释义 |
clod I. \ˈkläd\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English clodde, alteration of clot, clotte — more atclot 1. obsolete : clot 2. a. : a lump or mass especially of earth, turf, or clay b. : soil, ground, earth; also : a spot of earth or turf c. : something as unfeeling or as insensitive as a clod of earth : one that is gross and stupid : dolt < remind oneself that the lifeless clod he is writing about is the author of some … most important novels — J.W.Aldridge > 3. : a part of the shoulder of a beef or of the neck piece near the shoulder 4. : soft shale especially over a coal seam II. verb (clodded ; clodded ; clodding ; clods) Etymology: Middle English clodden, from clodde, n. transitive verb 1. a. : to throw clods of earth at < caught Henry on the outside stairs and clodded him vivaciously — Dixon Wecter > b. : to drive by pelting with clods < came a turtle, and I clodded it back into the water — W.A.White > 2. dialect Britain : to throw violently : hurl intransitive verb : to form into clods |