obnoxious
odieux
1376; du lat. odiosus.
+
from the verb odi "I hate," distantly related to the root meaning an odor. It emerges in Armenian ateam "I hate," but isn't seen much elsewhere in Indo-European languages meaning hate. English "annoy" was borrowed from Old French anoier "to annoy, bore," a descendant of Latin inodiare "to make odious" from the phrase in odio "odious," containing in "in" and "odio," the Ablative Case of "odium." Borrowing this particular French word was a cottage industry at one point in the history of the English language. We also created an English word, noisome "offensive, harmful" from it by dropping the initial vowel and adding the English suffix -some. Then, when "anoier" went on to become ennuyer "to bore" in French, we borrowed the noun from this verb: ennui "boredom."nang/šarm-âvar
bas-nâ-pasand
obnoxious
sengak
obnoxious
(อับนอค'เชิส) adj. น่ารังเกียจ,น่าขยะแขยง,ได้รับอันตรายหรือสิ่งเลวได้ง่าย,มีกลิ่นเหม็น. คำศัพท์ย่อย: obnoxiousness n. คำที่มีความหมายเหมือนกัน: objectionable
obnoxious
[ъb'nЈkshъs] а противен, извънредно неприятен, омразен (to).