Logo The Wordsmith Dictionary
Exact matches only Allow stemming Match all embedded
English-Thai Dictionary

thru

ADJ ผ่าน  ทะลุ  ตลอด  pan

 

thru

ADV ผ่าน  ทะลุ  ตลอด  pan

 

thru

PREP ผ่าน  ทะลุ  ตลอด  pan

 

thrum

VT ดีด ดนตรี เบาๆ  did-don-tre-bao-bao

 

thrum on

PHRV เคาะ เล่นๆ  ดีด เล่นๆ  เคาะ เปะปะ บน  kkor-len-len

 

thrummy

A ที่ ทำ ด้วย หัว ด้าย  ที่ มี ลักษณะ ปุย 

 

thrupenny bits

SL นม หรือ หัวนม  nom-rue-hue-nom

 

thrush

N นก ขนาดเล็ก และ มีเสียง ไพเราะ  nok-ka-nad-lek-lea-me-sing-pai-lor

 

thrust

VI ผลัก  ดัน  ยัน  poke push stab pierce plak

 

thrust

VT ผลัก  ดัน  ยัน  poke push stab pierce plak

 

thrust against

PHRV ดัน ตรง ที่  ทิ่ม ไป ที่  dan-trong-ti

 

thrust against / into

PHRV ทุบ  ตี  ต่อย  tub

 

thrust aside

PHRV ผลัก ไป ด้าน ข้าง  ดัน เข้าข้าง  elbow aside push aside shoulder aside plak-pai-dan-kang

 

thrust at

PHRV แทง  ทิ่ม  tang

 

thrust away

PHRV ผลักไส  เสือก  ผลัก อย่างแรง  ดัน อย่างแรง  push back plak-sai

 

thrust back

PHRV ทำให้ ถอยกลับ  push back tam-hai-toi-kab

 

thrust down

PHRV ยัด ลง  ดัน ลง  แหย่ ลง ไป  สอด ลง ไป  force down push down yad-long

 

thrust forward

PHRV ดัน ไป ข้างหน้า  ผลัก ไป ข้างหน้า  press forward push forward dan-pai-kang-na

 

thrust forward

PHRV ทำให้ เด่น  ทำให้ เป็น จุดเด่น  push forward push oneself tam-hai-den

 

thrust from

PHRV ดัน ออกจาก  ผลัก ออกจาก  dan-ook-jak

 

thrust home

PHRV เข้า โจมตี  จู่โจม  press home push home kao-jom-te

 

thrust in

PHRV แทง (บางสิ่ง  เข้าไป  ทิ่ม (บางสิ่ง )เข้าไป  plunge in press in push in tang-kao-pai

 

thrust into

PHRV กระตุ้น หรือ ผลักดัน ให้ เข้าสู่  push into kra-tuan-rue-plak-dan-hai-kao-su

 

thrust into

PHRV แทง  ทิ่ม (บางสิ่ง  เข้าไป  fit into plunge in tang-tim-kao-pai

 

thrust on

PHRV บังคับ ให้ ยอมรับ  ผลัก ภาระ ให้  bang-kab-hai-yom-rab

 

thrust something down someone's throat

IDM บังคับ ให้ ยอมรับ  เชื่อ  force down push down bang-kab-hai-yom-rab

 

thrust through

PHRV แหวก (ทางผ่าน  weak

 

thrust towards

PHRV ผลัก  ดัน ไป ทาง  push at push towards plak-dan-pai-tang

 

thrust upon

PHRV บังคับ ให้ ยอมรับ  ผลัก ภาระ ให้  bang-kab-hai-yom-rab

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

THRUM

n.[Gr. a fragment; to break. ] The ends of weaver's threads. 1. Any coarse yarn.
2. Thrums, among gardeners, the thread-like internal bushy parts of flowers; the stamens.

 

THRUM

v.i.To play coarsely on an instrument with the fingers.

 

THRUM

v.t.To weave; to know; to twist; to fringe. 1. Among seamen, to insert short pieces of rope-yard or spun yard in a sail or mat.

 

THRUSH

n. 1. A bird, a species of Turdus, the largest of the genus; the Turdus viscivorus or missel-bird.
2. An affection of the inflammatory and suppurating kind, in the feet of the horse and some other animals. In the horse it is in the frog.
3. In medicine, (L. apthoe,) ulcers in the mouth and fauces.

 

THRUST

v.t.pret. and pp. thrust. [L. trudo, trusum, trusito.] 1. To push or drive with force; as, to thrust any thing with the hand or foot, or with an instrument.
Neither shall one thrust another. Joel 2:8; John 2 :25.
2. To drive; to force; to impel.
To thrust away or from, to push away; to reject. Acts 7:27.
To thrust in, to push or drive in.
Thrust in thy sickle and reap. Revelation 14:15.
To thrust on, to impel; to urge.
To thrust off, to push away.
To thrust through, to pierce; to stab. Numbers 25:8; 2 Samuel 18:14.
To thrust out, to drive out or away; to expel. Exodus 12:39.
To thrust one's self, to obtrude; to intrude; to enter where one is not invited or not welcome.
To thrust together, to compress.

 

THRUST

v.i.To make a push; to attack with a pointed weapon; as, a fencer thrusts at his antagonist. 1. To enter by pushing; to squeeze in.
And thrust between my father and the god.
2. To intrude.
3. To push forward; to come with force; to press on.
Young, old, thrust there
In mighty concourse.

 

THRUST

n.A violent push or driving, as with a pointed weapon, or with the hand or foot, or with any instrument; a word much used in fencing. Polites Pyrrhus with his lance pursues,
And often reaches, and his thrusts renews.
1. Attack; assault.
There is one thrust at your pure, pretended mechanism.
[Note. Push and shove do not exactly express the sense of thrust. The two former imply the application of force by one body already in contact with the body to be impelled. Thrust on the contrary, often implies the impulse or application of force by a moving body, a body in motion before it reaches the body to be impelled. This distinction does not extend to every case. ]

 

THRUSTER

n.One who thrusts or stabs.

 

THRUSTING

ppr. Pushing with force; driving; impelling; pressing.

 

THRUSTING

n.The act of pushing with force. 1. In dairies, the act of squeezing curd with the hand, to expel the whey. [Local. ]

 

THRUSTINGS

n.In cheese-making, the white whey, or that which is last pressed out of the curd by the hand, and of which butter is sometimes made. [The application of this word to cheese-making, is, I believe, entirely unknown in New England. ]

 

THRUSTING-SCREW

n.A screw for pressing curd in cheese-making. [Local. ]

 

THRUSTLE

n.The thrust. [See Throstle. ]

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

THRU

THRU Thru, prep. , adv. & a.

 

Defn: Through. [Ref. spelling. ]

 

THRUM

Thrum, n. Etym: [OE. thrum, throm; akin to OD. drom, D. dreum, G.trumm, lump, end, fragment, OHG. drum end, Icel. edge, brim, and L. terminus a limit, term. Cf. Term. ] [Written also thrumb.]

 

1. One of the ends of weaver's threads; hence, any soft, short threads or tufts resembling these.

 

2. Any coarse yarn; an unraveled strand of rope.

 

3. (Bot. )

 

Defn: A threadlike part of a flower; a stamen.

 

4. (Mining )

 

Defn: A shove out of place; a small displacement or fault along a seam.

 

5. (Naut. )

 

Defn: A mat made of canvas and tufts of yarn. Thrum cap, a knitted cap. Halliwell. -- Thrum hat, a hat made of coarse woolen cloth. Minsheu.

 

THRUM

Thrum, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Thrummed; p. pr. & vb. n. Thrumming.]

 

1. To furnish with thrums; to insert tufts in; to fringe. Are we born to thrum caps or pick straw Quarles.

 

2. (Naut. )

 

Defn: To insert short pieces of rope-yarn or spun yarn in; as, to thrum a piece of canvas, or a mat, thus making a rough or tufted surface. Totten.

 

THRUM

Thrum, v. i. Etym: [CF. Icel. to rattle, to thunder, and E. drum. ]

 

1. To play rudely or monotonously on a stringed instrument with the fingers; to strum.

 

2. Hence, to make a monotonous drumming noise; as, to thrum on a table.

 

THRUM

THRUM Thrum, v. t.

 

1. To play, as a stringed instrument, in a rude or monotonous manner.

 

2. Hence, to drum on; to strike in a monotonous manner; to thrum the table.

 

THRUM-EYED

THRUM-EYED Thrum "-eyed `, a. (Bot. )

 

Defn: Having the anthers raised above the stigma, and visible at the throat of the corolla, as in long-stamened primroses; -- the reverse of pin-eyed.

 

THRUMMY

THRUMMY Thrum "my, a.

 

Defn: Like thrums; made of, furnished with, or characterized by, thrums. Dampier. On her head thrummy cap she had. Chalkhill.

 

THRUMWORT

THRUMWORT Thrum "wort `, n. (Bot. )

 

Defn: A kind of amaranth (Amarantus caudatus ). Dr. Prior.

 

THRUOUT

THRUOUT Thru *out ".

 

Defn: Throughout. [Ref. spelling. ]

 

THRUSH

Thrush, n. Etym: [OE. þrusche, AS. þrysce; akin to OHG. drosca,droscea, droscela, and E. throstle. Cf. Throstle. ]

 

1. (Zoöl.)

 

Defn: Any one of numerous species of singing birds belonging to Turdus and allied genera. They are noted for the sweetness of their songs.

 

Note: Among the best-known European species are the song thrush or throstle (Turdus musicus ), the missel thrush (see under Missel ), the European redwing, and the blackbird. The most important American species are the wood thrush (Turdus mustelinus ), Wilson's thrush (T.fuscescens ), the hermit thrush (see under Hermit ), Swainson's thrush (T. Aliciæ ), and the migratory thrush, or American robin (see Robin ).

 

2. (Zoöl.)

 

Defn: Any one of numerous species of singing birds more or less resembling the true thrushes in appearance or habits; as the thunderbird and the American brown thrush (or thrasher ). See Brown thrush. Ant thrush. See Ant thrush, Breve, and Pitta. -- Babbling thrush, any one of numerous species of Asiatic timaline birds; -- called also babbler. -- Fruit thrush, any species of bulbul. -- Shrike thrush. See under Shrike. -- Stone thrush, the missel thrush; -- said to be so called from its marbled breast. -- Thrush nightingale. See Nightingale, 2. -- Thrush tit, any one of several species of Asiatic singing birds of the genus Cochoa. They are beautifully colored birds allied to the tits, but resembling thrushes in size and habits. -- Water thrush. (a ) The European dipper. (b ) An American warbler (Seiurus Noveboracensis ).

 

THRUSH

Thrush, n. Etym: [Akin to Dan. tröske, Sw. trosk; cf. Dan. tör dry, Sw. torr, Icel., AS. , OE. thrust thrist, E. thrist. ]

 

1. (Med. )

 

Defn: An affection of the mouth, fauces, etc. , common in newly born children, characterized by minute ulcers called aphthæ. See Aphthæ.

 

2. (Far. )

 

Defn: An inflammatory and suppurative affection of the feet in certain animals. In the horse it is in the frog.

 

THRUSHEL

THRUSHEL Thrush "el, n.

 

Defn: The song thrush. [Prov. Eng. ]

 

THRUSHER

THRUSHER Thrush "er, n.

 

Defn: The song thrush. [Prov. Eng. ]

 

THRUST

THRUST Thrust, n. & v.

 

Defn: Thrist. [Obs. ] Spenser.

 

THRUST

Thrust, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Thrust; p. pr. & vb. n. Thrusting. ] Etym: [OE. ,,, Icel. to thrust, press, force, compel; perhaps akin to E. threat. ]

 

1. To push or drive with force; to drive, force, or impel; to shove; as, to thrust anything with the hand or foot, or with an instrument. Into a dungeon thrust, to work with slaves. Milton.

 

2. To stab; to pierce; -- usually with through. To thrust away or from, to push away; to reject. -- To thrust in, to push or drive in. -- To thrust off, to push away. -- To thrust on, to impel; to urge. -- To thrust one's self in or into, to obtrude upon, to intrude, as into a room; to enter (a place ) where one is not invited or not welcome. -- To thrust out, to drive out or away; to expel. -- To thrust through, to pierce; to stab. "I am eight times thrust through the doublet. " Shak. -- To thrust together, to compress.

 

THRUST

THRUST Thrust, v. i.

 

1. To make a push; to attack with a pointed weapon; as, a fencer thrusts at his antagonist.

 

2. To enter by pushing; to squeeze in. And thrust between my father and the god. Dryden.

 

3. To push forward; to come with force; to press on; to intrude. "Young, old, thrust there in mighty concourse. " Chapman. To thrust to, to rush upon. [Obs. ] As doth an eager hound Thrust to an hind within some covert glade. Spenser.

 

THRUST

THRUST Thrust, n.

 

1. A violent push or driving, as with a pointed weapon moved in the direction of its length, or with the hand or foot, or with any instrument; a stab; -- a word much used as a term of fencing. [Polites ] Pyrrhus with his lance pursues, And often reaches, and his thrusts renews. Dryden.

 

2. An attack; an assault. One thrust at your pure, pretended mechanism. Dr. H. More.

 

3. (Mech. )

 

Defn: The force or pressure of one part of a construction against other parts; especially (Arch. ), a horizontal or diagonal outward pressure, as of an arch against its abutments, or of rafters against the wall which support them.

 

4. (Mining )

 

Defn: The breaking down of the roof of a gallery under its superincumbent weight. Thrust bearing (Screw Steamers ), a bearing arranged to receive the thrust or endwise pressure of the screw shaft. -- Thrust plane (Geol.), the surface along which dislocation has taken place in the case of a reversed fault.

 

Syn. -- Push; shove; assault; attack. Thrust, Push, Shove. Push and shove usually imply the application of force by a body already in contact with the body to be impelled. Thrust, often, but not always, implies the impulse or application of force by a body which is in motion before it reaches the body to be impelled.

 

THRUSTER

THRUSTER Thrust "er, n.

 

Defn: One who thrusts or stabs.

 

THRUSTING

THRUSTING Thrust "ing, n.

 

1. The act of pushing with force.

 

2. (Dairies ) (a ) The act of squeezing curd with the hand, to expel the whey. (b ) pl.

 

Defn: The white whey, or that which is last pressed out of the curd by the hand, and of which butter is sometimes made. [Written also thrutchthings.] [Prov. Eng. ] Thrusting screw, the screw of a screw press, as for pressing curd in making cheese. [R.]

 

THRUSTLE

THRUSTLE Thrus "tle, n. (Zoöl.)

 

Defn: The throstle, or song thrust. [Obs. or Prov. Eng. ] When he heard the thrustel sing. Chaucer.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

thru

thru |THro͞o θru | preposition, adverb, & adjective informal spelling of through.

 

thrum

thrum 1 |THrəm θrəm | verb ( thrums, thrumming, thrummed ) [ no obj. ] make a continuous rhythmic humming sound: the boat's huge engines thrummed in his ears. [ with obj. ] strum (the strings of a musical instrument ) in a rhythmic way. noun [ usu. in sing. ] a continuous rhythmic humming sound: the steady thrum of rain on the windows. ORIGIN late 16th cent. (as a verb ): imitative.

 

thrum

thrum 2 |θrəm THrəm | noun (in weaving ) an unwoven end of a warp thread, or a fringe of such ends, left in the loom when the finished cloth is cut away. any short loose thread. verb ( thrums, thrumming, thrummed ) [ with obj. ] cover or adorn (cloth or clothing ) with ends of thread. DERIVATIVES thrum mer noun, thrum my adjective ORIGIN Old English thrum (only in tungethrum ligament of the tongue ): of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dreum thrum and German Trumm endpiece. The current sense dates from Middle English.

 

thrush

thrush 1 |THrəSH θrəʃ | noun a small or medium-sized songbird, typically having a brown back, spotted breast, and loud song. [Subfamily Turdinae (the thrush subfamily ), family Muscicapidae: many genera, in particular Turdus, and numerous species. The thrush subfamily includes the chats, robins, bluebirds, blackbirds, nightingales, redstarts, and wheatears. ] ORIGIN Old English thrysce, of Germanic origin; related to throstle .

 

thrush

thrush 2 |θrəʃ THrəSH | noun 1 infection of the mouth and throat by a yeastlike fungus, causing whitish patches. Also called candidiasis. [The fungus belongs to the genus Candida, subdivision Deuteromycotina, in particular C. albicans. ] infection of the female genitals with the same fungus. 2 a chronic condition affecting the frog of a horse's foot, causing the accumulation of a dark, foul-smelling substance. Also called canker. ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: origin uncertain; sense 1 possibly related to Swedish torsk and Danish troske; sense 2 perhaps from dialect frush in the same sense, perhaps from Old French fourchette frog of a horse's hoof.

 

thrush nightingale

thrush night |in ¦gale noun a songbird that is closely related to the nightingale and which replaces it in eastern Europe, the Baltic, and western Asia. Also called sprosser. Luscinia luscinia, family Turdidae.

 

thrust

thrust |THrəst θrəst | verb ( thrusts, thrusting; past and past participle thrust ) [ with obj. ] push (something or someone ) suddenly or violently in the specified direction: she thrust her hands into her pockets | figurative : Howard was thrust into the limelight | [ no obj. ] : he thrust at his opponent with his sword. [ no obj. ] (of a person ) move or advance forcibly: she thrust through the bramble canes | he tried to thrust his way past her. [ no obj. ] (of a thing ) extend so as to project conspicuously: beside the boathouse a jetty thrust out into the water. (thrust something on /upon ) force (someone ) to accept or deal with something: he felt that fame had been thrust upon him. noun 1 a sudden or violent lunge with a pointed weapon or a bodily part: he drove the blade upward with one powerful thrust. a forceful attack or effort: executives led a new thrust in business development. [ in sing. ] the principal purpose or theme of a course of action or line of reasoning: anti-Americanism became the main thrust of their policy. 2 the propulsive force of a jet or rocket engine. the lateral pressure exerted by an arch or other support in a building. 3 (also thrust fault ) Geology a reverse fault of low angle, with older strata displaced horizontally over younger. PHRASES cut and thrust see cut. ORIGIN Middle English (as a verb ): from Old Norse thrýsta; perhaps related to Latin trudere to thrust. The noun is first recorded (early 16th cent. ) in the sense act of pressing.

 

thrust bearing

thrust bear |ing noun a bearing designed to take a load in the direction of the axis of a shaft, especially one transmitting the thrust of a propeller shaft to the hull of a ship.

 

thrust block

thrust block noun a casting or frame carrying or containing the bearings on which the collars of a propeller shaft press.

 

thruster

thrust er |ˈTHrəstər ˈθrəstər | noun a person or thing that thrusts, in particular: a small rocket engine on a spacecraft, used to make alterations in its flight path or altitude. a secondary jet or propeller on a ship or offshore rig, used for accurate maneuvering and maintenance of position.

 

thrusting

thrust ing |ˈTHrəstiNG θrəstɪŋ | noun the motion of pushing or lunging suddenly or violently. Geology the pushing upward of the earth's crust.

 

thrust reverser

thrust re |verser noun Aeronautics a device for reversing the flow of gas from a jet engine so as to produce a retarding backward force.

 

thrust slice

thrust slice noun Geology a relatively thin, broad mass of rock situated between two approximately parallel thrust faults.

 

thrust stage

thrust stage noun a stage that extends into the auditorium so that the audience is seated around three sides.

 

thrutch

thrutch |θrʌtʃ | noun N. English a narrow gorge or ravine. verb [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] chiefly Mountaineering push, press, or squeeze into a space. ORIGIN Old English (as a verb ), of West Germanic origin.

 

thruway

thru way |ˈTHro͞oˌwā ˈθruˌweɪ |(also throughway ) noun a major road or highway.

 

Oxford Dictionary

thru

thru preposition, adverb, & adjective chiefly N. Amer. informal spelling of through.

 

thrum

thrum 1 |θrʌm | verb ( thrums, thrumming, thrummed ) [ no obj. ] make a continuous rhythmic humming sound: the boat's huge engines thrummed in his ears. [ with obj. ] strum (the strings of a musical instrument ) in a rhythmic way. noun [ usu. in sing. ] a continuous rhythmic humming sound: the steady thrum of rain on the windows. ORIGIN late 16th cent. (as a verb ): imitative.

 

thrum

thrum 2 |θrʌm | noun (in weaving ) an unwoven end of a warp thread, or a fringe of such ends, left in the loom when the finished cloth is cut away. any short loose thread. verb ( thrums, thrumming, thrummed ) [ with obj. ] cover or adorn (cloth or clothing ) with ends of thread. ORIGIN Old English thrum (only in tungethrum ligament of the tongue ): of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dreum thrum and German Trumm end piece . The current sense dates from Middle English.

 

thrush

thrush 1 |θrʌʃ | noun a small or medium-sized songbird, typically having a brown back, spotted breast, and loud song. Family Turdidae (the thrush family ): many genera, in particular Turdus, and numerous species. The thrush family also includes the chats, robins, blackbirds, nightingales, redstarts, and wheatears. ORIGIN Old English thrysce, of Germanic origin; related to throstle .

 

thrush

thrush 2 |θrʌʃ | noun [ mass noun ] 1 infection of the mouth and throat by a yeast-like fungus, causing whitish patches. Also called candidiasis. The fungus belongs to the genus Candida, subdivision Deuteromycotina, in particular C. albicans. infection of the genitals with the same fungus. 2 a chronic condition affecting the frog of a horse's foot, causing the accumulation of a dark, foul-smelling substance. Also called canker. ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: origin uncertain; sense 1 possibly related to Swedish torsk and Danish troske; sense 2 perhaps from dialect frush in the same sense, perhaps from Old French fourchette frog of a horse's hoof .

 

thrush nightingale

thrush night |in ¦gale noun a songbird that is closely related to the nightingale and which replaces it in eastern Europe, the Baltic, and western Asia. Also called sprosser. Luscinia luscinia, family Turdidae.

 

thrust

thrust |θrʌst | verb ( thrusts, thrusting; past and past participle thrust ) [ with obj. and adverbial of direction ] push suddenly or violently in a specified direction: she thrust her hands into her pockets | figurative : Howard was thrust into the limelight | [ no obj. ] : he thrust at his opponent with his sword. [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] move or advance forcibly: she thrust through the bramble canes | he tried to thrust his way past her. [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] extend so as to project conspicuously: beside the boathouse a jetty thrust out into the water. (thrust something on /upon ) force (someone ) to accept or deal with something: he felt that fame had been thrust upon him. noun 1 a sudden or violent lunge with a pointed weapon or a bodily part: he drove the blade upwards with one powerful thrust. a forceful attack or effort: executives led a new thrust in business development. [ in sing. ] the principal purpose or theme of a course of action or line of reasoning: anti-Americanism became the main thrust of their policy. 2 [ mass noun ] the propulsive force of a jet or rocket engine. the lateral pressure exerted by an arch or other support in a building. 3 (also thrust fault ) Geology a reverse fault of low angle, with older strata displaced horizontally over newer. ORIGIN Middle English (as a verb ): from Old Norse thrýsta; perhaps related to Latin trudere to thrust . The noun is first recorded (early 16th cent. ) in the sense act of pressing .

 

thrust bearing

thrust bear |ing noun a bearing designed to take a load in the direction of the axis of a shaft, especially one transmitting the thrust of a propeller shaft to the hull of a ship.

 

thrust block

thrust block noun a casting or frame carrying or containing the bearings on which the collars of a propeller shaft press.

 

thruster

thrust ¦er |ˈθrʌstə | noun a person or thing that thrusts. a small rocket engine on a spacecraft, used to make alterations in its flight path or altitude. a secondary jet or propeller on a ship or offshore rig, used for accurate manoeuvring and maintenance of position. a surfboard or sailboard capable of increased speed and manoeuvrability.

 

thrusting

thrust ing |ˈTHrəstiNG θrəstɪŋ | noun the motion of pushing or lunging suddenly or violently. Geology the pushing upward of the earth's crust.

 

thrusting

thrusting |ˈθrʌstɪŋ | adjective 1 aggressively ambitious: thrusting entrepreneurs. 2 (of an object or part of the body ) projecting in a conspicuous way: a thrusting jaw.

 

thrust reverser

thrust re |verser noun Aeronautics a device for reversing the flow of gas from a jet engine so as to produce a retarding backward force.

 

thrust slice

thrust slice noun Geology a relatively thin, broad mass of rock situated between two approximately parallel thrust faults.

 

thrust stage

thrust stage noun a stage that extends into the auditorium so that the audience is seated around three sides.

 

thrutch

thrutch |θrʌtʃ | noun N. English a narrow gorge or ravine. verb [ no obj., with adverbial of direction ] chiefly Mountaineering push, press, or squeeze into a space. ORIGIN Old English (as a verb ), of West Germanic origin.

 

thruway

thru way |ˈTHro͞oˌwā ˈθruˌweɪ |(also throughway ) noun a major road or highway.

 

thruway

thru |way noun N. Amer. informal spelling of throughway.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

thrust

thrust verb 1 she thrust her hands into her pockets: shove, push, force, plunge, stick, drive, propel, ram, poke, jam. 2 fame had been thrust on him: force, foist, impose, inflict. 3 he thrust his way past her: push, shove, force, elbow, shoulder, barge, bulldoze. noun 1 a hard thrust: shove, push, lunge, poke. 2 a thrust led by Canadian forces: advance, push, drive, attack, assault, onslaught, offensive, charge, sortie, foray, raid, sally, invasion, incursion. 3 only one engine is producing thrust: force, propulsive force, propulsion, power, impetus, momentum. 4 the thrust of the speech: gist, substance, drift, burden, meaning, sense, theme, message, import, tenor.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

thrust

thrust verb 1 she thrust her hands into her pockets | he tried to thrust his way past her: shove, push, propel, impel; send, press, drive, plunge, stick, force, shoot, ram, barge, bump, knock, strike, hit, jolt, butt, prod, poke, nudge, elbow, shoulder; bulldoze, sweep, jostle, bundle, hustle, hurry, rush, manhandle. 2 he felt that fame had been thrust upon him: impose, force, foist, push, unload, inflict, obtrude, press, urge; (thrust something on someone ) saddle someone with, land someone with, burden someone with, lumber someone with. noun 1 he gave the gate a hard thrust: shove, push, ram, prod, poke, stab, jab, lunge, drive, barge, bump, bang, jolt, butt, knock, nudge. 2 a sudden armoured thrust into the city: advance, push, drive, charge, attack, assault, onslaught, onrush, offensive, sortie, foray, raid, sally, invasion, incursion, blitz, campaign; archaic onset. 3 he countered this verbal attack with some choice thrusts of his own: barbed remark, verbal attack /assault, barb, hostile remark, insult; criticism, censure, vitriol. 4 only one engine is producing thrust: force, motive force, propulsive force, propulsion, drive, driving force, actuation, impetus, impulse, impulsion, momentum, push, pressure, power. 5 they failed to grasp the thrust of the speech: gist, substance, drift, implication, intention, burden, meaning, significance, signification, sense, essence, thesis, import, purport, tenor, message, spirit.

 

thrusting

thrusting adjective a thrusting young salesman: aggressive, ambitious, assertive, pushy, pushing, insistent, forceful, forward, energetic, determined, obtrusive, bold, brash; bumptious, presumptuous, full of oneself, self-assertive, overbearing, domineering, cocksure, loud, obnoxious; informal full of get-up-and-go; rare pushful. ANTONYMS meek, unambitious.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

thru

thru /θruː /⦅米 くだけて ⦆through (!発音つづり ) .

 

thrum

thrum /θrʌm /動詞 s ; med ; ming 自動詞 1 機械 エンジンなどが 〉ゴトゴトと (低い )音を立てる .2 strum .3 «…を » (指で )コツコツとたたく «on » .他動詞 1 〈機械など 〉をゴトゴトと鳴らす .2 まれ ギター 〉をかき鳴らす .名詞 C 1 ゴトゴトという音 .2 つまびくこと [音 ]; 指でコツコツたたくこと [音 ].

 

thrush

thrush 1 /θrʌʃ /名詞 C 〘鳥 〙ツグミ 〘ツグミ科の鳴鳥の総称; 胸部に斑点 はんてん があり背は茶色 〙.

 

thrush

thrush 2 名詞 U 〘医 〙口腔 こうこう カンジダ症, 鵝口瘡 がこうそう ; ちつ カンジダ症 .

 

thrust

thrust /θrʌst /動詞 s /-ts /; ; ing 他動詞 1 a. A +副詞 〈人が 〉A 〈人 物 〉をぐっと押す , 押しつける ; A 〈手など 〉を突っ込む (!副詞 は方向の表現 ) He thrust the newspaper into my hand [at me ].彼は私の手 [私 ]に新聞を押しつけた thrust one's hands into the pockets ポケットに両手を突っ込む thrust a man aside 人をわきへ押しのける b. 〈手 足など 〉を突き出す (out ), 〈体 枝など 〉を伸ばす (up )thrust out one's hand 手をぐいと突き出す 2 〈人が 〉【人に 】仕事 責任など 〉を押しつける «on , upon » ; «…を » 〈人 〉に強いる «into » thrust the job on him 彼にその仕事を押しつける ▸ I was thrust into command .私が指揮をとるはめになった 3 oneself «…に » 割り込む «in , into » ; 出しゃばる (forward ); «…に » 干渉する «in , into » She tends to thrust herself forward .彼女は出しゃばりがちだ 4 one's way 副詞 〈人が 〉ぐいっと進む (!副詞 は方向の表現 ) thrust one's way through the crowd 群衆を押しのけて進む 5 ⦅古 ⦆〈人が 〉【人の体などに 】〈ナイフなど 〉を突き刺す «into , in » ; 【ナイフなどで 】〈人の体など 〉を刺す «with » .自動詞 1 〈人が 〉押す, 突く ; 刺す ; 〈人が 〉【人などに /武器などで 】突きかかる «at /with » She thrust at the man with the knife. (≒She thrust the knife at the man. )彼女はその男にナイフで突きかかった 2 ⦅文 ⦆〈物が 〉突き出る ; 〈植物が 〉 (成長して )突き出る, 広がる ▸ Fingers of the sun are thrusting through the clouds .細長い太陽の光が雲間から突き出ている 3 «…を » 突き進む, 押し分けて進む (forward ) «through » .thr st A as de [as de A ]1 他動詞 1 a .2 A 〈不満 意見など 〉を却下する .名詞 1 C ぐっと押すこと , 押し ; 強く突き刺すこと , 突き the thrust of a kitchen knife 包丁での一突き 2 U the 要点, 主眼, 主旨 the (main ) thrust of the speech 演説の主旨 3 U 前進, 推進 .4 U C 〘機 〙(飛行機などの )推進力, 推力 ;〘 地 〙衝上 (しようじよう )断層 ;〘 建 〙推力 〘アーチの両端にかかる力 〙.5 U C 猛攻, 襲撃 ; « …に対する » 厳しい批判 «at , against » .

 

thruway

thru way /θrúːwèɪ /名詞 s ⦅米 ⦆expressway .