低い は英語で
low
英語の定義
低い | |
1. adj. low | |
血圧が低い - blood pressure is low | |
2. adj. short (height) | |
身長の低い彼氏 - short boyfriend | |
3. adj. low in pitch | |
低い声 - low voice |
その他の翻訳と定義
low | ||
1. 形容詞. ひくい。 | ||
2. 形容詞. 低地にある。 | ||
3. 形容詞. 下層の。 | ||
4. 形容詞. 下品な。 | ||
5. 形容詞. 低級な。 | ||
6. 形容詞. (声や音)ちいさい。 | ||
7. 形容詞. (音程)低い。 | ||
8. 形容詞. 元気のない。 | ||
9. 副詞. 低く。 | ||
10. 副詞. 低い所へ。 | ||
11. 副詞. 安く。 | ||
12. 副詞. 小さな声で。 | ||
13. 副詞. 低音で。 | ||
14. 名詞. 最低値。 | ||
15. 名詞. 最低水準。 | ||
16. 名詞. 低速ギア。 | ||
17. 名詞. 低気圧。 | ||
18. 動詞. (牛)モー((en):moo)となく。 | ||
The cattle were lowing. |
low | ||
1. adj. Situated close to, or even below, the ground or another normal reference plane; not high or lofty. | ||
standing on low ground in a low valley, ringed by low hills a low wall a low shelf | ||
2. adj. Pertaining to (or, especially of a language: spoken in) in an area which is at a lesser elevation, closer to sea level (especially near the sea), than | ||
the low countries Low German | ||
3. adj. (baseball, of a ball) Below the batter's knees. | ||
the pitch (or: the ball) was low | ||
4. adj. Of less than normal height; below the average or normal level from which elevation is measured. | ||
a low bow a low tide the Mississippi is unusually low right now | ||
5. adj. Not high in status, esteem or rank, dignity, or quality. (Compare vulgar). | ||
low birth low rank the low officials of the bureaucracy low-quality fabric playing low tricks on them a person of low mind | ||
Now that was low even for you! | ||
6. adj. Humble, meek, not haughty. | ||
7. adj. Disparaging; assigning little value or excellence. | ||
She had a low opinion of cats. He took a low view of dogs. | ||
8. adj. Being a nadir, a bottom. | ||
the low point in her career | ||
9. adj. Depressed in mood, dejected, sad. | ||
low spirits | ||
10. adj. Lacking health or vitality, strength or vivacity; feeble; weak. | ||
a low pulse | ||
made (or: laid) low by sickness | ||
11. adj. Small, not high (in amount or quantity, value, force, energy, etc). | ||
My credit union charges a low interest rate. Jogging during a whiteout, with such low temperatures and low visibility, is dangerous. The store sold bread at low prices, and milk a | ||
12. adj. Having a small or comparatively smaller concentration of (a substance, which is often but not always linked by "in" when predicative). | ||
diets low in vitamin A made from low-carbon steel | ||
13. adj. Depleted, or nearing deletion; lacking in supply. | ||
running low on cash | ||
14. adj. (especially in the field of biology) Simple in complexity or development; (in several set phrases) favoring simplicity; see e.g. low church, Low Tory. | ||
low protozoan animals, low cryptogamic plants, and other low organisms | ||
15. adj. (in several set phrases) Being near the equator. | ||
the low northern latitudes | ||
16. adj. (acoustics) Grave in pitch, due to being produced by relatively slow vibrations (wave oscillations); flat. | ||
The note was too low for her to sing. | ||
Generally, European men have lower voices than their Indian counterparts. | ||
17. adj. Quiet; soft; not loud. | ||
They spoke in low voices so I would not hear what they were saying. | ||
Why would you want to play heavy metal at such a low volume? | ||
18. adj. (phonetics) Made with a relatively large opening between the tongue and the palate; made with (part of) the tongue positioned low in the mouth, relative to the palate. | ||
19. adj. (card games) Lesser in value than other cards, denominations, suits, etc. | ||
a low card | ||
20. adj. (archaic) Not rich, seasoned, or nourishing; plain, simple. | ||
a low diet | ||
21. adj. (of an, automobile, gear, etc) Designed for a slow (or the slowest) speed. | ||
low gear | ||
22. n. Something that is low; a low point. | ||
You have achieved a new low in behavior, Frank. | ||
Economic growth has hit a new low. | ||
23. n. The minimum value attained by some quantity within a specified period. | ||
Unemployment has reached a ten-year low. | ||
24. n. A depressed mood or situation. | ||
He is in a low right now | ||
25. n. (meteorology) An area of low pressure; a depression. | ||
A deep low is centred over the British Isles. | ||
26. n. The lowest-speed gearing of a power-transmission system, especially of an automotive vehicle. | ||
Shift out of low before the car gets to eight miles per hour. | ||
27. n. (card games) The lowest trump, usually the deuce; the lowest trump dealt or drawn. | ||
28. n. (slang) (usually accompanied by "the") a cheap, cost-efficient, or advantageous payment or expense. | ||
He got the brand new Yankees jersey for the low. | ||
29. adv. Close to the ground. | ||
30. adv. Of a pitch, at a lower frequency. | ||
31. adv. With a low voice or sound; not loudly; gently. | ||
to speak low | ||
32. adv. Under the usual price; at a moderate price; cheaply. | ||
He sold his wheat low. | ||
33. adv. In a low mean condition; humbly; meanly. | ||
34. adv. In a time approaching our own. | ||
35. adv. (astronomy) In a path near the equator, so that the declination is small, or near the horizon, so that the altitude is small; said of the heavenly bodies with reference to the diurnal revolution. | ||
The moon runs low, i.e. comparatively near the horizon when on or near the meridian. | ||
36. v. (obsolete, transitive) To depress; to lower. | ||
37. v. (obsolete) simple past tense of laugh. | ||
38. v. (intransitive) To moo. | ||
The cattle were lowing. | ||
39. n. (UK, Scotland, dialect) A flame; fire; blaze. | ||
40. v. (Scotland) To burn; to blaze. | ||
41. n. (archaic, or obsolete) Barrow, mound, tumulus. | ||
42. n. (Scottish dialectal, archaic) A hill. | ||
43. n. cln, en, basic words, three-letter words |
short | ||
1. 形容詞. (距離、時間ともに)みじかい。 | ||
The post-1989 era is the world which changes in a short cycle. | ||
1989年以後の時代は、短い周期で変化する世界である。 | ||
2. 形容詞. 手短な。簡潔な。(前置詞「for」を後続させて)略称。短縮形。 | ||
'USA' is short for the 'United States of America'. | ||
「USA」は「United States of America」の略称である。 | ||
3. 形容詞. 背のひくい。 | ||
4. 形容詞. とぼしい。不足した。(後続する前置詞は「of」となる。) | ||
He is short of sensitivity. | ||
彼は感受性に乏しい。 | ||
5. 形容詞. 無愛想な。 | ||
6. 副詞. 不足して。 | ||
7. 副詞. 突然、急に。 | ||
8. 名詞. (電気の)ショート、短絡。 | ||
9. 名詞. 短編映画。 |
short | ||
1. adj. Having a small distance from one end or edge to another, either horizontally or vertically. | ||
2. adj. (of a person) Of comparatively little height. | ||
3. adj. Having little duration; opposite of long. | ||
Our meeting was a short six minutes today. Every day for the past month it's been at least twenty minutes long. | ||
4. adj. (followed by for) Of a word or phrase, constituting an abbreviation (for another) or shortened form (of another). | ||
“Phone” is short for “telephone” and "asap" short for "as soon as possible". | ||
5. adj. (cricket, of a fielder or fielding position) that is relatively close to the batsman. | ||
6. adj. (cricket, of a ball) that bounced relatively far from the batsman. | ||
7. adj. (golf, of an approach shot or putt) that falls short of the green or the hole. | ||
8. adj. (of pastries and metals) Brittle, crumbly, especially due to the use of too much shortening. (See shortbread, shortcake, shortcrust.) | ||
9. adj. Abrupt; brief; pointed; petulant. | ||
He gave a short answer to the question. | ||
10. adj. Limited in quantity; inadequate; insufficient; scanty. | ||
a short supply of provisions | ||
11. adj. Insufficiently provided; inadequately supplied; scantily furnished; lacking. | ||
to be short of money | ||
The cashier came up short ten dollars on his morning shift. | ||
12. adj. Deficient; less; not coming up to a measure or standard. | ||
an account which is short of the truth | ||
13. adj. (obsolete) Not distant in time; near at hand. | ||
14. adj. Being in a financial investment position that is structured to be profitable if the price of the underlying security declines in the future. | ||
I'm short General Motors because I think their sales are plunging. | ||
15. adv. Abruptly, curtly, briefly. | ||
They had to stop short to avoid hitting the dog in the street. | ||
He cut me short repeatedly in the meeting. | ||
The boss got a message and cut the meeting short. | ||
16. adv. Unawares. | ||
The recent developments at work caught them short. | ||
17. adv. Without achieving a goal or requirement. | ||
His speech fell short of what was expected. | ||
18. adv. (cricket, of the manner of bounce of a cricket ball) Relatively far from the batsman and hence bouncing higher than normal; opposite of full. | ||
19. adv. (finance) With a negative ownership position. | ||
We went short most finance companies in July. | ||
20. n. A short circuit. | ||
21. n. A short film. | ||
22. n. Used to indicate a short-length version of a size | ||
38 short suits fit me right off the rack. | ||
Do you have that size in a short. | ||
23. n. (baseball) A shortstop. | ||
Jones smashes a grounder between third and short. | ||
24. n. (finance) A short seller. | ||
The market decline was terrible, but the shorts were buying champagne. | ||
25. n. (finance) A short sale. | ||
He closed out his short at a modest loss after three months. | ||
26. n. A summary account. | ||
27. n. (phonetics) A short sound, syllable, or vowel. | ||
28. n. (programming) An integer variable shorter than normal integers; usually two bytes long. | ||
29. v. To cause a short circuit in (something). | ||
30. v. (intransitive) Of an electrical circuit, to short circuit. | ||
31. v. To shortchange. | ||
32. v. To provide with a smaller than agreed or labeled amount. | ||
This is the third time I've caught them shorting us. | ||
33. v. (transitive, business) To sell something, especially securities, that one does not own at the moment for delivery at a later date in hopes of profiting from a decline in the price; to sell short. | ||
34. v. (obsolete) To shorten. | ||
35. prep. Deficient in. | ||
We are short a few men on the second shift. | ||
He's short common sense. | ||
36. prep. (finance) Having a negative position in. | ||
I don't want to be short the market going into the weekend. |
humble | ||
1. 謙虚な, 謙遜した |
humble | ||
1. adj. Not pretentious or magnificent; unpretending; unassuming. | ||
He lives in a humble one-bedroom cottage. | ||
2. adj. Having a low opinion of oneself; not proud, arrogant, or assuming; modest. | ||
3. v. To bring low; to reduce the power, independence, or exaltation of; to lower; to abase; to humiliate. | ||
4. v. (often, reflexive) To make humble or lowly in mind; to abase the pride or arrogance of; to reduce the self-sufficiency of; to make meek and submissive. | ||
5. n. (Northern England, Scotland, also attributive) alternative form of hummel. | ||
humble cattle | ||
6. v. alternative form of hummel. |
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