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English-Thai Dictionary

wade

N การ เดิน ลุย ใน น้ำ หรือ โคลน  kan-doen-lui-nam-nai-kon

 

wade

VI ผ่าน ไป อย่าง ยากลำบาก  push through struggle through pan-pai-yang-yak-lam-bak

 

wade

VI เดิน ลุย ใน น้ำ หรือ โคลน  paddle doen-lui-nam-nai-kon

 

wade

VT เดิน ลุย ใน น้ำ หรือ โคลน  paddle doen-lui-nam-nai-kon

 

wade in

PHRV ย่ำ น้ำ  ลุย น้ำ  เดิน ลุย  yam-nam

 

wade in

PHRV เข้าร่วม การต่อสู้ หรือ โต้เถียง  tuck in kao-ruam-kan-tor-su-rue-to-tang

 

wade into

PHRV กิน อย่าง มูมมาม  กิน อย่าง รีบเร่ง และ จำนวนมาก  tuck into kin-yang-mum-mam

 

wade into

PHRV จู่โจม  โจมตี  ju-jom

 

wade into

PHRV ลุย น้ำ  เดิน ลุย ดิน  lui-nam

 

wade through

PHRV พยายาม ทำงาน ให้ เสร็จ อย่าง ค่อยๆ  ทำ  plough through pa-ya-yam-tam-ngan-hai-sed-yang-koi-koi-tam

 

wade through

PHRV ลุย ผ่าน  ย่ำ ผ่าน  lui-pan

 

wader

N นกช นิดหนึ่ง  มี ขา ยาว มักจะ เดิน หาอาหาร ใน น้ำ ตื้น  wading bird nok-cha-nid-nuang-me-ka-yao-mak-doen-ha-ar-han

 

wader

N ผู้เดิน ลุย น้ำ  phu-doen-lui-nam

 

waders

N รองเท้าบูท ใส่ กันน้ำ  high gumboots rong-tao-bud-sai-kan-nam

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

WADE

v.i. 1. To walk through any substance that yields to the feet; as, to wade through water; to wade through sand or snow; . To wade over a river, is to walk through on the bottom. Fowls that wade have long legs.
2. To move or pass with difficulty or labor; as, judges wade through an intriccate law case. it is not my purpose to wade through these controversies.
The kings admirable conduct has waded through all these difficulties.
And wades through fumes and gropes his way.

 

WADE

v.t.To pass by walking on the bottom; as, to wade a river. [this is a common expression, but elliptical for to wade through a river. ]

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

WADE

WADE Wade, n.

 

Defn: Woad. [Obs. ] Mortimer.

 

WADE

Wade, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Waded; p. pr. & vb. n. Wading. ] Etym: [OE. waden to wade, to go, AS. wadan; akin to OFries. wada, D. waden, OHG. watan, Icel. va, Sw. vada, Dan. vade, L. vadere to go, walk, vadum a ford. Cf. Evade, Invade, Pervade, Waddle. ]

 

1. To go; to move forward. [Obs. ] When might is joined unto cruelty, Alas, too deep will the venom wade. Chaucer. Forbear, and wade no further in this speech. Old Play.

 

2. To walk in a substance that yields to the feet; to move, sinking at each step, as in water, mud, sand, etc. So eagerly the fiend. .. With head, hands, wings, or feet, pursues his way, And swims, or sinks, or wades, or creeps, or flies. Milton.

 

3. Hence, to move with difficulty or labor; to proceed as, to wade through a dull book. And wades through fumes, and gropes his way. Dryden. The king's admirable conduct has waded through all these difficulties. Davenant.

 

WADE

WADE Wade, v. t.

 

Defn: To pass or cross by wading; as, he waded.

 

WADE

WADE Wade, n.

 

Defn: The act of wading. [Colloq. ]

 

WADER

WADER Wad "er, n.

 

1. One who, or that which, wades.

 

2. (Zoöl.)

 

Defn: Any long-legged bird that wades in the water in search of food, especially any species of limicoline or grallatorial birds; -- called also wading bird. See Illust. g, under Aves.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

wade

wade |wād weɪd | verb [ no obj. ] walk through water or another liquid or soft substance: we waded ashore. [ with obj. ] walk through (something filled with water ): firefighters waded the waist-deep flood water. (wade through ) read laboriously through (a long piece of writing ). (wade into ) informal get involved in (something ) vigorously or forcefully: he waded into the yelling, fighting crowd. (wade in ) informal make a vigorous attack or intervention: Nicola waded in and grabbed the baby. noun [ in sing. ] an act of wading. DERIVATIVES wad a ble (also wadeable ) adjective ORIGIN Old English wadan move onward, also penetrate, from a Germanic word meaning go (through ), from an Indo-European root shared by Latin vadere go, as in vade mecum .

 

Wade, George

Wade |weɪd | (1673 –1748 ), English soldier. He was responsible for the construction of a network of roads and bridges in the Scottish Highlands to facilitate government control of the Jacobite clans after the 1715 uprising.

 

Wade, Virginia

Wade, Virginia |wād weɪd | (1945 –), English tennis player; full name Sarah Virginia Wade. During 1968 –77, she won the women's singles title at the US Open, the Australian Open, and Wimbledon.

 

Wade–Giles

Wade –Giles |ˈwād ˈjīlz ˌweɪd ˈʤaɪlz | noun a system of romanized spelling for transliterating Chinese, devised by Sir Thomas Francis Wade (1818 –95 ) and Herbert Allen Giles (1845 –1935 ). It has been largely superseded by Pinyin.

 

wader

wad er |ˈwādər ˈweɪdər | noun 1 a person or animal, esp. a bird, that wades, in particular: a wading bird of the order Ciconiiformes, which comprises the herons, storks, and ibises. chiefly Brit. a wading bird of the order Charadriiformes, which comprises the sandpipers, plovers, and related birds. Also called shorebird (esp. in North America ). 2 (waders ) high waterproof boots, or a waterproof garment for the legs and body, used esp. by anglers when fishing.

 

Oxford Dictionary

wade

wade |weɪd | verb [ no obj., with adverbial ] 1 walk with effort through water or another liquid or viscous substance: he waded out to the boat. [ with obj. ] walk through (something filled with water ): I waded ditches instead of finding easier crossing places. (wade through ) read laboriously through (a long piece of writing ). 2 (wade into ) informal intervene in (something ) or attack (someone ) vigorously or forcefully: Seb waded into the melee and started to beat off the boys. (wade in ) informal make a vigorous attack or intervention: Nicola waded in and grabbed the baby. noun [ in sing. ] an act of wading. DERIVATIVES wadable (also wadeable ) adjective ORIGIN Old English wadan move onward , also penetrate , from a Germanic word meaning go (through ), from an Indo-European root shared by Latin vadere go .

 

Wade, George

Wade |weɪd | (1673 –1748 ), English soldier. He was responsible for the construction of a network of roads and bridges in the Scottish Highlands to facilitate government control of the Jacobite clans after the 1715 uprising.

 

Wade, Virginia

Wade |weɪd | (b.1945 ), English tennis player; full name Sarah Virginia Wade. She won many singles titles, including the US Open (1968 ), the Italian championship (1971 ), the Australian Open (1972 ), and Wimbledon (1977 ).

 

Wade–Giles

Wade –Giles |weɪdˈdʒʌɪlz | noun a system of romanized spelling for transliterating Chinese, devised by the British diplomat Sir Thomas Francis Wade (1818 –95 ), professor of Chinese at Cambridge, and modified by his successor Herbert Allen Giles (1845 –1935 ). It has been largely superseded by Pinyin.

 

wader

wader |ˈweɪdə | noun 1 a person or animal, especially a bird, that wades, in particular: chiefly Brit. a wading bird of the order Charadriiformes, which comprises the sandpipers, plovers, and related birds. Also called shorebird, especially in North America. chiefly N. Amer. a wading bird of the order Ciconiiformes, which comprises the herons, storks, and ibises. 2 (waders ) high waterproof boots, or a waterproof garment for the legs and body, used especially by anglers when fishing.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

wade

wade verb 1 they waded in the icy water: paddle, wallow, dabble; informal splosh. 2 I had to wade through some hefty documents: plow, plod, trawl, labor, toil; study, browse; informal splash, slog.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

wade

wade verb 1 five or six men were wading in the icy water: paddle, wallow, dabble, slop, squelch, trudge, plod; informal splosh. 2 Tony waded across the stream: ford, cross, traverse, walk across, make one's way across. 3 they could just click it up on screen, rather than having to wade through some hefty document: work one's way, plough, plod, trawl, proceed with difficulty, labour, toil away at, plug away at; peruse, study; browse, leaf, flick, skim, look, thumb; informal slog. PHRASES wade in informal police with truncheons waded in: move in, set to, set to work, pitch in, buckle down, go to it, put one's shoulder to the wheel; informal plunge in, dive in, get stuck in, get cracking. wade into someone informal I waded into those skinheads: attack, set upon, assault, launch oneself at, weigh into, fly at, let fly at, turn on, round on, lash out at, hit out at, fall on, jump on /at, lunge at, charge, rush, storm; informal lay into, light into, tear into, lace into, pitch into, beat up; Brit. informal have a go at. wade into something informal Flynn would gladly wade into the attack: get involved in, intervene in, get to work on, set to work on, tackle.

 

Duden Dictionary

Wade

Wa de Substantiv, feminin , die |W a de |die Wade; Genitiv: der Wade, Plural: die Waden mittelhochdeutsch wade, althochdeutsch wado, wahrscheinlich verwandt mit lateinisch vatax = krumm-, schiefbeinig und lateinisch vatius = einwärtsgebogen, krumm (beinig ) und eigentlich wohl = Krümmung, Biegung (am Körper )durch einen großen Muskel gebildete hintere Seite des Unterschenkels beim Menschen stramme, kräftige, dünne Waden | er hat einen Krampf in der Wade

 

Wadenbein

Wa den bein Substantiv, Neutrum Anatomie , das |W a denbein |äußerer, schwächerer der beiden vom Fuß bis zum Knie gehenden Knochen des Unterschenkels

 

Wadenbeinbruch

Wa den bein bruch Substantiv, maskulin , der |W a denbeinbruch |

 

Wadenbeißer

Wa den bei ßer Substantiv, maskulin umgangssprachlich , der |W a denbeißer |jemand, der einen andern, obwohl der ihm eindeutig überlegen ist, dennoch dreist angreift und ihm dadurch Verdruss bereitet

 

Wadenbeißerin

Wa den bei ße rin Substantiv, feminin , die |W a denbeißerin |weibliche Form zu Wadenbeißer

 

wadenhoch

wa den hoch Adjektiv |w a denhoch |bis zur halben Wade hinaufreichend 2 wadenhohe Stiefel

 

Wadenkrampf

Wa den krampf Substantiv, maskulin , der |W a denkrampf |Krampf in der Wade ein plötzlicher, nächtlicher Wadenkrampf | einen Wadenkrampf haben

 

wadenlang

wa den lang Adjektiv |w a denlang |bis zu den halben Waden hinunterreichend 2a ein wadenlanger Rock

 

Wadenmuskel

Wa den mus kel Substantiv, maskulin , der |W a denmuskel |Muskel der Wade

 

Wadenstrumpf

Wa den strumpf Substantiv, maskulin , der |W a denstrumpf |1 veraltet Kniestrumpf 2 (zu bestimmten Trachten gehörender ) das Bein vom Knöchel bis zur Wade bedeckender Strumpf ohne Füßling

 

Wadenwickel

Wa den wi ckel Substantiv, maskulin , der |W a denwickel |(fiebersenkender ) kalter bis lauwarmer Umschlag um die Wade

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

wade

wade /weɪd /動詞 s /-z /; d /-ɪd /; wading 自動詞 〈人などが 〉【水たまり ぬかるみなどの中を 】(苦労して )歩く , 徒渉する «in , through » ; «…を横切って » 歩いて渡る «across » wade waist-deep through the flood 洪水の中を腰までつかって歩く 他動詞 〈人などが 〉〈水たまり ぬかるみなど 〉 (苦労して )歩く, 歩いて渡る .w de n 1 浅瀬に踏み入る .2 ⦅くだけて ⦆(相手に )食ってかかる ; (仕事に )張り切ってかかる .3 ⦅英 くだけて ⦆〈人などが 〉口をはさむ, (強引に )割り込む ; (後先考えず )首を突っ込む .w de into A 1 ⦅くだけて ⦆A 〈相手 〉に食ってかかる ; A 〈仕事 〉に張り切ってかかる .2 Aに口をはさむ, (強引に )割り込む ; (後先考えず )首を突っ込む .w de through A 1 自動詞 .2 〈人などが 〉A 〈大量の書類 情報など 〉を (苦労して )読む ; 処理する .名詞 〖単数形で 〗水の中を歩くこと , 徒歩で渡ること .w ding b rd wader 2 .w ding p ol ⦅米 ⦆(ビニールの )子供用プール (⦅英 ⦆paddling pool ).

 

wader

wad er /wéɪdə r /名詞 C 1 通例 s 〗(釣り人が水の中を歩くための )防水ゴム長靴 [ズボン ].2 渉禽 (しようきん )類 (wading bird ) 〘水辺で魚を取る足や首の長いツルやサギなどの鳥 〙.3 (水の中などを )歩いて渡る人 .