0 a set of rungs or steps between two long supports, for climbing up or down -- บันได
1 a long, narrow flaw caused by the breaking of a stitch in a stocking or other knitted fabric; run American -- ลุ่ย
Rising levels of net disposable income allowed town-dwellers to climb the housing ladder, thereby reducing some at least of the ravages of infection.
Those who could adjust often ascended the social ladders that were newly created.
Both of these suffixes are obligatory, and show respect for those higher up on the social-stratification ladder.
For those on the bottom rungs of their occupational ladder, there are particular dangers.
At extreme deformations, this mode leads to a so-called ' ladder ' form where the two backbones are almost parallel.
After the first cycle a second aliquot is added, after the second cycle a third, etc. so building up a ladder.
They had more natural feelings than those who climbed up the power ladder of the company's management.
You're on the ladder, being handed on from one master to the next.