| toot | (vi) ส่งเสียงเป่าแตรหรือนกหวีด, Syn. whistle |
| toot | (vt) ส่งเสียงเป่าแตรหรือนกหวีด, Syn. whistle |
| toot |
| toot |
| toot | (n) a blast of a horn |
| tooth | (n) hard bonelike structures in the jaws of vertebrates; used for biting and chewing or for attack and defense |
| tooth | (n) something resembling the tooth of an animal |
| tooth | (n) toothlike structure in invertebrates found in the mouth or alimentary canal or on a shell |
| tooth | (n) a means of enforcement, Example: the treaty had no teeth in it |
| tooth | (n) one of a number of uniform projections on a gear |
| toothache | (n) an ache localized in or around a tooth, Syn. odontalgia |
| toothache tree | (n) small deciduous aromatic shrub (or tree) having spiny branches and yellowish flowers; eastern North America, Syn. Zanthoxylum fraxineum, sea ash, Zanthoxylum americanum |
| tooth and nail | (adv) with force and ferocity, Example: she fought tooth and nail |
| toothbrush | (n) small brush; has long handle; used to clean teeth |
| Toot | v. i. Tooting horns and rattling teams of mail coaches. Thackeray. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Toot | v. t. To see; to spy. [ Obs. ] P. Plowman. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Toot | v. t. To cause to sound, as a horn, the note being modified at the beginning and end as if by pronouncing the letter |
| Toot | v. i. [ OE. toten, AS. totian to project; hence, to peep out. ] For birds in bushes tooting. Spenser. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Tooter | n. One who toots; one who plays upon a pipe or horn. B. Jonson. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Tooth | n.; ☞ The hard parts of teeth are principally made up of dentine, or ivory, and a very hard substance called enamel. These are variously combined in different animals. Each tooth consist of three parts, a crown, or body, projecting above the gum, one or more fangs imbedded in the jaw, and the neck, or intermediate part. In some animals one or more of the teeth are modified into tusks which project from the mouth, as in both sexes of the elephant and of the walrus, and in the male narwhal. How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is These are not dishes for thy dainty tooth. Dryden. [ 1913 Webster ] [ 1913 Webster ]
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| Tooth | v. t. The twin cards toothed with glittering wire. Wordsworth. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Toothache | n. (Med.) Pain in a tooth or in the teeth; odontalgia. [ 1913 Webster ]
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| Toothback | n. (Zool.) Any notodontian. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Toothbill | n. (Zool.) A peculiar fruit-eating ground pigeon (Didunculus strigiostris) native of the Samoan Islands, and noted for its resemblance, in several characteristics, to the extinct dodo. Its beak is stout and strongly hooked, and the mandible has two or three strong teeth toward the end. Its color is chocolate red. Called also |