| Beddau | |
| beau |
| beau | (n) แฟน (ผู้ชาย), See also: คนรักผู้ชาย, Syn. boyfriend, Ant. girlfriend |
| ไฉไล | [chailai] (adj) EN: pretty ; lovely ; tender and beautiful FR: beau |
| beau |
| Beau | n.; |
| Beaucatcher | n. A small flat curl worn on the temple by women. [ Humorous ] [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Beaufet | n. [ See Buffet. ] A niche, cupboard, or sideboard for plate, china, glass, etc.; a buffet. [ 1913 Webster ] A beaufet . . . filled with gold and silver vessels. Prescott. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Beaufin | n. See Biffin. Wright. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Beaufort's scale | (Meteor.) A scale of wind force devised by ☞ The full scale is as follows: -- 0, calm; 1, light air; 2, light breeze; 3, gentle breeze; 4, moderate breeze; 5, fresh breeze; 6, strong breeze; 7, moderate gale; 8, fresh gale; 9, strong gale; 10, whole gale; 11, storm; 12, hurricane. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ] |
| Beau ideal | [ F. beau beautiful + idéal ideal. ] A conception or image of consummate beauty, moral or physical, formed in the mind, free from all the deformities, defects, and blemishes seen in actual existence; an ideal or faultless standard or model. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Beauish | a. Like a beau; characteristic of a beau; foppish; fine. “A beauish young spark.” Byrom. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Beau monde | ‖ [ F. beau fine + monde world. ] The fashionable world; people of fashion and gayety. Prior. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Beaumontague | n. A cement used in making joints, filling cracks, etc. For iron, the principal constituents are iron borings and sal ammoniac; for wood, white lead or litharge, whiting, and linseed oil. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ] |
| Beaupere | n. [ F. beau pére; beau fair + pére father. ] |
| beaufort scale | (n) an international scale of wind force from 0 (calm air) to 12 (hurricane), Syn. wind scale |
| beaufort scale | (n) a scale from 0 to 12 for the force of the wind |
| beaufort sea | (n) part of the Arctic Ocean to the northeast of Alaska |
| beau geste | (n) a gracious (but usually meaningless) gesture |
| beaugregory | (n) a blue and yellow damselfish of Bermuda and Florida and the West Indies, Syn. Pomacentrus leucostictus |
| beaujolais | (n) dry fruity light red wine drunk within a few months after it is made; from the Beaujolais district in southeastern France |
| beaumont | (n) United States surgeon remembered for his studies of digestion (1785-1853), Syn. William Beaumont |
| beaumont | (n) English dramatist who collaborated with John Fletcher (1584-1616), Syn. Francis Beaumont |
| beaumont | (n) a city of southeastern Texas near Houston |
| beaumontia | (n) small genus of evergreen woody vines in the East Indies and Asia, Syn. genus Beaumontia |