XIII. reformed the calendar by retrenching 1 days in October, 1582, in order to bring back the vernal equinox to the same day as at the time of the Council of Nice, A.D. 325. This reformation was adopted by act of the British Parliament in 1751, by which act 11 days in September, 1752, were retrenched, and the third day was reckoned the fourteenth. This mode of reckoning is called New Style, according to which every year divisible by 4, unless it is divisible by 1 without being divisible by 4 , has 366 days, and any other year 365 days. Style of court, the practice or manner observed by a court in its proceedings. Ayliffe.
Syn. -- Diction; phraseology; manner; course; title. See Diction.
STYLE
Style, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Styled; p. pr. & vb. n. Styling. ]
Defn: To entitle; to term, name, or call; to denominate. "Styled great conquerors." Milton. How well his worth and brave adventures styled. Dryden.
Syn. -- To call; name; denominate; designate; term; characterize.
STYLET
Sty "let, n. Etym: [F., dim. of style; cf. It. stiletto. See Stiletto. ]
Defn: A small poniard; a stiletto.
2. (Surg.) (a ) An instrument for examining wounds and fistulas, and for passing setons, and the like; a probe, -- called also specillum. (b ) A stiff wire, inserted in catheters or other tubular instruments to maintain their shape and prevent clogging.
3. (Zoöl.)
Defn: Any small, more or less rigid, bristlelike organ; as, the caudal stylets of certain insects; the ventral stylets of certain Infusoria.
New American Oxford Dictionary
style
style |stīl staɪl | ▶noun 1 a manner of doing something: different styles of management. • a way of painting, writing, composing, building, etc. , characteristic of a particular period, place, person, or movement. • a way of using language: he never wrote in a journalistic style | students should pay attention to style and idiom. • [ usu. with negative ] a way of behaving or approaching a situation that is characteristic of or favored by a particular person: backing out isn't my style. • an official or legal title: the partnership traded under the style of Storr and Mortimer. 2 a distinctive appearance, typically determined by the principles according to which something is designed: the pillars are no exception to the general style. • a particular design of clothing. • a way of arranging the hair. 3 elegance and sophistication: a sophisticated nightspot with style and taste. 4 a rodlike object or part, in particular: • archaic term for stylus ( sense 2 ). • Botany (in a flower ) a narrow, typically elongated extension of the ovary, bearing the stigma. • Zoology (in an invertebrate ) a small slender pointed appendage; a stylet. • the gnomon of a sundial. ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 design or make in a particular form: the yacht is well proportioned and conservatively styled. • arrange (hair ) in a particular way: he styled her hair by twisting it up to give it body. 2 [ with obj. and complement ] designate with a particular name, description, or title: the official is styled principal and vice chancellor of the university. PHRASES in style (or in grand style ) in an impressive, grand, or luxurious way. DERIVATIVES style less |ˈstīl (l )is |adjective, style less ness |ˈstīl (l )isnis |noun, styl er noun ORIGIN Middle English (denoting a stylus, also a literary composition, an official title, or a characteristic manner of literary expression ): from Old French stile, from Latin stilus. The verb dates (first sense 2 of the verb ) from the early 16th cent.
style sheet
style sheet |ˈstaɪl ˌʃit | ▶noun Computing a type of template file consisting of font and layout settings to give a standardized look to certain documents.
stylet
sty let |stīˈlet, ˈstīlit ˈstaɪlət | ▶noun 1 Medicine a slender probe. • a wire or piece of plastic run through a catheter or cannula in order to stiffen it or to clear it. 2 Zoology (in an invertebrate ) a small style, esp. a piercing mouthpart of an insect. ORIGIN late 17th cent.: from French stilet, from Italian stiletto (see stiletto ).
Oxford Dictionary
style
style |stʌɪl | ▶noun 1 a particular procedure by which something is done; a manner or way: different styles of management. • a way of painting, writing, composing, building, etc. , characteristic of a particular period, place, person, or movement. • a way of using language: he never wrote in a journalistic style | [ mass noun ] : students should pay attention to style and idiom. • [ usu. with negative ] (one's style ) one's usual way of behaving or approaching situations: backing out isn't my style. • an official or legal title: the partnership traded under the style of Storr and Mortimer. 2 a distinctive appearance, typically determined by the principles according to which something is designed: the pillars are no exception to the general style. • a particular design of clothing. • a way of arranging the hair. 3 [ mass noun ] elegance and sophistication: a sophisticated nightspot with style and taste. 4 Botany (in a flower ) a narrow, typically elongated extension of the ovary, bearing the stigma. 5 Zoology (in an invertebrate ) a small, slender pointed appendage; a stylet. 6 archaic term for stylus ( sense 2 ). ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 design or make in a particular form: the yacht is well proportioned and conservatively styled. • arrange (hair ) in a particular way: he styled her hair by twisting it up to give it body. 2 [ with obj. and complement ] designate with a particular name, description, or title: the official is styled principal and vice chancellor of the university. PHRASES in style (or in grand style ) in an impressive, grand, or luxurious way. DERIVATIVES styleless adjective, stylelessness noun, styler noun ORIGIN Middle English (denoting a stylus, also a literary composition, an official title, or a characteristic manner of literary expression ): from Old French stile, from Latin stilus. The verb dates (first in sense 2 of the verb ) from the early 16th cent.
style sheet
style sheet ▶noun Computing a type of template file consisting of font and layout settings to give a standardized look to certain documents.
stylet
stylet |ˈstʌɪlɪt | ▶noun 1 Medicine a slender probe. • a wire or piece of plastic run through a catheter or cannula in order to stiffen it or to clear it. 2 Zoology (in an invertebrate ) a small style, especially a piercing mouthpart of an insect. ORIGIN late 17th cent.: from French stilet, from Italian stiletto (see stiletto ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
style
style noun 1 differing styles of management: manner, way, technique, method, methodology, approach, system, mode, form, modus operandi; informal MO. 2 a nondirective style of counseling: type, kind, variety, sort, genre, school, brand, pattern, model. 3 wearing clothes with style: flair, stylishness, elegance, grace, gracefulness, poise, polish, suaveness, sophistication, urbanity, chic, dash, panache, elan; informal class, pizzazz. 4 Laura traveled in style: comfort, luxury, elegance, opulence, lavishness. 5 modern styles: fashion, trend, vogue, mode. ▶verb 1 sportswear styled by Karl: design, fashion, tailor. 2 men who were styled “knight ”: call, name, title, entitle, dub, designate, term, label, tag, nickname; formal denominate. WORD NOTE style In the past, a writer's style was thought to reflect that person's character —thus Julius Caesar's masculine authority and decisiveness can be seen in any line of his commentaries on the Gallic Wars. What you read was the verbal expression of the man himself. But a style can also be a disguise or the expression of a secret self. Yeats maintained that to create art one needed to wear a mask. What, after all, is so common as the humorist revealed as sullen and melancholy in real life? Often to write well, an inner daemon must be allowed to break free. We put aside our staid daytime selves for a more swashbuckling or daring, bawdy, or ironic personality in print. Be wary then of drawing conclusions about writers from their diction. Murderers have been known to possess fancy prose styles, and the crisp, no-nonsense sentences of Hemingway are far more stoic and assured than the man who typed them. — MD Conversational, opinionated, and idiomatic, these Word Notes are an opportunity to see a working writer's perspective on a particular word or usage.
Oxford Thesaurus
style
style noun 1 notice the differing styles of these two writers: manner, way, technique, method, methodology, approach, system, mode, form, practice; Latin modus operandi; informal MO. 2 a non-directive style of counselling: type, kind, manner, variety, sort, nature, genre, vein, species, ilk, vintage, school, brand, quality, calibre, kidney; design, pattern, stamp, model, cast, grain; N. Amer. stripe. 3 they wear their clothes with style: flair, stylishness, smartness, elegance, grace, gracefulness, poise, polish, suaveness, sophistication, urbanity, chic, dash, finesse, panache, elan, taste; informal class, pizzazz, ritziness, oomph, zing. 4 Laura travelled in style: comfort, luxury, elegance, chic; affluence, wealth, opulence, lavishness. 5 the groovy styles portrayed in the magazine: fashion, trend, vogue, mode, latest thing; fad, craze, rage. 6 candidates are asked to criticize both the content and style of the novel: phraseology, mode of expression, wording, language. ▶verb 1 winter sportswear styled by Karl and Derrick: design, fashion, tailor, make, produce. 2 by 1300 there were about eighty men styled ‘knight ’: call, name, title, entitle, dub, designate, term, address, label, tag; christen, baptize, nickname; archaic clepe; rare denominate.
Duden Dictionary
Style
Style Substantiv, maskulin Jargon , der |sta͜il |der Style; Genitiv: des Styles, Plural: die Styles englisch style, über das Altfranzösische zu lateinisch stilus, Stil Stil
Styleguide
Style guide Substantiv, maskulin , der |ˈsta͜ilga͜id |aus Style und Guide Leitfaden für Fragen des Stils
stylen
sty len schwaches Verb Jargon |ˈsta͜ilən |schwaches Verb; Perfektbildung mit »hat « englisch to style, zu: style < mittelenglisch stile < altfranzösisch style < lateinisch stilus, Stil 1 das Styling von etwas entwerfen, gestalten eine neue Karosserie stylen | meist im 2. Partizip allzu gestylte Gebrauchsgegenstände 2 zurechtmachen 2 das Model war perfekt gestylt
Style rayonnant
Style ra y on nant, Style ra yon nant Substantiv, maskulin Kunstwissenschaft , der |stilrɛjɔˈnã |der Style rayonnant; Genitiv: des Style rayonnant französisch ; »strahlender Stil «Stilrichtung der französischen Gotik (etwa zur Regierungszeit Ludwigs IX. ), die durch ein reiches Maßwerk gekennzeichnet ist
French Dictionary
style
style n. m. nom masculin 1 Manière d ’exprimer sa pensée. : Le style d ’un écrivain, d ’un peintre. 2 Ensemble des caractéristiques des œuvres d ’art d ’une époque. : Des meubles de style. Note Typographique L ’adjectif qui qualifie le nom style s ’écrit généralement avec une minuscule. Le style baroque, le style corinthien. Les noms d ’époques historiques qui déterminent le mot style s ’écrivent avec une majuscule. Le style Second Empire, le style Renaissance. 3 linguistique Niveau de langue. : Un texte de style soutenu ou littéraire. VOIR niveau de langue . 4 Manière de se comporter. : Le style de vie de la nouvelle génération.
stylé
stylé , ée adj. adjectif Qui accomplit son travail selon les règles. : Un sommelier stylé. Note Orthographique st y lé.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
style
style /staɪl /〖語源は 「先のとがった筆記具 」〗(形 )stylish 名詞 複 ~s /-z /1 C U 様式 , 流儀 , 方法 , やり方 ; 〖修飾語を伴って 〗…風 (ふう ), …流 , …式 ▸ in (a ) modern style 現代風に ▸ a living room furnished in the Japanese style 和風の家具が備え付けられた居間 ▸ the traditional style of paper making 伝統的な製紙法 ▸ American management [teaching ] style 米国流の経営 [教育 ]方法 ▸ It's not my style .それは自分の主義に合わない ▸ As for his foreign policy, I like his style .外交について言えば, 私は彼の政策に賛成だ ▸ be more one's style ⦅話 ⦆(冗談まじりに )より気楽で自分に合っている ▸ in true British [student ] style 典型的なイギリス人 [学生 ]らしく 2 C デザイン , 型 ; C U (服装 髪型などの )流行 (型 )▸ hats in the latest Paris style 最新のパリの流行モデルの帽子 ▸ be in style 流行 [粋 (いき )]である ▸ go [be ] out of style すたれる [すたれている, 流行 (はや )らない ]3 C U 文体 , (独特の )口調 ▸ prose style (s )散文 (体 )▸ literary [colloquial ] style 文語 [口語 ]体 4 C U (芸術 建築などの )様式 ▸ the classical [romantic, baroque ] style 古典 [ロマン, バロック ]様式 ▸ the Gothic [Renaissance ] style of architecture ゴシック [ルネサンス ]様式の建築 5 U (人 場所の )気品 , 優雅さ , 品格 ▸ have style 気品がある 6 C ⦅かたく ⦆称号 , 呼称 , 商号 .7 C とがったもの, (ろう板用 )尖筆 (せんぴつ ), (日時計の )針 .8 C 暦法 .cr à mp A's st ý le ⦅くだけて ⦆〈人 物 事が 〉A 〈人 〉の行動を妨げる, Aがしたいことを妨害する .in st ý le 1 見事に, 見上げた決意を持って ; 派手に, 贅沢 (ぜいたく )に ▸ live in style 派手に暮らす ▸ in great [grand, fine ] style 立派に 2 ↑2 .l ì ke [as ì f ] it's g ò ing out of st ý le ⦅くだけて ⦆思う存分, 好きなだけ .動詞 ~s /-z /; ~d /-d /; styling 他動詞 1 (あるスタイルに )〈服装 家具 髪型など 〉をデザインする ▸ have one's hair styled after one's favorite singer 自分の髪を大好きな歌手のようにカットしてもらう 2 ⦅かたく ⦆〖~ A C 〗A 〈人 〉をCと呼ぶ ; 〖~ oneself C 〗Cと自称する (!Cは 名詞 ) ▸ He styles himself the Savior .彼は自ら救世主と称している ▸ self- styled 自称の st ý ling br ù sh (主に女性用の )ブラシ付きヘアドライヤー .~́ m à nual =stylebook .~́ sh è et 〘コンピュ 〙スタイルシート 〘文書の書式を指定したファイル 〙; (出版社で用いる )書式要項 .
stylebook
st ý le b ò ok 名詞 C 1 ⦅米 ⦆(服の )スタイルブック .2 執筆 [印刷 ]便覧 〘新聞社 放送局 出版社 大学などで, つづり 略字 句読点などの統一基準を示す解説書 〙.