0 (soil which is full of) rotted leaves etc. -- ดินร่วน
1 a growth on stale food etc -- รา
This bread is covered with mould/mold.
2 a shape into which a substance in liquid form is poured so that it may take on that shape when it cools and hardens -- แม่พิมพ์
a jelly mould/mold.
3 something, especially a food, formed in a mould/mold. -- รา
4 to form in a mould -- หล่อ
This is partly because it is highly workable and capable of being moulded into the most expressive of surfaces.
In other words, discourse moulds music to serve a particular purpose dictated not by the attributes of music, but by the structural necessity of theory.
Religion was crucial to any society, moulding attitudes and dispositions and facilitating mutual understandings.
The key argument is that different ' cultures ' of fitness mould the subjective experiences of ageing in different ways through the use of various body-maintenance techniques.
Most specimens are flattened internal or external moulds, though threedimensional preservation also occurs.
The tendency to see constitutions as predetermined legal moulds can be a source of flawed institutional arrangements and eventual institutional failure.
But not all history can be shoehorned into a colonial/pre-colonial mould.
This pairing results from the practice of early modern papermakers, who used two paper moulds (crafted as a pair) in alternation.