different between tod vs toea

tod

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /t?d/
  • Rhymes: -?d
  • Rhymes: -??d

Etymology 1

From Middle English tod, of unknown origin. Possibly influenced by Etymology 2, due to its bushy tail. Cognate with Scots tod.

Noun

tod (plural tods)

  1. (now Britain dialect) A fox.
    • c. 1620-1625, Ben Jonson, Pan's Anniversary
      the wolf, the tod, the brock
    • 1977, Richard Adams, The Plague Dogs
      Who am Ah? Ah'm tod, whey Ah'm tod, ye knaw. Canniest riever on moss and moor!
    1. A male fox; a dog; a reynard.
  2. Someone like a fox; a crafty person.
Synonyms
  • (male fox): dog-fox
Hypernyms
  • (male fox): fox
Coordinate terms
  • (male fox): vixen (female fox)
Related terms
  • Todd
  • todd
References

Etymology 2

Apparently cognate with Saterland Frisian todde (bundle), Swedish todd (mass (of wool), dialectal).

Noun

tod (plural tods)

  1. A bush, especially of ivy.
    • c. 1614, John Fletcher, William Shakespeare, The Two Noble Kinsmen, Act 4, Scene 2, 1997, Lois Potter (editor), The Two Noble Kinsmen, page 277,
      His head's yellow, / Hard-haired, and curled, thick-twined like ivy tods, / Not to undo with thunder.
    • 1798, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
      The ivy tod is heavy with snow.
  2. An old English measure of weight, usually of wool, containing two stone or 28 pounds (13 kg).
    • 1843, The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Volume 27, p. 202:
      Seven pounds make a clove, 2 cloves a stone, 2 stone a tod, 6 1/2 tods a wey, 2 weys a sack, 12 sacks a last. [...] It is to be observed here that a sack is 13 tods, and a tod 28 pounds, so that the sack is 364 pounds.
    • 1882, James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England, Volume 4, p. 209:
      Generally, however, the stone or petra, almost always of 14 lbs., is used, the tod of 28 lbs., and the sack of thirteen stone.

Verb

tod (third-person singular simple present tods, present participle todding, simple past and past participle todded)

  1. (obsolete) To weigh; to yield in tods.

Anagrams

  • DOT, DTO, Dot, ODT, OTD, do't, dot

Old High German

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *dauþuz, akin to Old Saxon d?th, Old Dutch d?th, d?t, Old English d?aþ, Old Norse dauði, Gothic ???????????????????????? (dauþus).

Noun

t?d m

  1. death, cessation of life

Related terms

  • t?t

Descendants

  • Middle High German: t?t
    • Alemannic German:
      Swabian: Daod, Dod
    • Central Franconian:
      Hunsrik: Dod
    • German: Tod
    • Luxembourgish: Doud
    • Yiddish: ????? (toyt)

Old Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [toð]

Determiner

tod m or f sg

  1. Apocopic form of todo or toda; all
    • c. 1200, Almerich, Fazienda de Ultramar, f. 42v.

Slovene

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tò?t/, /tó?t/

Adverb

t??d

  1. (clarification of this definition is needed) thus

Further reading

  • tod”, in Slovarji Inštituta za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša ZRC SAZU, portal Fran

tod From the web:

  • what today
  • what today date
  • what today weather
  • what today holiday
  • what today national day
  • what to do
  • what today temperature
  • what today day


toea

English

Noun

toea (plural toeas or toea)

  1. A unit of currency, equivalent to one hundredth of a Papua New Guinean kina.

Anagrams

  • -oate

toea From the web:

  • what to eat
  • what to eat near me
  • what to eat for lunch
  • what to eat for dinner
  • what to eat when sick
  • what to eat on keto
  • what to eat with steak
  • what to eat with ibs
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like