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English-Thai Dictionary

vamp

N หญิง ที่ ล่อลวง ชาย ด้วย เสน่ห์ (คำ โบรา ณ  coquette enchantress siren ying-ti-lo-luang-chai-duai-sa-ne

 

vamp

N หนัง รองเท้า ตอน บน (เช่น  รองเท้า บูต  nang-rong-tao-ton-bon

 

vamp

VI ปะ ด้วย หนัง รองเท้า  ปะติดปะต่อ  ซ่อมแซม  fix mend pa-duai-nang-rong-tao

 

vamp up

PHRV ซ่อมแซม  som-saem

 

vamp up

PHRV ปะติดปะต่อ  ประดิษฐ์ จาก สิ่ง เล็กๆ  pa-tid-pa-to

 

vamper

N การ ปะ ด้วย หนัง รองเท้า  การ ปะติดปะต่อ  การซ่อมแซม  kan-pa-duai-nang-rong-tao

 

vampire

N คำ เรียก สั้นๆ  ของ  vampire bat kam-riak-san-san-kong-vampire bat

 

vampire

N ผี ดูด เลือด  ผี ดูด เลือด มนุษย์  dracula ghoul zombie pi-dud-luead

 

vampire bat

N ค้างคาว ดูด เลือด  kang-kao-dud-luead

 

vampiric

ADJ เกี่ยวกับ  vampire kiao-kab-vampire

 

vampirical

ADJ เกี่ยวกับ  vampire kiao-kab-vampire

 

vampirish

ADJ เกี่ยวกับ  vampire kiao-kab-vampire

 

vampirism

N ความ เชื่อเรื่อง ผี ดูด เลือด คน  การ ดูด เลือด คน เป็น อาหาร 

 

vampish

ADJ ซึ่ง ลวง ด้วย เสน่ห์  sueng-luang-duai-sa-ne

 

vampishly

ADV อย่าง ลวง ด้วย เสน่ห์  yang-luang-duai-sa-ne

 

vampy

ADJ ซึ่ง ลวง ด้วย เสน่ห์  sueng-luang-duai-sa-ne

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

VAMP

n.The upper leather of a shoe.

 

VAMP

v.t.To piece an old thing with a new part; to repair. I had never much hopes of your vamped play.

 

VAMPED

pp. Pieced; repaired.

 

VAMPER

n.One who pieces an old thing with something new.

 

VAMPING

ppr. Piecing with something new.

 

VAMPIRE

n. 1. In mythology, an imaginary demon, which was fabled to suck the blood of persons during the night.
2. In zoology, a species of large bat, the Vespertilio vampyrus of Linne, called also the ternate bat. It inhabits Guinea, Madagascar, the East India Isles, New Holland and New Caledonia. These animals fly in flocks, darkening the air by their numbers. It is said that this bat will insinuate his tongue into the vein of an animal imperceptibly, and suck his blood while asleep. This name is also given by Buffon to a species of large bat in South America, the V. spectrum of Linne.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

VAMP

VAMP Vamp v. i.

 

Defn: To advance; to travel. [Obs. ]

 

VAMP

Vamp, n. Etym: [OE. vampe, vaumpe, vauntpe, F. avantpied the forefoot, vamp; anat before, fore + pied foot, L. pes. See Advance, Van of an army, and Foot. ]

 

1. The part of a boot or shoe above the sole and welt, and in front of the ankle seam; an upper.

 

2. Any piece added to an old thing to give it a new appearance. See Vamp, v. t.

 

VAMP

Vamp, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Vamped; p. pr. & vb. n. Vamping. ]

 

Defn: To provide, as a shoe, with new upper leather; hence, to piece, as any old thing, with a new part; to repair; to patch; -- often followed by up. I had never much hopes of your vamped play. Swift.

 

VAMPER

VAMPER Vamp "er, n.

 

Defn: One who vamps; one who pieces an old thing with something new; a cobbler.

 

VAMPER

Vamp "er, v. i. Etym: [Cf. Vaunt. ]

 

Defn: To swagger; to make an ostentatious show. [Prov. eng. & Scot. ] Jamieson.

 

VAMPIRE

Vam "pire, n. Etym: [F. vampire (cf. It. vampiro, G. & D. vampir ), fr. Servian vampir. ] [Written also vampyre.]

 

1. A blood-sucking ghost; a soul of a dead person superstitiously believed to come from the grave and wander about by night sucking the blood of persons asleep, thus causing their death. This superstition is now prevalent in parts of Eastern Europe, and was especially current in Hungary about the year 173 . The persons who turn vampires are generally wizards, witches, suicides, and persons who have come to a violent end, or have been cursed by their parents or by the church, Encyc. Brit.

 

2. Fig. : One who lives by preying on others; an extortioner; a bloodsucker.

 

3. (Zoöl.)

 

Defn: Either one of two or more species of South American blood- sucking bats belonging to the genera Desmodus and Diphylla. These bats are destitute of molar teeth, but have strong, sharp cutting incisors with which they make punctured wounds from which they suck the blood of horses, cattle, and other animals, as well as man, chiefly during sleep. They have a cæcal appendage to the stomach, in which the blood with which they gorge themselves is stored.

 

4. (Zoöl.)

 

Defn: Any one of several species of harmless tropical American bats of the genus Vampyrus, especially V. spectrum. These bats feed upon insects and fruit, but were formerly erroneously supposed to suck the blood of man and animals. Called also false vampire. Vampire bat (Zoöl.), a vampire, 3.

 

VAMPIRISM

Vam "pir *ism, n. Etym: [Cf. F. vampirisme.]

 

1. Belief in the existence of vampires.

 

2. The actions of a vampire; the practice of bloodsucking.

 

3. Fig. : The practice of extortion. Carlyle.

 

VAMPLATE

Vam "plate `, n. Etym: [F. avant fore, fore + E. plate. ]

 

Defn: A round of iron on the shaft of a tilting spear, to protect the hand. [Written also vamplet.]

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

vamp

vamp 1 |vamp væmp | noun 1 the upper front part of a boot or shoe. 2 (in jazz and popular music ) a short, simple introductory passage, usually repeated several times until otherwise instructed. verb 1 [ with obj. ] attach a new upper to (a boot or shoe ). (vamp something up ) informal repair or improve something: the production values have been vamped up. 2 [ no obj. ] repeat a short, simple passage of music: the band was vamping gently behind his busy lead guitar. ORIGIN Middle English (denoting the foot of a stocking ): shortening of Old French avantpie, from avant before + pie foot. The musical sense of the verb developed from the general sense improvise.

 

vamp

vamp 2 |væmp vamp | informal noun a woman who uses sexual attraction to exploit men. verb [ with obj. ] blatantly set out to attract: she had not vamped him like some wicked Jezebel. DERIVATIVES vamp ish adjective, vamp ish ly adverb, vamp y adjective ORIGIN early 20th cent.: abbreviation of vampire .

 

vampire

vam pire |ˈvamˌpī (ə )r ˈvæmˌpaɪ (ə )r | noun 1 a corpse supposed, in European folklore, to leave its grave at night to drink the blood of the living by biting their necks with long pointed canine teeth. a person who preys ruthlessly on others: the protectionist vampires in the Congress. 2 (also vampire bat ) a small bat that feeds on the blood of mammals or birds using its two sharp incisor teeth and anticoagulant saliva, found mainly in tropical America. See also false vampire. [Family Desmodontidae (or Phyllostomidae ): three species, in particular the common vampire (Desmodus rotundus ).] DERIVATIVES vam pir ic |vamˈpirik |adjective ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: from French, from Hungarian vampir, perhaps from Turkish uber witch.

 

vampirism

vam pir ism |ˈvampīˌrizəm ˈvæmpaɪ (ə )ˌrɪzəm | noun the action or practices of a vampire.

 

vamplate

vam plate |ˈvamˌplāt ˈvæmpleɪt | noun historical a circular plate on a spear or lance designed to protect the hand. ORIGIN Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French vauntplate, from avant before + plate thin plate. Compare with vambrace .

 

Oxford Dictionary

vamp

vamp 1 |vamp | noun 1 the upper front part of a boot or shoe. 2 (in jazz and popular music ) a short, simple introductory passage, usually repeated several times until otherwise instructed. verb 1 [ with obj. ] (vamp something up ) informal repair or improve something: the production values have been vamped up. 2 [ no obj. ] repeat a short, simple passage of music: the band was vamping gently behind his busy lead guitar. 3 [ with obj. ] attach a new upper to (a boot or shoe ). ORIGIN Middle English (denoting the foot of a stocking ): shortening of Old French avantpie, from avant before + pie foot . The musical sense of the verb developed from the general sense improvise .

 

vamp

vamp 2 |vamp | informal noun a woman who uses sexual attraction to exploit men. verb [ with obj. ] blatantly set out to attract (a man ): she had not vamped him like some wicked Jezebel. DERIVATIVES vampish adjective, vampishly adverb, vampishness noun, vampy adjective ( vampier, vampiest ) ORIGIN early 20th cent.: abbreviation of vampire .

 

vampire

vampire |ˈvampʌɪə | noun 1 a corpse supposed, in European folklore, to leave its grave at night to drink the blood of the living by biting their necks with long pointed canine teeth. a person who preys ruthlessly on others: the protectionist vampires in the Congress. 2 (also vampire bat ) a small bat that feeds on the blood of mammals or birds using its two sharp incisor teeth and anticoagulant saliva, found mainly in tropical America. See also false vampire. Family Desmodontidae (or Phyllostomidae ): three species, in particular the common vampire (Desmodus rotundus ). 3 (also vampire trap ) Theatre a small spring trapdoor used for sudden disappearances from a stage. DERIVATIVES vampiric |-ˈpɪrɪk |adjective ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: from French, from Hungarian vampir, perhaps from Turkish uber witch .

 

vampirism

vampirism |ˈvampʌɪərɪz (ə )m | noun [ mass noun ] the action or practices of a vampire.

 

vamplate

vamplate |ˈvampleɪt | noun historical a circular plate on a spear or lance designed to protect the hand. ORIGIN Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French vauntplate, from avant before + plate thin plate . Compare with vambrace .

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

vamp

vamp noun informal a tawny-haired vamp: seductress, temptress, siren, femme fatale, sex kitten, trollop, home wrecker, man-eater; flirt, coquette, tease.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

vamp

vamp 1 verb informal a newly vamped museum: refurbish, renovate, modernize, redecorate, revamp, make over, restore, recondition, rehabilitate, overhaul, repair, redevelop, rebuild, reconstruct, remodel; update, bring up to date, improve; upgrade; refit, re-equip, refurnish; N. Amer. bring something up to code; informal do up, fix up, give something a facelift, tart up, vamp up, patch up; N. Amer. informal rehab.

 

vamp N. Amer. informal

vamp 2 N. Amer. informal noun she portrayed man-devouring vamps in a succession of films: seductress, temptress, siren, femme fatale, enchantress, Delilah, Circe, Lorelei, Mata Hari; flirt, coquette, tease, Lolita; informal tart, mantrap. verb will you promise you won't vamp him? seduce, tempt, lure, beguile, entice; flirt with, make up to, make eyes at, lead on, toy with, trifle with, philander with; informal pull, chat up.

 

Duden Dictionary

Vamp

Vamp Substantiv, maskulin , der |vɛmp |der Vamp; Genitiv: des Vamps, Plural: die Vamps englisch vamp, gekürzt aus: vampire = Vampir < serbokroatisch vampir verführerische, ihre erotische Anziehungskraft unterstreichende, meist kalt berechnende Frau der Typ des männermordenden Vamps

 

Vampir

Vam pir Substantiv, maskulin , der Vampirin |Vamp i r auch, österreichisch nur ˈvam …|der Vampir; Genitiv: des Vampirs, Plural: die Vampire serbokroatisch vampir 1 (nach dem Volksglauben ) Toter, der nachts als unverwester, lebender Leichnam dem Sarg entsteigt, um Lebenden, besonders jungen Mädchen, Blut auszusaugen, indem er ihnen seine langen Eckzähne in den Hals schlägt 2 Blutsauger 3 , Wucherer 3 (in den amerikanischen [Sub ]tropen lebende ) Fledermaus, die sich vom Blut von Tieren ernährt, indem sie ihnen mit ihren scharfen Zähnen die Haut aufritzt und das ausfließende Blut aufleckt

 

Vampirin

Vam pi rin Substantiv, feminin , die |Vamp i rin |weibliche Form zu Vampir

 

Vampirismus

Vam pi ris mus Substantiv, maskulin , der |Vampir i smus |Glaube an Vampire 1

 

French Dictionary

vamp

vamp n. f. nom féminin cinéma Actrice qui jouait les rôles de femme fatale. : Des vamps irrésistibles. Prononciation Le p se prononce, [vɑ̃p ]

 

vampire

vampire n. m. nom masculin Fantôme qui vient sucer le sang des vivants pendant leur sommeil, d ’après la croyance populaire. : Ce film met en scène des vampires effrayants.

 

Spanish Dictionary

vampiresa

vampiresa nombre femenino Mujer que aprovecha su gran atractivo y su capacidad de seducción amorosa para conquistar a los hombres y conseguir beneficios de ellos .

 

vampírico, -ca

vampírico, -ca adjetivo 1 Del vampiro o relacionado con él :estudios vampíricos .2 Que vampiriza :el poder vampírico del cine .

 

vampirismo

vampirismo nombre masculino 1 Conjunto de fenómenos relacionados con los vampiros o seres imaginarios de algunas tradiciones :las páginas de la narrativa y los fotogramas del celuloide se ocupan del crimen, del misterio, de los piratas, del amor, del vampirismo, de las mil y una historias de la vida .2 Condición de la persona que vampiriza .

 

vampirización

vampirización nombre femenino 1 Acción de vampirizar :advirtió que el partido corría peligro de vampirización .2 Efecto de vampirizar .

 

vampirizar

vampirizar verbo transitivo Privar a alguien de su personalidad o a algo de sus características fundamentales y conseguir su dependencia total . Conjugación [4 ] como realizar .

 

vampiro

vampiro nombre masculino 1 Ser imaginario, aparentemente difunto, que sale de su tumba por las noches para alimentarse con la sangre que chupa a las personas vivas :el conde Drácula, el más famoso de los vampiros, tiene unos largos colmillos y huye de la luz, los ajos y las cruces .2 Murciélago de entre 6 y 9 cm de longitud, provisto de un hocico largo y fino y un par de incisivos grandes y muy afilados, que clava en la piel de otros animales para chuparles la sangre; habita en América :los vampiros, que muy raramente atacan al ser humano, tienen un anticoagulante en la saliva que mantiene la sangre fluida mientras se alimentan .3 Persona sin escrúpulos que se enriquece aprovechándose de los demás .ETIMOLOGÍA Préstamo (s. xix ) del serbio vampir , por ser personaje mitológico de Transilvania. Por comparación del comportamiento se ha aplicado al animal .

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

vamp

vamp /væmp /名詞 C ⦅古 くだけて ⦆妖婦 ようふ , バンプ (vampire ).動詞 他動詞 〈男 〉を誘惑する, 食いものにする .自動詞 妖婦役を演じる .

 

vampire

vam pire /vǽmpaɪə r /名詞 C 1 吸血鬼 〘死体に宿り, 夜生き返って, 眠っている人の血を吸うといわれる悪霊 〙.2 他人を食いものにする人, 搾取者 ; 妖婦 ようふ .3 〘動 〙吸血コウモリ (vampire bat ).4 〘劇 〙落とし戸 .