| When you asked me for your own per Sona I supply of water when the lumbing went down, did I not provide it? | ตอนแกถามหาน้ำใช้ส่วนตัว ตอนปั๊มน้ำพัง ฉันเคยไม่ให้แกไหม Vamonos (2007) |
| lumb | Good lumber is hard to find these days. |
| lumb | The vessel was loaded with coal, lumber, and so on. |
| lumb | They will send us lumber. |
| lumb |
| lumbago | (n) backache affecting the lumbar region or lower back; can be caused by muscle strain or arthritis or vascular insufficiency or a ruptured intervertebral disc, Syn. lumbar pain |
| lumbar | (adj) of or relating to or near the part of the back between the ribs and the hipbones, Example: lumbar vertebrae |
| lumbar artery | (n) one of four or five pairs of arteries that originate in the abdominal aorta and supply the lumbar vertebrae and the back muscles and abdominal wall, Syn. arteria lumbalis |
| lumbar nerve | (n) any of five pairs of spinal nerves emerging from the lumbar section of the spinal cord |
| lumbar plexus | (n) a lymphatic plexus located along the lower portion of the aorta and iliac vessels, Syn. plexus lumbalis |
| lumbar plexus | (n) a plexus of nerves formed by the ventral branches of the first four lumbar nerves, Syn. plexus lumbalis |
| lumbar puncture | (n) removal by centesis of fluid from the subarachnoid space of the lumbar region of the spinal cord for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes, Syn. spinal puncture, spinal tap |
| lumbar vein | (n) veins that drain the posterior body wall and the lumbar vertebral venous plexuses, Syn. vena lumbalis |
| lumbar vertebra | (n) one of 5 vertebrae in the human vertebral column; lumbar vertebrae extend from the twelfth thoracic vertebra down to the sacral vertebrae |
| lumber | (n) the wood of trees cut and prepared for use as building material, Syn. timber |
| Lumbaginous | a. Of or pertaining to lumbago. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Lumbago | n. [ L., fr. lumbus loin. See Lumbar. ] (Med.) A rheumatic pain in the loins and the small of the back. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Lumbal |
|
| Lumber | v. t. |
| Lumber | v. i. |
| Lumber | n. [ Prob. fr. Lombard, the Lombards being the money lenders and pawnbrokers of the Middle Ages. A lumber room was, according to Trench, originally a They put all the little plate they had in the lumber, which is pawning it, till the ships came. Lady Murray. [ 1913 Webster ]
|
| Lumberer | n. One employed in lumbering, cutting, and getting logs from the forest for lumber; a lumberman. [ U.S. ] [ 1913 Webster ] Lumberers have a notion that he (the woodpecker) is harmful to timber. Lowell. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Lumbering | n. The business of cutting or getting timber or logs from the forest for lumber. [ U.S. ] [ 1913 Webster ] |
| lumberjack | n. |
| Lumberman | n.; |
| lumbal { adj }; die Lende betreffend [ med. ] | lumbar [Add to Longdo] |