| daw | (n) นกชนิดหนึ่งคล้ายอีกา (คำโบราณ), Syn. jackdaw |
| daw | (n) คนขี้เกียจ, See also: คนโง่ |
| daw |
| daw |
| Daw | v. t. [ Contr. fr. Adaw. ] |
| Daw | v. i. [ OE. dawen. See Dawn. ] To dawn. [ Obs. ] |
| Daw | n. [ OE. dawe; akin to OHG. tāha, MHG. tāhe, tāhele, G. dohle. Cf. Caddow. ] (Zool.) A European bird of the Crow family (Corvus monedula), often nesting in church towers and ruins; a jackdaw. [ 1913 Webster ] The loud daw, his throat ☞ The daw was reckoned as a silly bird, and a daw meant a simpleton. See in Shakespeare: -- “Then thou dwellest with daws too.” (Coriolanus iv. 5, 1. 47.) Skeat. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Dawdle | n. A dawdler. Colman & Carrick. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Dawdle | v. i. Come some evening and dawdle over a dish of tea with me. Johnson. [ 1913 Webster ] We . . . dawdle up and down Pall Mall. Thackeray. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Dawdle | v. t. To waste by trifling; |
| Dawdler | n. One who wastes time in trifling employments; an idler; a trifler. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Dawe | n. [ See Day. ] Day. [ Obs. ] Chaucer. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Dawish | a. Like a daw. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Dawk | n. A hollow, crack, or cut, in timber. Moxon. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| dawdler | (n) someone who takes more time than necessary; someone who lags behind, Syn. poke, drone, lagger, laggard, trailer |
| dawes | (n) American patriot who rode with Paul Revere to warn that the British were advancing on Lexington and Concord (1745-1799), Syn. William Dawes |
| dawn | (n) the first light of day, Syn. morning, aurora, sunrise, dawning, first light, dayspring, sunup, cockcrow, daybreak, break of day, break of the day, Ant. sunset, Example: we got up before dawn; they talked until morning |
| dawn | (n) the earliest period, Syn. morning, Example: the dawn of civilization; the morning of the world |
| dawn | (n) an opening time period, Example: it was the dawn of the Roman Empire |
| dawn | (v) appear or develop, Example: The age of computers had dawned |
| dawn | (v) become light, Example: It started to dawn, and we had to get up |
| dawson | (n) a town in northwestern Canada in the Yukon on the Yukon River; a boom town around 1900 when gold was discovered in the Klondike |