- defend with
- phr. v. ปกป้องด้วยrelated: ป้องกันด้วย, คุ้มครองด้วย
English-Thai dictionary. 2014.
English-Thai dictionary. 2014.
Defend Your Castle — Main menu for the Wii version of Defend Your Castle Developer(s) XGen Studios Publisher(s) … Wikipedia
defend — de‧fend [dɪˈfend] verb [transitive] LAW 1. if a lawyer defends someone charged with a crime, he or she represents that person and argues that they are not guilty of the charge 2. to do something in order to stop something being taken away or to… … Financial and business terms
defend — 1 Defend, protect, shield, guard, safeguard mean to keep secure from danger or against attack. Defend implies the use of means to ward off something that actually threatens or to repel something that actually attacks {raise a large army to defend … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Defend — De*fend (d[ e]*f[e^]nd ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Defended}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Defending}.] [F. d[ e]fendre, L. defendere; de + fendere (only in comp.) to strike; perh. akin to Gr. qei nein to strike, and E. dint. Cf. {Dint}, {Defense}, {Fend}.] 1.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
With Apologies to Jesse Jackson — South Park episode Randy on Wheel of Fortune trying to solve the final puzzle … Wikipedia
defend — verb Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French defendre, from Latin defendere, from de + fendere to strike; akin to Old English gūth battle, war, Greek theinein to strike Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. a. to drive danger or attack away… … New Collegiate Dictionary
defend — de|fend W3S3 [dıˈfend] v [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: defendre, from Latin defendere, from fendere to hit ] 1.) [I and T] to do something in order to protect someone or something from being attacked ▪ a struggle to defend our homeland… … Dictionary of contemporary English
defend — /dI fend/ verb 1 (T) to do something in order to protect someone or something from being attacked: defend sth against/from: They needed more troops to defend the border against possible attack. | defend yourself: I picked a stick up to defend… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
defend — 01. The father was seriously injured trying to [defend] his son from a vicious dog. 02. I [defended] myself with a knife. 03. She [defended] herself successfully in court, and was found innocent of the charges against her. 04. The whale was… … Grammatical examples in English
defend — verb 1 protect against attack ADVERB ▪ adequately, effectively, properly (esp. BrE), successfully ▪ Computer users need to ensure their systems are properly defended. ▪ She successfully defended herself against an attack from someone larg … Collocations dictionary
defend — [13] Defend comes via Old French defendre from Latin dēfendere ‘ward off’, a compound verb formed from the prefix dē ‘off, away’ and an element that survives elsewhere only in other compound forms (represented in English by offend). It has been… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins