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*martin*

 ลองค้นหาคำในรูปแบบอื่น: martin, -martin-
ค้นหาอัตโนมัติโดยใช้martin
NECTEC Lexitron Dictionary EN-TH
(n)นกนางแอ่นSyn.swallow
(n)เหล้าประเภทค็อกเทล
(n)นายทหารผู้เคร่งครัดSyn.perfectionist
(n)ผู้เคร่งครัดในระเบียบวินัยSyn.disciplinarian, moralist
(n)วันรำลึกถึง Saint Martin
(n)บังเหียน
(n)ประธานาธิบดีคนที่ 8 ของอเมริกา (ค.ศ 1837-1841)
Hope Dictionary
(มาร์'ทิน) n. นกนางแอ่นชนิดหนึ่ง
(มาร์'ทิเนท) n. ผู้เคร่งครัดในระเบียบวินัยSee Also:martinetish, adj. martinetism n.Syn.disciplinarian
(มาร์'ทิงเกล) n. บังเหียนม้า
(มาร์ท'นิ) n. เหล้าค็อกเทลที่ประกอบด้วยเหล้ายีนหรือวอสก้ากับ vermouth (ดู)
(มาร์'ทันมัส) n. งานเฉลิมฉลอง
Nontri Dictionary
(n)ผู้เคร่งครัดในวินัย
คลังศัพท์ไทย (สวทช.)
ศิลปะมาร์ตินีก[TU Subject Heading]
นกเจ้าฟ้า[TU Subject Heading]
แถบยางยาวสำหรับรัดไล่เลือดที่แขนขา[การแพทย์]
ฟรีมาร์ติน[การแพทย์]
ตัวอย่างประโยคจาก Open Subtitles**ระวัง คำแปลอาจมีข้อผิดพลาด**
Oder einen trockenen Martini?One Day (2011)
Martin Bishop ...erscheint?Sneakers (1992)
Wenn du respektlos gegenüber Martin Scorsese sein willst, mach nur weiter.Moot Point (2014)
Martin Scorsese hat den verdammten Film nicht einmal geschrieben.Moot Point (2014)
Ihr Vater ist aber nicht Martin Channing, der im Gefängnis, wegen der Ponzi-Affäre ist?And the Not Broke Parents (2014)
Das dritte Opfer, Christy White, ging mit ihrer Freundin, Debbie Martin, gestern Abend in einen Supermarkt.What Happens in Mecklinburg... (2014)
Das würde auch erklären, wieso er Debbie Martin zurück ließ.What Happens in Mecklinburg... (2014)
Der Unbekannte hatte reichlich Zeit, auch Debbie Martin zu entführen, aber er hat sie einfach da gelassen.What Happens in Mecklinburg... (2014)
Ed, Martin, bitte nehmen Sie zur Kenntnis, wenn Sie Ihre eigene Familie nicht liebt und respektiert, - wir tun es.Charlie and the Hot Latina (2014)
Christophe Martin-Vallet: 12 Jahre Yayia Touret Cabat: 11 Jahre24 Days (2014)
- Finden Sie Agent Martin.Providence (2014)
Harold Martin, freiberuflicher Software-Entwickler.Beta (2014)
Martin ist erst 14, er ist zu jung.Toy Soldiers (2014)
Ja, Martin Odum ist unser bester Agent, das steht außer Frage, wenn er gesund ist.Lords of War (2014)
Wie will Martin das VX rechtzeitig finden, geschweige denn die Hubbards?Lords of War (2014)
Martin, du wärst nicht der erste Undercover-Agent, der Probleme hat, sich aus einem Fall zu lösen.Lords of War (2014)
Dämmerzustand, das sind anerkannte Risiken für Undercover-Agenten, Martin.Lords of War (2014)
Es gibt einen schmalen Grat zwischen spontan und stalken, Martin.Lords of War (2014)
- Du siehst nicht gut aus, Martin.Lords of War (2014)
Schauen Sie, Martin Odum ist ein wichtiger Zeuge in einem brutalen Mordfall, in dem er einen untersuchenden Agenten angelogen hat.Lords of War (2014)
Martin kann nicht riskieren, als verdeckter Ermittler aufzufliegen, nicht mit dem Nervengas, das noch da draußen ist.Lords of War (2014)
Ich habe Martin auf dem Schirm.Lords of War (2014)
Es ist die Gegenrichtung von der, aus der Martin kam, Lords of War (2014)
Ich will nicht, das die Tschetschenen irgendjemanden einen Tipp geben, dass wir sie ausgehoben haben, denn dann trifft dieser Bumerang Martin.Lords of War (2014)
Ich denke, es liegt jetzt an Martin.Lords of War (2014)
McGee, ruf die Dienstakte von Staff Sergeant Martin Roe auf.Shooter (2014)
Lorin Davis, Sie sind wegen des Mordes an Staff Sergeant Martin Roe verhaftet.Shooter (2014)
Und, vor kurzem, als Liber8 Jim Martin entführt hat.Minute Changes (2014)
Okay, ich habe einen Scotch für dich, einen Martini für Sie... und eine Diät-Cola für Sie. Sicher, dass das alles ist, was Sie wollen?Charlie and the Re-Virginized Hooker (2014)
Dr. Martinez, lassen Sie mich alleine.Last Rites (2014)
Ja, das tue ich, Mrs. Martinez.Last Rites (2014)
Cocktails könnten Pink Margaritas und Unanständige Schulmädchen sein. Martinis mit einem Lolli.Operation Fake Date (2014)
Ich denke, Martin Odum ist ein wichtiger Zeuge in einem brutalen Mordfall.Betrayal (2014)
ตัวอย่างประโยคจาก Tanaka JP-EN Corpus
NECTEC Lexitron-2 Dictionary (TH-EN)
(n)Pseudochelidon sirintaraeSee Also:house martin, Pseudochelidon sirintaraeSyn.นกเจ้าฟ้าหญิงสิรินธร, นกนางแอ่นตาพองExample:ฉันเห็นนกตาพองตอนฉันไปเที่ยวบึงบอระเพ็ดUnit:ตัว, ชนิดThai Definition:ชื่อนกนางแอ่นชนิด Pseudochelidon sirintarae ในวงศ์ Hirundinidae ลำตัวสีดำ มีแต้มขาวตรงโคนหาง ตาและขอบตาขาว ปากเหลือง เฉพาะตัวผู้มีหางยาวคล้ายเส้นลวด 2 เส้น พบบริเวณบึงบอระเพ็ด
Volubilis Dictionary (TH-EN-FR)
[kraten] (n) EN: kingfisher  FR: martin-pêcheur [ m ] ; alcyon pie [ m ]
[kratheū] (n) EN: Wild Ginger ; Martinique Ginger
[Mātin Haidekkoē] (n, prop) EN: Martin Heidegger  FR: Martin Heidegger
[nok aen] (n) EN: swift  FR: martinet [ m ]
[nok aen bān] (n, exp) EN: House Swift ; Little Swift  FR: Martinet des maisons [ m ] ; Martinet à croupion blanc [ m ] ; Martinet à dos blanc [ m ] ; Martinet cul-blanc [ m ]
[nok aen lek hāng nām taphōk khāo] (n, exp) EN: Silver-rumped Needletail ; Silver-rumped Swift ; Silver-rumped Spinetail  FR: Martinet leucopyge [ m ]
[nok aen tān] (n, exp) EN: Asian Palm Swift  FR: Martinet batassia [ m ]
[nok aen taphōk khāo hāng chaēk] (n, exp) EN: Fork-tailed Swift ; Pacific Swift  FR: Martinet de Sibérie [ m ] ; Martinet du Pacifique [ m ] ; Martinet à queue fourchue [ m ]
[nok aen thøng khāo] (n, exp) EN: Glossy Swiftlet ; White-bellied Swiftlet  FR: Salangane soyeuse [ f ] ; Martinet soyeux [ m ]
[nok aen thøng lāi] (n, exp) EN: Dark-rumped Swift  FR: Martinet de l'Assam [ m ] ; Martinet à queue pointue [ m ]
[nok aen yai hūa tā dam] (n, exp) EN: Silver-backed Needletail ; White-vented Needletail  FR: Martinet de Cochinchine [ m ]
[nok aen yai hūa tā khāo] (n, exp) EN: Brown-backed Needlatail ; Brown Needletail  FR: Martinet géant [ m ]
[nok aen yai khø khāo] (n, exp) EN: White-throated Needletail  FR: Martinet épineux [ m ] ; Martinet à queue épineuse [ m ] ; Martinet à queue aiguë [ m ] ; Martinet à queue blanche [ m ]
[nok īeng dāng] (n, exp) EN: Asian Pied Starling   FR: Étourneau pie [ m ] ; Martin pie [ m ]
[nok īeng hūa sī thøng] (n, exp) EN: Golden-crested Myna  FR: Martin couronné [ m ] ; Mainate couronné [ m ] ; Mainate à couronne [ m ]
[nok īeng khwāi] (n, exp) EN: Jungle Myna  FR: Martin forestier [ m ] ; Mainate de jungle [ m ] ; Martin brun [ m ] ; Martin sombre [ m ]
[nok īeng kon lāi] (n, exp) EN: Crested Myna  FR: Martin huppé [ m ] ; Étourneau huppé [ m ] ; Mainate huppé [ m ]
[nok īeng ngøn] (n, exp) EN: White-vented Myna  FR: Grand Martin [ m ] ; Mainate à ventre blanc [ m ] ; Grand Mainate [ m ]
[nok īeng Phrām] (n, exp) EN: Brahminy Starling  FR: Étourneau des pagodes [ m ] ; Martin des pagodes [ m ] ; Martin brahmanique [ m ]
[nok īeng sārikā] (n, exp) EN: Common Myna  FR: Martin triste [ m ] ; Martin familier [ m ] ; Mainate triste [ m ] ; Merle des Moluques [ m ]
[nok Jaofāying Sīrinthøn] (n, exp) EN: White-eyed River-Martin  FR: Pseudolangrayen d'Asie [ m ] ; Aronde asiatique [ f ] ; Aronde d'Asie [ f ] ; Pseudolangrayen à lunettes [ m ]
[nok kamkūam] (n, exp) EN: Stork-billed Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur gurial [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng hūa sī nūan] (n, exp) EN: Vinous-breasted Starling  FR: Étourneau vineux [ m ] ; Martin de Jerdon [ m ] ; Martin de Birmanie [ m ] ; Étourneau de Birmanie [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng kaem khāo] (n, exp) EN: White-cheeked Starling  FR: Étourneau gris [ m ] ; Martin gris [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng khø dam] (n, exp) EN: Black-collared Starling  FR: Étourneau à cou noir [ m ] ; Martin à col noir [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng klaēp hūa thao] (n, exp) EN: Chestnut-tailed Starling  FR: Étourneau à tête grise [ m ] ; Martin de Malabar [ m ] ; Martin à tête grise [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng klaēp kaem sī namtān daeng] (num) EN: Chestnut-cheeked Starling  FR: Étourneau à joues marron [ m ] ; Martin des Philippines [ m ] ; Étourneau des Philippines [ m ] ; Étourneau philippin [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng klaēp lang muang dam] (n, exp) EN: Purple-backed Starling  FR: Étourneau de Daourie [ m ] ; Martin à dos pourpré [ m ] ; Martin dominicain [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng klaēp pīk khāo] (n, exp) EN: White-shouldered starling  FR: Étourneau mandarin [ m ] ; Martin de Chine [ m ] ; Martin d’orient [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng pāk daēng] (n, exp) EN: Red-billed Starling  FR: Étourneau soyeux [ m ] ; Martin à bec rouge [ m ]
[nok kingkhrōng sī kulāp] (n, exp) EN: Rosy Starling  FR: Étourneau roselin [ m ] ; Martin roselin [ m ] ; Martin rose [ m ] ; Merle rose [ m ]
[nok kin pīo] (n, exp) EN: Collared Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur à collier blanc [ m ]
[nok kin plā] (n) EN: kingfish (in general – inf.)  FR: martin-pêcheur (en général – inf.) [ m ]
[nok kraten = nok katen] (n) EN: kingfisher  FR: martin-pêcheur [ m ]
[nok kraten daēng = nok katen daēng] (n) EN: Ruddy Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur violet [ m ] ; Alcyon roux [ m ]
[nok kraten Hoēkhiūlit = nok katen Hoēkhiūlis] (n, exp) EN: Blyth's Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur de Blyth [ m ]
[nok kraten hūa dam = nok katen hūa dam] (n, exp) EN: Black-capped Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur à coiffe noire [ m ] ; Martin-chasseur à calotte noire [ m ]
[nok kraten khāo dam yai = nok katen khāo dam yai] (n, exp) EN: Crested Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur tacheté [ m ] ; Alcyon tacheté [ m ] ; Martin-pêcheur pie de l’Himalaya [ m ] ; Martin-pêcheur titan [ m ]
[nok kraten lāi = nok katen lāi] (n, exp) EN: Banded Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur mignon [ m ]
[nok kraten nøi lang sī nāmngoēn = nok katen nøi lang sī nāmngoēn] (n, exp) EN: Blue-eared Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur méninting [ m ]
[nok kraten nøi sām niū lang daēng = nok katen nøi sām niū lang daēng] (n, exp) EN: Rufous-backed Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur à dos roux [ m ]
[nok kraten nøi sām niū lang dam = nok katen nøi sām niū lang dam] (num) EN: Black-backed Kingfisher ; Oriental Dwarf Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur pourpré [ m ] ; Martin-pêcheur tridactyle [ m ]
[nok kraten nøi thaēp ok dam = nok katen nøi thaēp ok dam] (n, exp) EN: Blue-banded Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur à large bande [ m ]
[nok kraten nøi thammadā = nok katen nøi thammadā] (n, exp) EN: Common Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur d'Europe [ m ]
[nok kraten ok khāo = nok katen ok khāo] (n, exp) EN: White-throated Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur de Smyrne [ m ] ; Martin-pêcheur à poitrine blanche [ m ] ; Martin-chasseur à gorge blanche [ m ] ; Martin-pêcheur à gorge blanche [ m ] ; Martin-pêcheur de Smyrne
[nok kraten paklak = nok katen paklak] (n, exp) EN: Pied Kingfisher  FR: Martin-pêcheur pie [ m ] ; Alcyon pie [ m ] ; Céryle pie
[nok kraten søikhø sī nāmtān = nok katen søikhø sī nāmtān] (n, exp) EN: Rufous-collared Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur trapu [ m ]
[nok kraten yai pīk sī nāmtān = nok katen yai pīk sī nāmtān] (n, exp) EN: Brown-winged Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur à ailes brunes [ m ]
[nok kraten yai thammadā = nok katen yai thammadā] (n, exp) EN: Stork-billed Kingfisher  FR: Martin-chasseur gurial [ m ]
[nok nāng-aen mātin phan Ēsīa tāi] (n, exp) EN: Asian House Martin  FR: Hirondelle de Bonaparte [ f ]
CMU Pronouncing Dictionary
WordNet (3.0)
(n)swallow of the northern hemisphere that nests in tunnels dug in clay or sand banksSyn.Riparia riparia, sand martin, bank swallow
(n)common small European martin that builds nests under the eaves of housesSyn.Delichon urbica
(n)French bishop who is a patron saint of France (died in 397)Syn.St. Martin
(n)United States actor and comedian (born in 1945)Syn.Steve Martin
(n)United States actress (1913-1990)Syn.Mary Martin
(n)United States singer (1917-1995)Syn.Dino Paul Crocetti, Dean Martin
(n)any of various swallows with squarish or slightly forked tail and long pointed wings; migrate around Martinmas
(n)someone who demands exact conformity to rules and formsSyn.moralist, disciplinarian
(n)a harness strap that connects the nose piece to the girth; prevents the horse from throwing back its head
(n)a cocktail made of gin (or vodka) with dry vermouth
(n)an island in the eastern Caribbean in the Windward Islands; administered as an overseas region of France
(n)observed on the Monday closest to January 15Syn.Martin Luther King Day
(n)the feast of Saint Martin; a quarter day in ScotlandSyn.11 November, St Martin's Day
(n)Italian pope from 1417 to 1431 whose election as pope ended the Great Schism (1368-1431)Syn.Oddone Colonna
(n)large North American martin of which the male is blue-blackSyn.Progne subis
(n)an island in the western Leeward Islands; administered jointly by France and the NetherlandsSyn.Saint Maarten, St. Maarten, St. Martin
(n)martini made with vodka rather than gin
(n)American purple gallinuleSyn.Porphyrula martinica
(n)Israeli religious philosopher (born in Austria); as a Zionist he promoted understanding between Jews and Arabs; his writings affected Christian thinkers as well as Jews (1878-1965)Syn.Martin Buber
(n)French neurologist who tried to use hypnotism to cure hysteria (1825-1893)Syn.Jean Martin Charcot
(n)American geneticist who succeeded in transferring a functioning gene from one mouse to another (born in 1934)Syn.Martin Cline
(n)spar under the bowsprit of a sailboatSyn.martingale
(n)English explorer who led an expedition in search of the Northwest Passage to the orient; served under Drake and helped defeat the Spanish Armada (1535-1594)Syn.Sir Martin Frobisher
(n)United States chemist who developed an economical method of producing aluminum from bauxite (1863-1914)Syn.Charles Martin Hall
(n)German philosopher whose views on human existence in a world of objects and on Angst influenced the existential philosophers (1889-1976)Syn.Martin Heidegger
(n)a period of unusually warm weather in the autumnSyn.Saint Martin's summer
(n)United States charismatic civil rights leader and Baptist minister who campaigned against the segregation of Blacks (1929-1968)Syn.Martin Luther King, Martin Luther King Jr.
(n)German chemist who pioneered analytical chemistry and discovered three new elements (1743-1817)Syn.Martin Heinrich Klaproth
(n)German theologian who led the Reformation; believed that salvation is granted on the basis of faith rather than deeds (1483-1546)Syn.Martin Luther
(n)United States tennis player (born in Czechoslovakia) who won nine Wimbledon women's singles championships (born in 1956)Syn.Martina Navratilova
(n)Venezuelan master terrorist raised by a Marxist-Leninist father; trained and worked with many terrorist groups (born in 1949)Syn.Carlos the Jackal, Glen Gebhard, Andres Martinez, Salim, Taurus, Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, Ilich Sanchez, Michael Assat, Carlos, Hector Hevodidbon
(n)United States filmmaker (born in 1942)Syn.Martin Scorsese
(n)a kind of pain such as that caused by a wound or a burn or a soreSyn.smartness, smarting
(n)of Australia and Polynesia; nests in tree cavitiesSyn.Hirundo nigricans, tree martin
(n)8th President of the United States (1782-1862)Syn.President Van Buren, Martin Van Buren
(n)Australian writer (1912-1990)Syn.Patrick Victor Martindale White, Patrick White
(n)schooling goatfish; greyish with yellow stripeSyn.Mulloidichthys martinicus
Collaborative International Dictionary (GCIDE)

n. (Zool.) An imperfect female calf, twinborn with a male, which is sterile as a result of exposure to masculinizing hormones. [ 1913 Webster +PJC ]

Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968): Martin Luther King stands alongside John F. Kennedy as one of the strikingly iconic images of 1960s America, one of the figures who inspired a revolution of political will and social perception.
Born on 15 January 1929, to Reverend Martin Luther King, Sr. and Alberta Christine King in Atlanta, Georgia, King was a gifted student. It was while studying towards his Divinity degree in 1951, that King first discovered the teachings of Mahatma Ghandi, whose inspiration would be seen in many of King's future ideas. In 1953, King married Coretta Scott. The world that Martin Luther King and his new family found themselves in during the late 1950s was one where racial segregation was an accepted norm, whether in schools, churches, or on public transport.
When Rosa Parks was arrested for not giving up her seat on a bus for a white man - in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955 - the black civil rights movement found an unexpected opportunity to begin a push that would eventually remove all officially sanctioned segregation throughout the United States . And Dr. King was at the forefront of that push. (https://web.archive.org/web/20081229032957/http://www.time.com/time/time100/heroes/profile/parks01.html)
Four days after Rosa Parks was arrested, on the first day of a boycott of the buses by black passengers, King was appointed as president of the Montgomery Improvement Association. Placing himself so publicly at the forefront of the movement, he soon found himself and his family to be targets for white hate. In January of the next year, a bomb was thrown at his house. The King family would face similar threats and acts of violence all through Martin's lifetime.
On 21 February 1956, King was one of those arrested as a consequence of the boycott. By 4 June, however, a US District Court ruled that such segregation on city bus lines was unconstitutional, a decision confirmed in November by the Supreme Court. Before the end of the year, Federal injunctions had been served, and the Montgomery bus system was officially unsegregated.
This was the first of King's victories. Although the success was by no means solely his, the methods of non-violent opposition utilised for this protest were to become a trademark of Dr. King. This ideology contrasted sharply with that represented by the other prominent black civil rights leader of the time, Malcolm X, (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcolm_X) but many people responded strongly to King's gifts as an orator, to his message of optimism and compassion, and to his sheer presence as a human being.
Throughout his lifetime, King's activities were closely monitored by the FBI, under the control of the controversial J. Edgar Hoover. Evidence collected by Hoover's agents, combined with rumour and innuendo, has cast a shadow over the official view of Martin Luther King. Hoover was looking for dirt, and compiled a dossier that accused King of infidelity, beating women and of being a Communist. (https://web.archive.org/web/20041019083224/http://archive.aclu.org/features/f011702a.html).
From 1957 onwards, King's reputation as a civil rights leader and powerful orator grew. He appeared on the cover of Time in February and met then-Vice President Richard Nixon in June. (https://web.archive.org/web/20090316061938/http://www.time.com/time/time100/leaders/profile/king.html). 1958 saw the publication of his first book, Stride Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story, his version of the incidents surrounding the bus boycott
. By 1960, Dr. King was a major voice in US political life. He met with Presidential candidate John F. Kennedy to discuss racial policy. In keeping with his belief in non-violent protest, King's continued civil rights demonstrations would take the form of sit-ins and obstructions, often leading to his arrest. The sight of Martin Luther King being bundled off to jail brought the causes he was helping much public sympathy and support.
August 28 1963 saw the 'March on Washington', regarded as the first major, integrated protest march in American history. (https://web.archive.org/web/20040608193544/http://www.life.com/Life/mlk/mlk06.html). At the end of the march, Dr. King delivers the I Have A Dream speech at the Lincoln Memorial, Washington DC. (https://web.archive.org/web/20060831163009/http://www.mecca.org/~crights/dream.html) Racial tension, however, was increasing; 1964 saw riots all across the country, notably in New York, New Jersey, Illinois and Pennsylvania.
King was growing as an international figure. In 1964, he visited West Berlin, invited by the then-mayor, Willy Brandt, had an audience with Pope Paul VI at the Vatican, then, most significantly, he received the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, Norway. (https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel-prize-lessons-theme-martin-luther-king-jr-and-the-civil-rights-movement/)
The following year, Malcolm X was assassinated in New York. Violence was escalating in areas of racial tension, including Montgomery, Alabama. Protesters were regularly beaten by police officers, often resulting in serious injuries or even fatalities. In Watts, Los Angeles, riots left 35 people dead. In March a protest rally reached Montgomery, under the protection of federal troops. Starting at an estimated 3, 000 marchers, by the time they reach their destination, it's believed they numbered nearly 30, 000 people. On reaching the capitol, the marchers were addressed by Dr. King.
1966 saw King talk openly about more than racial issues. He began to discuss his opposition to the Vietnam war and issues such as housing - arguing for protection for poor people, regardless of their race.
In 1967, the rioting was worsening growing to be some of the worst in American history. Fuelled by the uncertainty and anger created by the shootings of figures such as Malcolm X and John F. Kennedy, the sense of helpless rage directed at the nation's social structure and America's involvement in Vietnam, already strained civil relations were heading towards what seemed to be an inevitably violent conclusion.
In Mississippi, one black student was killed in a riot at Jackson State College; 23 people died in riots in New Jersey; and 43 died, with another 324 injured in riots in Detroit riots, labelled as the worst of the century.
The last year of Martin Luther King's life saw him cast his net even wider, including taking part in a march in support of sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee. This part of King's career is often glossed over or undervalued by historians and commentators of the time. (https://web.archive.org/web/20081011070216/http://www.fair.org/media-beat/950104.html/).
On April 3, he delivered his last speech, entitled “I See the Promised Land”. The contents of the speech seem eerily prescient in retrospect. (http://www.edchange.org/multicultural/speeches/mlk_promised_land.html). The next day, April 4 1968, Martin Luther King was shot dead as he stood talking on the balcony of his room at the Lorraine Motel, Memphis. James Earl Ray was charged and found guilty of his murder.
King was buried on April 9, aged 39. After his death, Dr. King's widow, Coretta Scott King, established The King Center as 'the official, living memorial dedicated to the advancement of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.' (https://thekingcenter.org/).
King's legacy is represented by Martin Luther King Day, celebrated in the United States on the third Monday in January every year. http://www.holidays.net/mlk/
Carl Gillingham [ CG ]

n. (Stone Working) [ Etymol. uncertain. ] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. [ 1913 Webster ]

n. [ F. martin, from the proper name Martin. Cf. Martlet. ] (Zool.) One of several species of swallows, usually having the tail less deeply forked than the tail of the common swallows. [ Written also marten. ] [ 1913 Webster ]

☞ The American purple martin, or bee martin (Progne subis or Progne purpurea), and the European house martin, or window martin (Hirundo urbica or Chelidon urbica), are the best known species. [ 1913 Webster ]


Bank martin. (a) The bank swallow. See under Bank. (b) The fairy martin. See under Fairy. --
Bee martin. (a) The purple martin. (b) The kingbird. --
Sand martin, the bank swallow.
[ 1913 Webster ]

n. [ So called from an officer of that name in the French army under Louis XIV. Cf. Martin the bird, Martlet. ] In military language, a strict disciplinarian; in general, one who lays stress on a rigid adherence to the details of discipline, or to forms and fixed methods. [ Hence, the word is commonly employed in a depreciatory sense. ] [ 1913 Webster ]

n. [ F. ] (Zool.) The martin. [ 1913 Webster ]

n. [ Cf. Sp. martinete. ] (Zool.) A species of tinamou (Calopezus elegans), having a long slender crest. [ 1913 Webster ]

n. The principles or practices of a martinet; rigid adherence to discipline, etc. [ 1913 Webster ]

{ } n. [ F. martingale; cf. It. martingala a sort of hose, martingale, Sp. martingala a greave, cuish, martingale, Sp. almártaga a kind of bridle. ] 1. A strap fastened to a horse's girth, passing between his fore legs, and fastened to the bit, or now more commonly ending in two rings, through which the reins pass. It is intended to hold down the head of the horse, and prevent him from rearing. [ 1913 Webster ]

2. (Naut.) A lower stay of rope or chain for the jib boom or flying jib boom, fastened to, or reeved through, the dolphin striker. Also, the dolphin striker itself. [ 1913 Webster ]

3. (Gambling) The act of doubling, at each stake, that which has been lost on the preceding stake; also, the sum so risked; -- metaphorically derived from the bifurcation of the martingale of a harness. Called also Martingale strategy. Such a betting strategy does not change the overall likelihood of winning, but in a short run it increases the probability of winning a small sum, balancing it against an increased probability of losing a large sum. [ Cant ] Thackeray. [ 1913 Webster +PJC ]

n. [ St. Martin + mass religious service. ] (Eccl.) The feast of St. Martin, the eleventh of November; -- often called martlemans. [ 1913 Webster ]


Martinmas summer, a period of calm, warm weather often experienced about the time of Martinmas; Indian summer. Percy Smith.
[ 1913 Webster ]

See Open-hearth process, etc., under Open. [ 1913 Webster ]

See Open-hearth steel, under Open. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]

CC-CEDICT CN-EN Dictionary
[  /  , Mǎ dīng, ㄇㄚˇ ㄉㄧㄥ]Martin (name)#18352[Add to Longdo]
[, yǎng, ㄧㄤˇ]martingale#39226[Add to Longdo]
[, jìn, ㄐㄧㄣˋ]martingale; stingy; surname Jin#50083[Add to Longdo]
[ , Lù dé, ㄌㄨˋ ㄉㄜˊ]Luther (name); Martin Luther (1483-1546), reformation protestant minister#69720[Add to Longdo]
[    /    , Mǎ tí ní kè, ㄇㄚˇ ㄊㄧˊ ㄋㄧˊ ㄎㄜˋ]Martinique (French Caribbean island)#205533[Add to Longdo]
[   /   , Wéi Mù tíng, ㄨㄟˊ ㄇㄨˋ ㄊㄧㄥˊ]Clarence Martin Wilbur (1908-1997), US Sinologist and Professor of Columbia University#284822[Add to Longdo]
[   /   , Dīng Wěi liáng, ㄉㄧㄥ ㄨㄟˇ ㄌㄧㄤˊ]William A.P. Martin (1827-1916), American missionary who lived 62 years in China between 1850 and 1916, and helped found many Chinese colleges; the first president of Beijing university[Add to Longdo]
[   /   , Tóng wén guǎn, ㄊㄨㄥˊ ㄨㄣˊ ㄍㄨㄢˇ]the first modern Chinese library established in 1898 by William A.P. Martin 丁韙良|丁韪良, becoming the foundation for Beijing University library[Add to Longdo]
[ , yàn kē, ㄧㄢˋ ㄎㄜ]Hirundinidae (the family of swallows and martins)[Add to Longdo]
[     /     , Mǎ dīng· Lù dé, ㄇㄚˇ ㄉㄧㄥ· ㄌㄨˋ ㄉㄜˊ]Martin Luther (1483-1546), reformation protestant minister[Add to Longdo]
DING DE-EN Dictionary
Martinshorn { n }
(police; ambulance; fire-engine) siren[Add to Longdo]
gutaussehend
überlisten | überlistend | überlistet | überlistete
to outsmart | outsmarting | outsmarts | outsmarted[Add to Longdo]
übervorteilen | übervorteilend | übervorteilt | übervorteilt | übervorteilte
to outsmart | outsmarting | outsmarted | outsmarts | outsmarted[Add to Longdo]
Martiniquespottdrossel { f } [ ornith. ]
Grey Trembler[Add to Longdo]
Martinique [ geogr. ]
Martinique (mq)[Add to Longdo]
Fort-de-France (Hauptstadt von Martinique)
Fort-de-France (capital of Martinique)[Add to Longdo]
EDICT JP-EN Dictionary
[つばめ(P);つばくらめ(ok);つばくら(ok);つばくろ(ok);ツバメ(P), tsubame (P); tsubakurame (ok); tsubakura (ok); tsubakuro (ok); tsubame (P)](n) (1) (uk) swallow (bird of the Hirundinidae family); martin; (2) barn swallow (Hirundo rustica); (3) (See 若い燕) younger man involved with an older woman; (P)#5944[Add to Longdo]
[hirihiri](adv, n, vs) (on-mim) prickling pain; smarting; stinging[Add to Longdo]
[sho-todorinku](n) short drink (martini, gimlet, etc.)[Add to Longdo]
[doraimatei-ni ; doraima-tei-ni (ik)](n) dry martini[Add to Longdo]
[furi-ma-chin](n) freemartin[Add to Longdo]
[matei-ni ; marutei-ni ; ma-teini ; ma-tei-ni](n) martini[Add to Longdo]
[maruteiniku](n) Martinique[Add to Longdo]
[いわつばめ;イワツバメ, iwatsubame ; iwatsubame](n) (uk) Asian house martin (species of songbird, Delichon dasypus)[Add to Longdo]
[さんがい, sangai](n) (See 面繋, 胸繋, 尻繋) headstall, martingale, and crupper[Add to Longdo]
[むらさきつばめ;ムラサキツバメ, murasakitsubame ; murasakitsubame](n) (1) (uk) powdered oakblue (butterfly) (Narathura bazalus); (2) purple martin (bird) (Progne subis)[Add to Longdo]
[にしいわつばめ;ニシイワツバメ, nishiiwatsubame ; nishiiwatsubame](n) (uk) common house martin (species of songbird, Delichon urbica)[Add to Longdo]
[むながい;むなかき(ok), munagai ; munakaki (ok)](n) martingale[Add to Longdo]
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