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5 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
ax
/ˈæks/
斧頭(
vt
.)削減
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
ax
縮寫
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Ax
,
Axe
,
n.
A
tool
or
instrument
of
steel
,
or
of
iron
with
a
steel
edge
or
blade
,
for
felling
trees
,
chopping
and
splitting
wood
,
hewing
timber
,
etc
.
It
is
wielded
by
a
wooden
helve
or
handle
,
so
fixed
in
a
socket
or
eye
as
to
be
in
the
same
plane
with
the
blade
.
The
broadax
,
or
carpenter's
ax
,
is
an
ax
for
hewing
timber
,
made
heavier
than
the
chopping
ax
,
and
with
a
broader
and
thinner
blade
and
a
shorter
handle
.
Note:
The
ancient
battle-ax
had
sometimes
a
double
edge
.
Note:
☞
The
word
is
used
adjectively
or
in
combination
;
as
,
ax
head
or
ax
head
;
ax
helve
;
ax
handle
;
ax
shaft
;
ax
-shaped;
ax
like.
Note:
This
word
was
originally
spelt
with
e
,
axe
;
and
so
also
was
nearly
every
corresponding
word
of
one
syllable
:
as
,
flaxe
,
taxe
,
waxe
,
sixe
,
mixe
,
pixe
,
oxe
,
fluxe
,
etc
.
This
superfluous
e
is
not
dropped
;
so
that
,
in
more
than
a
hundred
words
ending
in
x
,
no
one
thinks
of
retaining
the
e
except
in
axe
.
Analogy
requires
its
exclusion
here
.
Note:
“The
spelling
ax
is
better
on
every
ground
,
of
etymology
,
phonology
,
and
analogy
,
than
axe
,
which
has
of
late
become
prevalent.”
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Ax
v.
t
. & i.
To
ask
;
to
inquire
or
inquire
of
.
Note:
☞
This
word
is
from
Saxon
,
and
is
as
old
as
the
English
language
.
Formerly
it
was
in
good
use
,
but
now
is
regarded
as
a
vulgarism
.
It
is
still
dialectic
in
England
,
and
is
sometimes
heard
among
the
uneducated
in
the
United
States
.
“And
Pilate
axide
him
,
Art
thou
king
of
Jewis?”
“Or
if
he
axe
a fish.”
--
Wyclif
.
'
bdThe
king
axed
after
your
Grace's
welfare
.” --
Pegge
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
ax
n
:
an
edge
tool
with
a
heavy
bladed
head
mounted
across
a
handle
[
syn
:
axe
]
v
1:
chop
or
split
with
an
ax
; "
axe
wood
" [
syn
:
axe
]
2:
terminate
; "
The
NSF
axed
the
research
program
and
stopped
funding
it
" [
syn
:
axe
]
[
also
:
axes
(
pl
)]
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