English-Thai Dictionary
thud
N เสียงดัง ตุ้บ dull sound plop noise sing-dang-tub
thud
VT ทำให้เกิด เสียงดัง ตุ้บ tam-hai-koed-sing-dang-tub
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
THUD
Thud, n. Etym: [Cf. AS. a whirlwind, violent wind, or E. thump. ]
Defn: A dull sound without resonance, like that produced by striking with, or striking against, some comparatively soft substance; also, the stroke or blow producing such sound; as, the thrud of a cannon ball striking the earth. At every new thud of the blast, a sob arose. Jeffrey. At intervals there came some tremendous thud on the side of the steamer. C. Mackay.
New American Oxford Dictionary
thud
thud |THəd θəd | ▶noun a dull, heavy sound, such as that made by an object falling to the ground: Jean heard the thud of the closing door. ▶verb ( thuds, thudding , thudded ) [ no obj. ] move, fall, or strike something with a dull, heavy sound: the bullets thudded into the dusty ground. PHRASES with a thud used to describe a sudden and disillusioning reminder of reality in contrast to someone's dreams or aspirations: dropouts have now come back down to earth with a thud. ORIGIN late Middle English (originally Scots ): probably from Old English thyddan ‘to thrust, push ’; related to thoden ‘violent wind. ’ The noun is recorded first denoting a sudden blast or gust of wind, later the sound of a thunderclap, whence a dull, heavy sound. The verb dates from the early 16th cent.
thudding
thud ding |ˈTHədiNG ˈθədɪŋ | ▶noun the action of moving, falling, or striking something with a dull, heavy sound: he heard the hollow thudding of hooves. ▶adjective [ attrib. ] used to emphasize the clumsiness or awkwardness of something, esp. a remark: great thudding conversation-stoppers. DERIVATIVES thud ding ly adverb
Oxford Dictionary
thud
thud |θʌd | ▶noun a dull, heavy sound, such as that made by an object falling to the ground: he hit the floor with a terrific thud. ▶verb ( thuds, thudding, thudded ) [ no obj. ] move, fall, or strike something with a dull, heavy sound: the bullets thudded into the dusty ground | (as noun thudding ) : he heard the hollow thudding of hooves. • (as adj. thudding ) used to emphasize the clumsiness or awkwardness of something: great thudding conversation-stoppers. DERIVATIVES thuddingly adverb ORIGIN late Middle English (originally Scots ): probably from Old English thyddan ‘to thrust, push ’; related to thoden ‘violent wind ’. The noun is recorded first denoting a sudden blast or gust of wind, later the sound of a thunderclap, whence a dull, heavy sound. The verb dates from the early 16th cent.
American Oxford Thesaurus
thud
thud noun & verb it landed with a thud | bullets thudded into the ground: thump, thunk, clunk, clonk, crash, smack, bang; stomp, stamp, clump, clomp; informal wham, whump.
Oxford Thesaurus
thud
thud noun Jean heard the thud of the closing door: thump, clunk, clonk, crash, smash, smack, bang, boom, thunder, wallop; stomp, stamp, clump, clomp; informal wham, whump. ▶verb bullets thudded into the dusty ground: thump, clunk, clonk, crash, smash, smack, bang, thunder; stomp, stamp, clump, clomp; informal wham, whump.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
thud
thud /θʌd /〖擬音語 〗名詞 C 〖通例単数形で 〗ドン [ドサッ ]という音 (!重い物がぶつかったり落ちたりする音; ドスン, バタン, ブスリなど ) .動詞 ~s ; ~ded ; ~ding 自動詞 1 ドンとあたる ; ドサッと落ちる .2 〈心臓が 〉ドキドキする .