Sod vs Clod - What's the difference?
sod | clod |
(uncountable) That stratum of the surface of the soil which is filled with the roots of grass, or any portion of that surface; turf; sward.
* Collins
Turf grown and cut specifically for the establishment of lawns.
To cover with sod.
(British, vulgar) Sodomite; bugger.
(British, slang, mildly pejorative, formerly considered vulgar) A person, usually male; (often qualified with an adjective).
(UK, vulgar) expression of surprise, contempt, outrage, disgust, boredom, frustration.
(transitive, British, slang, vulgar) Bugger; sodomize.
(transitive, British, slang, vulgar) Damn, curse, confound.
(obsolete) (seethe)
(obsolete) Boiled.
*, New York, 2001, p.223:
(Australia, of bread) Sodden; incompletely risen.
(Australia, colloquial) A damper (bread) which has failed to rise, remaining a flat lump.
* 1954 , Tom Ronan, Vision Splendid'', quoted in Tom Burton, ''Words in Your Ear , Wakefield Press (1999), ISBN 1-86254-475-1, page 120:
A lump of something, especially of earth or clay.
* Milton
* E. Fairfax
* Francis Bacon
* T. Burnet
* 2010 ,
The ground; the earth; a spot of earth or turf.
* Jonathan Swift
A stupid person; a dolt.
Part of a shoulder of beef, or of the neck piece near the shoulder.
To pelt with clods.
(Scotland) To throw violently; to hurl.
To collect into clods, or into a thick mass; to coagulate; to clot.
* G. Fletcher
As nouns the difference between sod and clod
is that sod is that stratum of the surface of the soil which is filled with the roots of grass, or any portion of that surface; turf; sward while clod is a lump of something, especially of earth or clay.As verbs the difference between sod and clod
is that sod is to cover with sod while clod is to pelt with clods.As an interjection sod
is expression of surprise, contempt, outrage, disgust, boredom, frustration.As an adjective sod
is boiled.sod
English
Etymology 1
(en)Noun
(-)- She there shall dress a sweeter sod / Than Fancy's feet have ever trod.
- The landscapers rolled sod onto the bare earth and made a presentable lawn by nightfall.
Verb
(sodd)- He sodded the worn areas twice a year.
Etymology 2
From sodomize, by shorteningNoun
(en noun)- You mean old sod !
- poor sod
- unlucky sod
Derived terms
* Sod’s lawInterjection
(en interjection)Verb
(sodd)- Sod''' him!'', '''''Sod''' it!'', '''''Sod that bastard!
Derived terms
* sod offEtymology 3
Originally a the past participle ((sodden)).Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)- Beer, if it be over-new, or over-stale, over-strong, or not sod ,is most unwholesome, frets, and galls, etc.
- sod damper
Noun
(en noun)- And Mart the cook the shovel took / And swung the damper to and fro. / 'Another sod , so help me God, / That's fourteen in a flamin' row.
Etymology 4
Anagrams
* ----clod
English
Noun
(en noun)- clods of iron and brass
- clods of blood
- The earth that casteth up from the plough a great clod', is not so good as that which casteth up a smaller ' clod .
- this cold clod of clay which we carry about with us
- "What a bunch of hooey," I said under my breath, tossing a dirt clod over my shoulder against the locked-up garden shed.
- the clod where once their sultan's horse has trod
- (Dryden)
Verb
(clodd)- (Jonson)
- (Sir Walter Scott)
- clodded gore
- Clodded in lumps of clay.
