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DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
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Elements database 20001107
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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8 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
worm
/ˈwɝm/
蟲,蠕蟲,蚯蚓,小人物,螺紋,蝸桿(vi.)蠕行,慢慢前進(vt.)使蠕行,慢慢地走 ; 網絡病毒,(可以在網絡上傳播的病毒)
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
worm
/ˈwɝm/
名詞
蚓部,蟲,蠕蟲,腸蟲,蚯蚓,蝸桿,螺紋
From:
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
worm
一種複製保護程序
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Worm
n.
1.
A
creeping
or
a
crawling
animal
of
any
kind
or
size
,
as
a
serpent
,
caterpillar
,
snail
,
or
the
like
. [
Archaic
]
There
came
a
viper
out
of
the
heat
,
and
leapt
on
his
hand
.
When
the
men
of
the
country
saw
the
worm
hang
on
his
hand
,
they
said
,
This
man
must
needs
be
a
murderer
.
--
Tyndale
(
Acts
xxviii
. 3, 4).
'
T
is
slander
,
Whose
edge
is
sharper
than
the
sword
,
whose
tongue
Outvenoms
all
the
worms
of
Nile
. --
Shak
.
When
Cerberus
perceived
us
,
the
great
worm
,
His
mouth
he
opened
and
displayed
his
tusks
. --
Longfellow
.
2.
Any
small
creeping
animal
or
reptile
,
either
entirely
without
feet
,
or
with
very
short
ones
,
including
a
great
variety
of
animals
;
as
,
an
earth
worm
;
the
blind
worm
.
Specifically
:
Zool.
(a)
Any
helminth
;
an
entozoon
.
(b)
Any
annelid
.
(c)
An
insect
larva
.
(d)
pl.
Same
as
Vermes
.
3.
An
internal
tormentor
;
something
that
gnaws
or
afflicts
one's
mind
with
remorse
.
The
worm
of
conscience
still
begnaw
thy
soul!
--
Shak
.
4.
A
being
debased
and
despised
.
I
am
a
worm
,
and
no
man
.
--
Ps
.
xxii
. 6.
5.
Anything
spiral
,
vermiculated
,
or
resembling
a
worm
;
as
:
(a)
The
thread
of
a
screw
.
The
threads
of
screws
,
when
bigger
than
can
be
made
in
screw
plates
,
are
called
worms
.
--
Moxon
.
(b)
A
spiral
instrument
or
screw
,
often
like
a
double
corkscrew
,
used
for
drawing
balls
from
firearms
.
(c)
Anat.
A
certain
muscular
band
in
the
tongue
of
some
animals
,
as
the
dog
;
the
lytta
.
See
Lytta
.
(d)
The
condensing
tube
of
a
still
,
often
curved
and
wound
to
economize
space
.
See
Illust
.
of
Still
.
(e)
Mach.
A
short
revolving
screw
,
the
threads
of
which
drive
,
or
are
driven
by
,
a
worm
wheel
by
gearing
into
its
teeth
or
cogs
.
See
Illust
.
of
Worm gearing
,
below
.
Worm abscess
Med.
,
an
abscess
produced
by
the
irritation
resulting
from
the
lodgment
of
a
worm
in
some
part
of
the
body
.
Worm fence
.
See
under
Fence
.
Worm gear
.
Mach.
(a)
A
worm
wheel
.
(b)
Worm
gearing
.
Worm gearing
,
gearing
consisting
of
a
worm
and
worm
wheel
working
together
.
Worm grass
.
Bot.
(a)
See
Pinkroot
, 2
(a)
.
(b)
The
white
stonecrop
(
Sedum album
)
reputed
to
have
qualities
as
a
vermifuge
. --
Dr
.
Prior
.
Worm oil
Med.
,
an
anthelmintic
consisting
of
oil
obtained
from
the
seeds
of
Chenopodium anthelminticum
.
Worm powder
Med.
,
an
anthelmintic
powder
.
Worm snake
.
Zool.
See
Thunder snake
(b)
,
under
Thunder
.
Worm tea
Med.
,
an
anthelmintic
tea
or
tisane
.
Worm tincture
Med.
,
a
tincture
prepared
from
dried
earthworms
,
oil
of
tartar
,
spirit
of
wine
,
etc
. [
Obs
.]
Worm wheel
,
a
cogwheel
having
teeth
formed
to
fit
into
the
spiral
spaces
of
a
screw
called
a
worm
,
so
that
the
wheel
may
be
turned
by
,
or
may
turn
,
the
worm
; --
called
also
worm gear
,
and
sometimes
tangent wheel
.
See
Illust
.
of
Worm gearing
,
above
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Worm
v. i.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Wormed
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Worming
.]
To
work
slowly
,
gradually
,
and
secretly
.
When
debates
and
fretting
jealousy
Did
worm
and
work
within
you
more
and
more
,
Your
color
faded
. --
Herbert
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Worm
,
v. t.
1.
To
effect
,
remove
,
drive
,
draw
,
or
the
like
,
by
slow
and
secret
means
; --
often
followed
by
out
.
They
find
themselves
wormed
out
of
all
power
.
--
Swift
.
They
. . .
wormed
things
out
of
me
that
I
had
no
desire
to
tell
.
--
Dickens
.
2.
To
clean
by
means
of
a
worm
;
to
draw
a
wad
or
cartridge
from
,
as
a
firearm
.
See
Worm
,
n.
5
(b)
.
3.
To
cut
the
worm
,
or
lytta
,
from
under
the
tongue
of
,
as
a
dog
,
for
the
purpose
of
checking
a
disposition
to
gnaw
.
The
operation
was
formerly
supposed
to
guard
against
canine
madness
.
The
men
assisted
the
laird
in
his
sporting
parties
,
wormed
his
dogs
,
and
cut
the
ears
of
his
terrier
puppies
.
--
Sir
W
.
Scott
.
4.
Naut.
To
wind
rope
,
yarn
,
or
other
material
,
spirally
round
,
between
the
strands
of
,
as
a
cable
;
to
wind
with
spun
yarn
,
as
a
small
rope
.
Ropes
. . .
are
generally
wormed
before
they
are
served
.
--
Totten
.
To worm one's self into
,
to
enter
into
gradually
by
arts
and
insinuations
;
as
,
to
worm
one's
self
into
favor
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
worm
n
1:
any
of
numerous
relatively
small
elongated
soft-bodied
animals
especially
of
the
phyla
Annelida
and
Chaetognatha
and
Nematoda
and
Nemertea
and
Platyhelminthes
;
also
many
insect
larvae
2:
a
person
who
has
a
nasty
or
unethical
character
undeserving
of
respect
[
syn
:
louse
,
insect
,
dirt ball
]
3:
a
software
program
capable
of
reproducing
itself
that
can
spread
from
one
computer
to
the
next
over
a
network
;
"
worms
take
advantage
of
automatic
file
sending
and
receiving
features
found
on
many
computers
"
4:
screw
thread
on
a
gear
with
the
teeth
of
a
worm
wheel
or
rack
v
:
to
move
in
a
twisting
or
contorted
motion
, (
especially
when
struggling
); "
The
prisoner
writhed
in
discomfort
"; "
The
child
tried
to
wriggle
free
from
his
aunt's
embrace
"
[
syn
:
writhe
,
wrestle
,
wriggle
,
squirm
,
twist
]
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Worm
(1.)
Heb
.
sas
(
Isa
. 51:8),
denotes
the
caterpillar
of
the
clothes-moth
.
(2.)
The
manna
bred
worms
(
tola'im
),
but
on
the
Sabbath
there
was
not
any
worm
(
rimmah
)
therein
(
Ex
. 16:20, 24).
Here
these
words
refer
to
caterpillars
or
larvae
,
which
feed
on
corrupting
matter
.
These
two
Hebrew
words
appear
to
be
interchangeable
(
Job
25:6;
Isa
. 14:11).
Tola'im
in
some
places
denotes
the
caterpillar
(
Deut
. 28:39;
Jonah
4:7),
and
rimmah
,
the
larvae
,
as
bred
from
putridity
(
Job
17:14; 21:26; 24:20).
In
Micah
7:17,
where
it
is
said
, "
They
shall
move
out
of
their
holes
like
worms
,"
perhaps
serpents
or
"
creeping
things
,"
or
as
in
the
Revised
Version
,
"
crawling
things
,"
are
meant
.
The
word
is
used
figuratively
in
Job
25:6;
Ps
. 22:6;
Isa
.
41:14;
Mark
9:44, 46, 48;
Isa
. 66:24.
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