English-Thai Dictionary
thole
N หลัก หรือ หมุด ยึด กรรเชียง ที่ กราบ เรือ lak-rue-mud-ti-yud-kan-ching-ti-kab-ruea
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
THOLE
n. 1. A pin inserted into the gunwale of a boat, to keep the oar in the row-lock, when used in rowing.
2. The pin or handle of a sythe-snath.
THOLE
v.t.[L. tollo, tolero.] To bear; to endure; to undergo.
THOLE
v.i.[supra. ] To wait. [Local. ]
THOLE
n.[L. tholus.] The roof of a temple. [Not used or local. ]
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
THOLE
THOLE Thole, n. [Written also thowel, and thowl. ] Etym: [OE. thol, AS. þol;akin to D. dol, Icel. þollr a fir tree, a young fir, a tree, a thole. ]
1. A wooden or metal pin, set in the gunwale of a boat, to serve as a fulcrum for the oar in rowing. Longfellow.
2. The pin, or handle, of a scythe snath. Thole pin. Same as Thole.
THOLE
Thole, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Tholed; p. pr. & vb. n. Tholing.] Etym: [OE. þolen, þolien, AS. þolian; akin to OS. tholon, OHG. dolen, G. geduld patience, dulden to endure, Icel. þola, Sw. tåla, Dan. taale, Goth. þulan, L. tolerate, tulisse, to endure, bear, tollere to lift, bear, Gr. tul to lift. *55. Cf. Tolerate. ]
Defn: To bear; to endure; to undergo. [Obs. or Scot. ] Gower. So much woe as I have with you tholed. Chaucer. To thole the winter's steely dribble. Burns.
THOLE
THOLE Thole, v. i.
Defn: To wait. [Prov. Eng. & Scot. ]
New American Oxford Dictionary
thole
thole |THōl θoʊl | ▶verb [ with obj. ] Scottish or archaic endure (something ) without complaint or resistance; tolerate. ORIGIN Old English tholian, of Germanic origin.
tholeiite
tholeiite |ˈθəʊlɪʌɪt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Geology a basaltic rock containing augite and a calcium-poor pyroxene (pigeonite or hypersthene ), and with a higher silica content than an alkali basalt. DERIVATIVES tholeiitic |ˌθəʊlɪˈɪtɪk |adjective ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Tholei, the name of a village (now Tholey ) in the Saarland, Germany, + -ite 1 .
thole pin
thole pin ▶noun a pin, typically one of a pair, fitted to the gunwale of a rowboat to act as the fulcrum for an oar. ORIGIN Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dol .
Oxford Dictionary
thole
thole 1 |θəʊl |(also thole pin ) ▶noun a pin, typically one of a pair, fitted to the gunwale of a rowing boat and on which an oar pivots. ORIGIN Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dol .
thole
thole 2 |θəʊl | ▶verb [ with obj. ] Scottish or archaic endure (something ) without complaint or resistance; tolerate. ORIGIN Old English tholian, of Germanic origin.
tholeiite
tholeiite |ˈθəʊlɪʌɪt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Geology a basaltic rock containing augite and a calcium-poor pyroxene (pigeonite or hypersthene ), and with a higher silica content than an alkali basalt. DERIVATIVES tholeiitic |ˌθəʊlɪˈɪtɪk |adjective ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Tholei, the name of a village (now Tholey ) in the Saarland, Germany, + -ite 1 .