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单词 rod
释义

rodn.1

Brit. /rɒd/, U.S. /rɑd/
Forms: Old English roddum (dative plural), Middle English–1500s 1700s rode, Middle English–1600s rodd, Middle English–1600s rodde, Middle English– rod; Scottish pre-1700 road, pre-1700 rodd, pre-1700 rodde, pre-1700 rode, pre-1700 rood, pre-1700 1700s– rod; also Irish English (Wexford) 1800s rade.
Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: rood n.
Etymology: Origin uncertain. The early history suggests a relationship with rood n. (see discussion below), but it is difficult to explain how a variant or by-form of that word with a short vowel could have arisen. Alternatively, perhaps compare Old Icelandic rudda club, Norwegian regional rudda , rydda large pliant twig or stick used as a whip, rodda horizontal bar used to hang things on, and (with added suffix) Swedish regional (eastern) ruddil young tree, of uncertain origin (in spite of the superficial semantic and formal resemblance to the cognates of rood n., perhaps ultimately < the same Germanic base as rid v.).The word shows formal and semantic overlap with rood n.: both words are attested in Old English in the sense ‘stick or rod of wood’; in later use, spellings indicating a long vowel are occasionally attested for senses of the present word, and, conversely, some senses of rood n. are occasionally attested with short-vowel spellings. Such apparent confusion of form is especially frequent at sense 8b, which overlaps with rood n. 7a. In sense 2b after the post-classical Latin sense ‘scion, descendant’ of classical Latin virga rod (see virga n.), which is used by many patristic writers with reference to the Virgin Mary and (less often) to Jesus, especially in virga a radice Iesse , virga de radice Iesse , virga ex radice Iesse ‘rod from the root of Jesse’, all in allusion to Isaiah 11:1: et egredietur virga de radice Iesse, et flos de radice eius ascendet ‘and there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots’. Although the passage in Isaiah prophesies the Davidic descent of the Messiah (and hence, in Christian interpretation, of Jesus), the application of the term to the Virgin Mary is traditional, based on the tradition that she, like Jesus, was of Davidic descent, and probably also influenced by association of virga virga n. with virgin- , virgo maiden, virgin (see virgin n.), this connection being made by many patristic writers. The term virga Iesse ‘rod of Jesse’ is much rarer in patristic writers (Tertullian, Jerome), and it is often difficult to determine whether it refers to Jesus or to his mother. With the specific bacteriological use in sense 12 compare bacillus n. In sense 13 after Danish †staavene (plural noun), literally ‘rods’ (apparently 1842 in A. Hannover Mikroskopiske undersøgelser af nervesystemet, the source reviewed in quot. 1844). With sense 15 compare earlier hot rod n. 2. It is unclear whether in Old English the word is strong masculine (rodd) or (like the Scandinavian nouns cited above) weak feminine (rodde). If membership of the weak declension is assumed, the word is perhaps attested earlier in the place name Roddanbeorg, Gloucestershire (first half of the 11th cent. in copies of documents of the late 9th cent. or earlier; now Rodborough), although the first element may alternatively represent an otherwise unattested personal name; compare likewise the following:c1250 ( Bounds (Sawyer 609) in W. de G. Birch Cartularium Saxonicum (1893) III. 140 Ærest on roddan pol nioþeweardne, & of roddan pole on þane langan hlinc.
I. A stick of wood or bar of metal, and related senses.
1.
a. A stick or bundle of twigs used as an instrument of punishment, esp. for a child. Cf. cane n.1 4, birch n. 2. to spare the rod and spoil the child: see spare v.1 6a. Now chiefly historical.birch, school-rod: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > corporal punishment > instrument or place of corporal punishment > [noun] > rod or birch
besomc893
yardc1000
rodlOE
baleysa1259
ferule1559
scutcher1611
birch1648
whisk rod1688
twig1736
fasces1762
tickler1765
tickle-tail1785
wand1828
tickle-toby1830
birch-rod1834
birch-wand1876
lOE St. Margaret (Corpus Cambr.) (1994) 158 Ða het se gerefa hi niman..and mid greatum roddum [OE Tiber. mid smalum gyrdum; L. uirgis subtilibus] beaton.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vi. 2216 (MED) Thus was the king withoute rodd Chastised and the queene excused Of that sche hadde ben accused.
a1450 (a1401) Chastising of God's Children (Bodl.) (1957) 113 If þe childe wex wanton, she [sc. the mother] betiþ him, first wiþ a litel rodde, and þe strenger he wexiþ, þe sharper rodde she takeþ.
c1475 Proverbs (Rawl. D.328) in Mod. Philol. (1940) 38 125 (MED) Blesse be þe rodde þat chastyth þe chyld.
1552 T. Wilson Rule of Reason (rev. ed.) sig. Lj The rodde, as an instrument..helpeth forwarde to bring the boy to some goodnesse.
1580 in W. Boys Coll. Hist. Sandwich (1792) 231 Punished..with rodd, shame, restraint of plaie, or otherwyse.
1636 A. Cowley Vote in Poet. Blossomes iii I would not be a School-master, though he His Rods no lesse than Fasces deemes to be.
1663 J. Lamont Diary (1830) 164 He..did weipe hir with his rodde.
1734 H. Fielding Intrig. Chambermaid Epil. sig. A5v 'Tis hard to pay them who our Faults reveal, As Boys are forc'd to buy the Rods they feel.
1780 W. Cowper Boadicea 2 The British warrior queen, Bleeding from the Roman rods.
1824 W. Irving Tales of Traveller I. 270 It makes a vast difference in opinion about the utility of the rod, which end happens to fall to one's share.
1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake II. xx. 337 To fast all the year on bread and water; and to be disciplined with rods or otherwise.
1921 L. Strachey Queen Victoria ix. 277 He was..sentenced to one year's imprisonment and twenty strokes of the birch rod.
1956 Times 25 Apr. 13/3 Every boy had his daily duties about the house and grounds, and woe betide him if he neglected them—for Harold..did not spare the rod.
1996 R. W. Bushnell Culture of Teaching ii. 26 To beat anyone with a rod was to treat him or her as a child and a slave.
b. figurative. A means or instrument of punishment; (also) punishment, chastisement. Frequently in to make a rod for one's own back (also oneself) and variants: to be the cause of one's own troubles or misfortune.to kiss the rod: see kiss v. 6i.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > [noun] > implement or means
roda1393
judiciala1641
society > authority > punishment > [verb (intransitive)] > bring about punishment for oneself
to make a rod for one's own back (also oneself)a1393
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) iv. 1276 (MED) He [sc. Cupid] that hihe hertes loweth..hath mad a rodd To dryve awei hir wantounesse.
?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 313 (MED) Chastise hem with þe hondis of mercy and þe rodde of riȝtwiisenesse.
1485 Malory's Morte Darthur (Caxton) v. ii. sig. hviiiv I fere me ye haue made a rodde for your self.
a1500 tr. Thomas à Kempis De Imitatione Christi (Trin. Dublin) (1893) 132 (MED) Thy discipline is upon me, & þy rodde she shal teche me..I encline me under þe rodde of þy correccion.
?1531 J. Frith Disput. Purgatorye i. sig. Cv Then hath he made a rod for his owne arse.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Lament. iii. 1 I am the man, that thorow the rodd of his wrath haue experience of misery.
1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 iii. ii. 10 Thou dost..Make me beleeue that thou art..the rod of heauen, To punish my mistreadings. View more context for this quotation
?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads v. 606 And therefore..never strive, but gently take your rod.
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. v. 234 It hapned that this Lord first felt the smart of this rod which he made for others.
1677 W. Hughes Man of Sin i. ix. 39 Oh how the good man smiles to see what a Rod we have made for our own Back!
1734 E. Erskine Serm. in Wks. (1871) II. 284 How little fruit is there of rods, whether public or personal.
1771 ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra (1772) II. 352 Shortening the duration of parliaments..is keeping the representative under the rod of the constituent.
1860 J. L. Motley Hist. United Netherlands I. iii. 67 It was the policy of both..governments..to make use of him as a rod over the head of Philip.
1878 M. A. Denison Stella xi. 109 I made a rod for myself, sure enough. Rose Mary became the torment of my life.
1914 D. H. Lawrence Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd iii. 93 I used to thank God for my children, but they 're rods o' trouble.
1966 B. Malamud Fixer (1969) vii. iii. 217 The rod of God's anger against the fixer in Nicholas II.
1998 G. Walvin African's Life vii. 86 Equiano had made a rod for his own back. He had lent some money to his captain, who hesitated with the repayment.
2.
a. More generally: a straight, slender shoot or branch, growing on or cut from a tree or bush.hazel, spar-, thatching-rod, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > bough or branch > flexible and slender
rodc1275
wanda1300
wicker?1507
whip1585
switch1616
sway1630
withe1817
c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) 1123 (MED) Vor meþe hoþ in one rodde An þu mid þine fule codde..Bi werest manne corn urom dore.
?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 41 Hingand apon a spere or apon a rodd.
c1425 Edward, Duke of York Master of Game (Vesp. B.xii) (1904) 100 Þe lord shuld take a faire smalle rodde in his honde, þe which oon of þe ȝemen or oon of þe gromys shuld kitte for hym.
a1450 in T. Austin Two 15th-cent. Cookery-bks. (1888) 52 (MED) Pryke þe cofyn with a pynne y-stekyd on a roddys ende.
a1500 Legend of Cross in Medium Ævum (1965) 34 216 In short tyme sprong iii roddis of a yerd in length.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection iii. sig. BBBvv The angell sat downe and knyt roddes & wrought on the basket.
1572 in A. Feuillerat Documents Office of Revels Queen Elizabeth (1908) 166 For wicker Roddes to make frettes.
1611 Bible (King James) Gen. xxx. 37 Iacob tooke him rods of greene poplar, and of the hasel and chestnut tree. View more context for this quotation
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. 107/2 To put two rods through the cross thrids that were crossed at the Warping.
1766 Compl. Farmer at Surveying It is good that he..carry in his hand a bundle of rods, to stick down one at the end of the chain.
1785 W. Cowper Task vi. 166 So thick a swarm Of flow'rs, like flies clothing her slender rods, That scarce a leaf appears.
1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. (at cited word) Rods, or sticks, fastened to sky-rockets, to make them rise in a straight line.
1885 C. G. W. Lock Workshop Receipts 4th Ser. 276/1 ‘Osiers’,..under the technical name of ‘rods’ and willows, are a merchantable commodity.
1939 ‘F. O'Brien’ At Swim-Two-Birds 168 There was a prolonged snappling of stiffened rods and stubborn shoots.
1956 Sci. Monthly Aug. 61/1 Rods of poplar, almond, and plane, partially peeled of their bark, were placed in the breeding and watering areas.
1998 A. Ball Catholic Trad. in Garden 82 In many countries, ‘palm bouquets’ are made with flowers intertwined with the ‘palms’, and affixed to a stick or rod.
b. figurative. In biblical uses and contexts: an offshoot, a scion; (also) †a tribe (obsolete). Frequently in rod of Jesse (and variants): Jesus, or the Virgin Mary, as a descendant of Jesse, considered by Christians as fulfilling the prophecy of Isaiah 11:1; cf. Jesse n.1 and quot. 1535. Cf. branch n. 5, stem n.1 3.With the sense ‘tribe’ cf. Numbers 17:2-9, in which the twelve tribes of Israel are symbolized by rods or staffs.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinship group > tribe > [noun]
mankinOE
tribea1325
rod1483
jati1838
phratry1876
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende f. cclvv/2 The vyrgyne that chylded mounted vnto heuen, the lytel rodde of Iesse.
a1500 in F. J. Furnivall Polit., Relig., & Love Poems (1903) 112 (MED) Thou art parfyte rodde of Iesse.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Isa. xi. A After this there shal come a rod forth of ye Kynrede of Iesse, and a blossome out of his rote.
1611 Bible (King James) Psalms lxxiv. 2 Remember..the rod [margin Or, tribe] of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed. View more context for this quotation
1645 G. Gillespie Serm. preached before House of Lords 3 It is said of Christ, The rod of Jesse, with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked.
1725 E. Chandler Def. Christianity (ed. 2) ii. 80 Of the same rod of Jesse Esay prophesied, that to him shall the Gentiles seek.
1785 E. Perronet Occas. Verses 22 Extol the stem of Jesse's rod, And crown Him Lord of All.
1840 Baptist Preacher 3 172 Each one of his [sc. Jacob's] sons was considered as a rod, or scion, all of whom were to be transplanted into Canaan, and there to grow and flourish.
c1850 J. M. Neale Hymns Eastern Church (1866) 73 Rod of the Root of Jesse, Thou, Flower of Mary born.
1916 C. L. O'Donnell Dead Musician & Other Poems 99 Jesse's rod hath flowered; Heaven opes before us.
2001 J. Quirate in E. N. C. Zarur & C. M. Lovell Art & Faith in Mexico 81 Saint Jerome's fifth-century commentaries on Isaiah emphasized the Christian view that the Virgin Mary should be read as the rod of Jesse and the flower as our Savior.
c. One of the main stems of a grapevine, on which grapes grow. Cf. vine-rod n. at vine n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tree or plant producing edible berries > grape-vine > parts of
railinga1382
arma1398
palmita1398
vine-branchc1400
vine-leafc1420
portoir1601
vine dragon1601
husband1628
vine-water1736
rodding1833
rod1846
1846 Farmer's Mag. Dec. 488/2 The mode of training and pruning, to have new bearing rods every year, is the same as that for any other white grape.
1874 Florist & Pomologist Oct. 225 As regards the main stem or rod, the same considerations as to its pruning have to be applied as in the previous season.
1917 W. F. Rowles Garden under Glass 353 Individual fertilisation is not needed with grapes, where the pollen is distributed by giving the rod a sharp rap at midday.
2006 A. Swithinbank Greenhouse Gardener iv. 89/1 You can train more than one rod from a single plant, but make sure that they run vertically and remain at least 90cm/3ft apart.
3.
a. A long stick or staff carried in the hand for a particular purpose, such as a walking stick or shepherd's staff; (also) an enchanter's wand. Now somewhat archaic.charming-, walking rod: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports > something to lean on > staff to lean on > walking stick
staffc725
yardc1000
bat?c1225
rodc1300
handstaffa1425
walking staffc1450
sceptre1526
walking stick1580
stick1620
nibbie1812
baton1860
waddy1974
c1300 St. Christopher (Laud) l. 90 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 273 (MED) Cristofre..with is rodde wod a-ȝen; a luyte child he fond þare stonde.
c1450 (?a1400) Parl. Thre Ages (BL Add. 31042) 7 (MED) Then the fawkoners full fersely to floodes þay hyen, To the reuere with thaire roddes to rere vp the fewles.
1474 W. Caxton tr. Game & Playe of Chesse (1883) iii. 76 The rodde is for to dryue and conduyte wyth all the bestes vnto her pasture.
1511 Pylgrymage Richarde Guylforde (Pynson) f. xxxijv Ye Relyques yt Titus caryed to Rome, that is to say..Aarons rodde, Moyses rod [etc.].
1526 Bible (Tyndale) Matt. x. 10 Possess nott golde, nor silver.., Nether shues, nor yet a rod [so Cranmer (1539) and Rheims (1582)].
1611 Bible (King James) Psalms xxiii. 4 Thy rod and thy staffe, they comfort me. View more context for this quotation
1637 J. Milton Comus 28 Without his rod revers't, And backward mutters of dissevering power Wee cannot free the Ladie.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost xi. 133 Charm'd with Arcadian Pipe, the Pastoral Reed Of Hermes, or his opiate Rod . View more context for this quotation
1781 W. Cowper Expostulation 85 He that rul'd them with a shepherd's rod, In form a man, in dignity a God.
1820 P. B. Shelley Œdipus Tyrannus i. 15 I struck the crust o' the earth With this enchanted rod, and Hell lay bare!
1876 T. G. Appleton Nile Jrnl. ii. 232 Everybody carries a rod in Egypt, sorcerers included.
1966 Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 79 543/2 A shepherd's rod represents the Good Shepherd.
1999 L. Kennedy All in Mind vi. 123 Among the 242 items housed at Reading Abbey..were the magical rods of Moses and Aaron.
b. A stick or switch used while riding to encourage the horse to move faster. Now historical (only in riding rod n.).
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > riding on horse (or other animal) > [noun] > urge on > with a whip > (types of) whip
wandc1400
rod?a1475
riding rod?a1549
switch1597
quirka1616
whippet1616
shambrier1667
horsewhipa1691
whip-stick1782
lash-whip1787
flogger1789
string1839
nagaika1842
whalebone1842
quirt1845
switcher1847
ash-plant1850
hunting-crop1857
dick1864
bow-whip1890
?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1865) I. 353 The peple of that cuntre..haue a wonde, other a rodde..to cause the horses to move.
?1561 T. Blundeville Newe Bk. Arte of Ryding i. vi. sig. Bivv You may correct him vii. manner of waies, that is to say, with your voice, rod, cauffes of your legges, [etc.].
1614 G. Markham Cheape & Good Husbandry i. ii Carry your rod without offence to his eye in your right hand.
a1648 Ld. Herbert Life (1976) 33 The Rule for gracefull ryding is That a Man hould..his rod over the left eare of his horse.
1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. Rod, in the manege,..is a switch held by a horseman in his right hand.
1819 Ld. Byron Mazeppa xvii. 683 Mouths bloodless to the bit or rein,..And flanks unscarr'd by spur or rod.
1863 17th Ann. Rep. Ohio State Board Agric. 1862 366 The rider has no spurs, but a rod in his hand, with which he chastises the animal.
1999 J. Arnold in A. de la Haye & E. Wilson Defining Dress ii. 11 (caption) A Belgian noblewoman riding, holding a riding rod. Engraving from Abraham de Bryn..1576.
c. A stick, typically forked and often of hazel, used in dowsing for underground water, minerals, etc. Cf. divining-rod at divining n. 2, dowsing-rod at dowse v. Derivatives, Mosaical rod n. at Mosaical adj.1 2. Also in extended use.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > the paranormal > [noun] > detection of radiation > detecting subterraneous springs, etc. > rhabdomancy > divining-rod
rod1617
Moses' rod1646
divining-wand1656
virgula divina or divinatoria1656
Mosaical roda1681
dowsing-rod1692
divining-stick1712
waggers1747
divining-rod1751
mineral rod1797
fork1886
1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 12 When they goe over silver, they say the Rod bends or breakes, if it be straightly held.
1641 H. Thorndike Of Govt. Churches i. 2 Those that seek for mines, have..a rod which they hold even-balanced over the place where they hope for a vein.
a1657 G. Daniel Trinarchodia: Henry V clv, in Poems (1878) IV. 139 Soe great a faith have Princes, when the Sword (Their Rod of Prophecie) leads on.
1778 W. Pryce Mineralogia Cornubiensis 114 The corpuscles..that rise from the Minerals, entering the rod, determine it to bow down.
1836 R. Furness Astrologer i To cut the wondrous rod, and thence define The place and bearing of the hidden mine.
1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake II. vi. 92 There might be iron-ore in the wolds; and if you could find it by the rod, we might get it up and smelt it.
1935 Times 20 Nov. 15/5 A..piece of machinery,..which can discern the presence of water almost as certainly as the dowser and his rod.
1959 E. Z. Vogt & R. Hyman Water Witching U.S.A. ii. 28 ‘Twirlers’..are diviners for whom the rod does a series of complete rotations between the hands.
1996 R. Webster Dowsing for Beginners i. 5 When you walk over whatever it is you are divining for, the rod will—usually—turn downward with a very strong pull.
4.
a. A staff or stick (of wood, ivory, or metal) carried as a symbol of office, authority, or dignity. Cf. Black Rod n.green, vine-, white rod: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > office > symbol of office or authority > [noun] > staff or rod
yardc1275
tipped stickc1386
bastona1400
mace?a1419
wandc1430
warderc1440
baculc1449
roda1450
verge1493
staff1535
tipstaff1541
verger1547
truncheon1573
vare1578
baton?1590
trunch1590
fasces1598
macer wanda1600
virge1610
batoona1652
stick1677
shaku1875
poker1905
a1450 (?c1400) Sir Gowther (Royal) (1886) l. 334 (MED) There come the steward with a rod [a1500 Adv. yarde] in his honde.
c1453 (c1437) Brut (Harl. 53) 545 Sir Thomas Percy..stuard of the Kynges howsold, come into the hall amonges the pepill and there he brak the rodde of his office.
a1486 Coronation Kings Eng. in Archaeologia (1900) 57 48 (MED) The crosse, the patene, the septir, and the kyngis rodde, the whiche bene thingis of Ryalte, schull be bore in the procession bi the abbot.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 284/2 Verger that bereth a rodde in the churche, sergent de lesglise.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. ccxvv The erle of Arrondel whiche bare the rod of Yuery with the Doue both together.
1557 Bible (Whittingham) Mark xiv. 65 The sergeantes smote him with their rods of office.
1623 W. Shakespeare & J. Fletcher Henry VIII iv. i. 91 Holy Oyle,..The Rod, and Bird of Peace, and all such Emblemes. View more context for this quotation
1643 R. Baker Chron. Kings of Eng. ii. 16 Receiving at the Kings hands the Rod and the Cap, as Investitures of that Dutchy.
1677 F. Sandford Geneal. Hist. Kings Eng. 75 Delivering Him the Scepter to hold in His Right Hand, and the Rod Royal in his Left Hand.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Vergers Inferior Officers, who go before the Bishop, Dean, &c. with a Verge, or Rod tip'd with Silver.
1777 J. Brand Observ. Pop. Antiq. xxv. 261 The Staff or Rod of Authority in the Civil and in the Military..are both derived from hence.
1822 W. Scott Fortunes of Nigel I. ix. 233 Maxwell, still keeping his rod across the door, said,..‘My lord, this gentleman is not known’.
1878 Times 29 Aug. 6/2 An aged and venerable prelate..sat motionless,..holding in his hand a jewelled rod resembling a sceptre.
1917 Biblical World 49 228/2 He does not come to them with a rod. He requires no insignia of his authority.
1955 Mod. Lang. Rev. 50 446 Pedro Crespo takes up his rod of office and prepares to act in his official capacity.
1990 R. Critchfield Among British vii. 440 He once seized the ceremonial rod of the House of Commons and angrily swung it over his head.
b. figurative and in figurative contexts, as a symbol of power or tyranny. Frequently in rod of iron, iron rod (in allusion to Revelation 2:27; see quot. 1526); cf. iron n.1 1b.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > power > [noun] > symbols of power
hornc825
rod1526
fascesa1625
society > authority > rule or government > oppression > [noun] > instrument or symbol of
yokeeOE
rod of iron1526
iron fist1600
heel1601
millstonea1660
1526 Bible (Tyndale) Rev. ii. 27 He shall rule them with a rodde of yeron.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost v. 887 That Golden Scepter..Is now an Iron Rod to bruise and breake Thy disobedience. View more context for this quotation
1717 in G. Lamoine Charges to Grand Jury (1992) 84 His Religion commanded him to govern Protestants with a Rod of Iron.
c1761 T. Gray Elegy xii, in Poems (1768) 113 Hands, that the rod of empire might have sway'd.
a1771 T. Gray Ess. I in W. Mason Mem. Life & Writings (1775) 197 Proud of the yoke, and pliant to the rod.
1787 R. Burns Poems (new ed.) 275 Here Justice..High wields her balance and her rod.
1813 P. B. Shelley Queen Mab v. 65 The iron rod of penury still compels Her wretched slave to bow the knee to wealth.
1879 J. A. Froude Cæsar xxvi. 437 They would fall only under the rod of less scrupulous conquerors.
1909 R. Kane Serm. of Sea vi. 89 They are all defiled, down-thrown, hurled from their high place to cower..under the rod of sin.
1964 M. L. King Strength to Love (1969) v. 54 For more than three centuries American Negroes have been battered by the iron rod of oppression.
1997 Daily Express 19 Feb. 23/1 They are more likely to behave like dictators, ruling their employees with a rod of iron.
5.
a. A fishing rod.fly-, salmon, trout rod, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > rod > [noun]
angle-rodc1450
rodc1450
angling rod1510
gada1535
fishing-rod1552
angling wand1565
wand1565
pole1577
fishing-pole1791
fish pole1834
fishing-wand1889
c1450 Treat. Fishing in J. McDonald et al. Origins of Angling (1963) 135 (MED) Fyschyng, namely anglyng with a rod or a yarde, a lyne, and a hoke.
c1450 Treat. Fishing in J. McDonald et al. Origins of Angling (1963) 147 (MED) How ȝe schall make your Rodde craftely, j schall tell ȝow.
1577 Arte of Angling sig. Avv So then you wold haue your rod, your line, your hooke, your bait, and your fish.
1630 M. Drayton Muses Elizium vi. 54 The lusty Samon..wresting at my Rod, doth make my Boat turne round.
1653 I. Walton Compl. Angler 120 This kind of fishing with a dead rod, and laying night-hooks, are like putting money to use.
1720 J. Gay Rural Sports i, in Poems I. 10 Let the fisherman..Encrease his tackle, and his rod retye.
1753 Scots Mag. Mar. 134/1 He got a rod, and went a-fishing.
1835 J. Barrow Visit to Iceland iv. 121 My two angling companions..armed themselves with their rods and lines, and flies of various sizes, shapes, and colours.
1897 E. F. Burton Trouting in Norway 157 I arrived, rod in hand, at this mill pool.
1929 Travel Jan. 39/2 (advt.) Daylight fishing with rod and reel, night-time fishing with spear and torch.
1967 R. Brautigan Trout Fishing in Amer. (1972) 106 My woman trailed silently behind, carrying the rods and the fish.
1990 M. Wesley Sensible Life xxvi. 176 He took to the river with his rod.
b. Used in collocation with gun to designate fishing and shooting, considered as related pursuits. Now chiefly North American.
ΚΠ
1801 G. Holmes Sketches Southern Counties Ireland x. 123 He was a singular character, and retired here to enjoy the pleasures of his rod and gun.
1827 J. E. Alexander Trav. India to Eng. ii. x. 197 At this village there was excellent sport both for the rod and gun.
1840 J. Wilson (title) The rod and the gun, being two treatises on angling and shooting.
1898 Outing June 271/2 The lover of rod and gun who visits Muskoka this season will find plenty to do.
1912 E. D. Cuming (title) With rod and gun.
1946 Pop. Mech. Feb. 41 a (advt.) A remarkable guide to the hunting and fishing spots selected by a leading rod and gun writer in each of the 48 states.
1991 J. S. Wulff Joan Wulff's Fly Fishing ii. 7 She grew up with a rod and gun in her hands.
2008 A. Ghosh Sea of Poppies 386 The boy was to be erudite, active and urbane, as handy with rod and gun as with book and pen.
c. By metonymy: an angler; a fisher.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fisher > [noun] > angler
anglerc1450
piscator1674
piscatorian1694
Waltonian1832
rodsman1837
rod1848
rodman1865
rodster1867
piscatorialist1881
sport fisher1902
sport fisherman1915
sportsfisherman1928
1848 Port Phillip Herald 25 Apr. 2/3 There could not be less than one hundred and fifty rods on the river.
1851 in L. Lloyd Scand. Adventures (1854) I. xiii. 230 I was last year one of five rods, who tried many rivers between Stockholm and Tornea.
1894 Outing 24 257/2 He lands more big fish and throws back more small ones than any other rod in his district.
1935 B. Perry And gladly Teach viii. 181 After showing me how often he had been ‘high rod’ on his stretch of the river, he would ‘O.K.’ all of my estimates with a smile.
1975 Oxf. Univ. Gaz. 16 Jan. 428/1 (advt.) Prospective rods may apply for descriptive booklet.
1994 Game Gaz. Dec. 13/3 Big game fishing..can be good value for money if a boat is shared by several rods for the day.
d. The right to fish a stretch of a river, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > [noun] > rights
several fishery1426
piscary1475
piscage1610
rod1898
fishing rights1936
society > law > legal right > rights to do or use something > [noun] > hunting or fishing rights
several fishery1426
piscary1475
(free) warren1485
fishing1495
chasea1500
fugationc1503
piscage1610
fishery1703
shooting1848
shoot1861
rod1898
fishing rights1936
1898 Westm. Gaz. 11 May 4/2 Angling on the choice streams of the South..is hardly to be obtained unless by leasing a rod.
1932 G. Cornwallis-West Edwardians go Fishing v. 60 Colonel Sneyd..had let two other rods to men who had little if any knowledge of the art of dry fly fishing.
1958 Angling Times 28 Feb. 11/3 The Board offers 14 rods to let during the 1958 season for its fishery on the River Piddle.
1990 Compl. Angler's Guide Spring 4/1 Season rods and corporate fishing is to be their new policy.
6.
a. A piece of metal, carbon, or other hard material formed into a long, straight, typically cylindrical bar; esp. a connecting part or shaft which is slender in proportion to its length.connecting, curtain-, guiding-, lightning-, piston-rod, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > shaft > [noun] > rod
rod1494
stay-bar1503–4
pitman1813
connecting rod1839
stay-rod1844
pushrod1908
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > metal in specific state or form > [noun] > cast metal > in form of pigs > pig, ingot, or bar
gada1325
lingot1488
rod1494
niggot1579
nygot1579
ingot1582
sow1590
pig1620
forge-pig1839
1494 Edinb. Hammermen f. 6, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) For makin of the rod to the hers.
a1500 Rule Minoresses in W. W. Seton Two 15th Cent. Franciscan Rules (1914) 88 (MED) Þe perlour be of many & þicke roddis of yren.
1540 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1907) VII. 312 For twa roddis to the chandelaris.
1615 in H. M. Paton Accts. Masters of Wks. (1957) I. 376 To..[the] smyth for making kipperis vyce naillis and rodis for the forsaid kist.
1676 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Glasgow (1905) III. 224 Stones in the said Hie Kirk yaird sua heighted with rodis or ballasters beneth them.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Pendulum Clock The Iron Rod or Wiar which bears the Bob at Bottom.
1749 B. Franklin Let. 29 July in Exper. Electricity (1751) 62 Would not these pointed rods probably draw the electrical fire silently out of a cloud?
a1774 O. Goldsmith Surv. Exper. Philos. (1776) I. 155 The rod of the pendulum, like all other bodies, contracts with cold.
1815 J. Smith Panorama Sci. & Art I. 4 A rod of good steel, in its hardest state..may be broken almost as easily as a rod of glass.
1858 D. Lardner Hand-bk. Nat. Philos.: Hydrostatics, Pneumatics, & Heat (new ed.) 30 This plunger hangs from a rod..which passes through the cover of the cylinder.
1883 Encycl. Brit. XVI. 458/2 The rod in the shaft, known as the main rod or spear rod, is usually made of strong balks of timber butted together.
1902 W. W. Beaumont in A. C. Harmsworth et al. Motors & Motor-driving (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) x. 220 A good form of brake is that..in which the pull on the rod F from pedal E pulls the arm D.
1955 K. Hutton & A. Swallow Chem. for Gen. Sci. xvii. 246 A rod of zinc placed in a solution of lead acetate will produce an admirable crop of lead crystals.
1986 E. Hall in A. Limon et al. Home Owner Man. (ed. 2) iii. ix. 443 Screw on more lengths of drain rod as necessary and continue to thrust into the drain until the obstruction is encountered and cleared.
1998 J C Penney Home Coll. Catal. 33/2 Measure from top of the rod to the windowsill, apron or floor.
b. North American colloquial. The connecting draw rod on the underside of a railway carriage or bogie. Usually in plural. Now historical.With reference to the practice, esp. among hobos, of obtaining free rail travel by riding on these connecting rods. Frequently in to ride the rods: see ride v. Phrases 2j(b).
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > railway wagon or carriage > coupling > draw-bar
pulling bar1858
rod1894
1894 Oelwein (Iowa) Reg. 18 Oct. 2/2 Two tramps were riding on the rods under a coal-car.
1904 Outing July 486/2 Thousands of miles in the United States and Canada he has wandered on rods and blind baggages.
1924 J. Tully Beggars of Life 56 I beat it through De Kalb last night on the rods of a mannerfest meat train.
1949 W. R. Burnett Asphalt Jungle 26 He was marooned in this..town without a chance of getting away unless he wanted to hit the rods.
1999 A. Pearson in E. L. Uys Riding Rails (2003) 84 Once the train gets up speed, you have no way of leaving the rods without rolling off and practically killing yourself.
c. Nuclear Physics. A control rod. Also: a fuel rod.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > chemical fuel > [noun] > nuclear
atom1945
rod1945
nuclear fuel1946
1945 Pop. Sci. Monthly Oct. 73 (caption) Neutron-absorbing rods control reaction.
1956 Ann. Rev. Nucl. Sci. 6 329 The fuel loading consists of roughly five tons of natural UO2 or uranium metal as round rods clad with Zircaloy.
1959 C. Hodder-Williams Chain Reaction ix. 113 Did he leave it so late that the ‘X holes’ had warped out of alignment and the rods wouldn't drop?
1994 Sci. & Public Affairs Spring 14/1 At 1:23 a.m. the power started to surge, and the scram button was pushed to reinsert the rods to close the reactor down.
2002 M. C. Paraschiv et al. in Fission Gas Behaviour in Water Reactor Fuels ii. 307 A methodology has been developed to determine the fuel oxidation kinetics in operating defective rods.
7.
a. The shaft of a spear. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > spear or lance > [noun] > shaft of spear
spear-shafta900
ashOE
shaftc1000
truncheon13..
tree?a1366
timberc1400
sting?a1500
spear-staff1530
steal1530
rodc1540
stale1553
stave1873
staff-
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 1234 The king share thrugh his shild with þe sharpe ende, And the rod all-to roofe right to his honde.
b. Chiefly English regional. The shafts of a cart, wagon, etc. Now historical and rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > cart, carriage, or wagon > parts of cart or carriage > [noun] > shaft(s) or pole
thillc1325
limber1480
sway1535
neap1553
draught-tree1580
wain-beam1589
beam1600
fills1609
spire1609
foreteam?1611
verge1611
shaft1613
rangy1657
pole1683
thrill1688
trill1688
rod1695
range1702
neb1710
sharp1733
tram1766
carriage pole1767
sill1787
tongue1792
nib1808
dissel-boom1822
tongue-tree1829
reach1869
wain-stang1876
1695 W. Kennett Parochial Antiq. Gloss. at Pullanus In a team, the horse which goes in the rods is commonly call'd the Fillar.
c1736 S. Pegge Alphabet of Kenticisms (1876) Rods, of a cart or waggon; in Derb. the sills.
1855 J. C. Morton Cycl. Agric. II. (Gloss.) 725/2 Rods (Sussex), cart and waggon shafts.
1882 H. Lansdell Through Siberia (ed. 3) xii. 138 The two outer horses are in loose harness, and the one in rods has no breeching.
2008 D. M. Epstein Lincolns 397 The reins dangled in the rods, the horses spooked and broke into a wild gallop.
II. Senses relating to measurement.
8.
a. A unit of length used esp. for land, fences, walls, etc., varying locally but later standardized at 5½ yards, 16½ feet (approx. 5.03 metres); also called pole, perch (cf. perch n.1 2, pole n.1 2a). Cf. rood n. 6. Now chiefly historical.In the United Kingdom the rod (pole, perch) was not one of the ‘permitted units’ allowed by the Weights and Measures Act 1963 (11–12 Eliz. II, c. 31), and was abolished thereby with effect from 31 January 1969.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement of length > [noun] > units of length or distance > rod, pole, or perch
yard900
roodOE
perchc1300
rodc1380
fall1388
goad1391
polea1500
lug1562
farthing1602
land-pole1603
gad1706
virgate1772
perk1825
esperduct1866
gad-stick1866
c1380 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1901) III. 591 In sol. facta Rogero Diker pro mundacione unius rivi circa campum de Pittyngton, videl't 240 rod cap. pro rod 1 d. ob., 40 s.
a1450 (c1410) H. Lovelich Merlin (1904) I. l. 1940 (MED) This werk was thus begonne, & the heythe of fowre roddis [Fr. toises] vpe was j-ronne aboven the erthe.
a1475 in A. Clark Eng. Reg. Godstow Nunnery (1905) i. 375 (MED) The which acre holdeth in lengthe xxxij roddis and iiij fote of the kyngis standard.
a1525 Coventry Leet Bk. 397 Out of the seid yard growith a Rodde to mesure lond by, the wich Rod conteyneth in lengthe v yardes & halfe.
1576 W. Lambarde Perambulation of Kent 312 This auncient bridge..conteined in length, about twentie and sixe roddes.
1637 H. Hexham True & Briefe Relation Famous Seige of Breda 17 The English aduanced their Sapp this night some two rod.
1670 J. Smith England's Improvem. Reviv'd iv. 107 The Fence about this Great Wood, containing 1600 Pearch Wood measure, (which is 18 foot to the Pearch, for by that Rod, Pole, or Pearch are all the Hedges and Ditches measured) will require 86466 Plants.
1723 G. Miège Present State Great Brit. & Ireland (ed. 5) xiv. 158 A Geometrical Pace, reckoned at five Foot; a Fadom at six; a Rod, Pole, or Perch, at 16 Foot and a half.
1769 E. Bancroft Ess. Nat. Hist. Guiana 362 Extending a thousand or fifteen hundred rods in front of the River.
1849 J. E. Squire Let. 18 July in Western Humanities Rev. (1949) Apr. 107 It is from 80 to 100 rods long,..and slopes from the base to the top.
1865 E. Burritt Walk to Land's End (1868) 191 Then at every rod you have a sea-view of peculiar interest.
1911 E. A. Ross Changing Chinese iv. 77 There is a staircase of curving fields, perhaps four rods wide and differing in level by the height of a man.
1941 WPA Guide Minnesota Arrowhead Country ii. 50 Third day. South on [River] Rose and portage one rod to Rat Lake.
1951 Rep. Comm. Weights & Meas. 27 in Parl. Papers 1960–1 Cmd. 8219 XX. 913 We advocate the deletion of the Rod, Pole or Perch on the grounds that its use for trade purposes has virtually died out.
2001 J. De Chiara et al. Time-saver Standards Interior Design & Space Planning (ed. 2) vi. 1644/1 5½ yards = 16½ feet = 1 rod, pole or perch.
b. A unit of land area equal to a square rod, varying locally but later standardized at 30¼ square yards (1/ 160 acre, approx. 25.3 square metres); = perch n.1 3, pole n.1 2b. Also: a unit of area equal to 40 square rods (a quarter of an acre, approx. 0.1012 hectare); = rood n. 7a. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement of area > [noun] > a system or process of measuring land > a strip of specific measurements
rod1449
yoking1533
brede1677
the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement of area > [noun] > a system or process of measuring land > an acre > quarter acre or rood
roodlOE
rod1449
yardc1450
particate1489
farthingdeal1543
yardland1543
stang1570
farthing-land1602
ferling1695
the world > relative properties > measurement > measurement of area > [noun] > a system or process of measuring land > square rod, pole, or perch
falla1242
percha1398
rood?c1450
rod?a1560
pole1637
pole square1707
lug1727
1449 T. Howes et al. in Paston Lett. & Papers (2005) III. 65 An jnclos called Morlees, wyth lij acre lond, di. rod ariable, wyth ij acre mersh, j acre of medew, cleped Childerhouslondes.
c1460 in A. Clark Eng. Reg. Oseney Abbey (1907) 101 [I], John ffiȝt John philippe of Cotes, ȝafe..vj acris of Arable londe..j acre and dj and j Rodde lyen in Stodfolde..and iij Roddys lyen In Medelforlong.
1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 108 Thou shalt yoke hem and make hem to tourne foure rodd of londe.
?a1560 L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria (1571) ii. xvi. sig. O ij Now bycause I would cut off from that figure one acre, and an acre conteineth 160 rods: I multiply 160 in 50.
1653 Retour in T. Thomson Inquisitionum (1811) I. 260 The lands called the Tolseylands..extending to 30 aikers and 3 rods of land.
1660 R. Sharrock Hist. Propagation & Improvem. Veg. 19 A rod or pole of ground, which is the square of sixteen feet and a half.
1727 R. Bradley Compl. Body Husbandry xvi. 332/2 1 pole, or rod, or perch of field-measure for arable, medow or pasture.
1832 J. Baxter Libr. Agric. & Hort. Knowl. (ed. 2) 184 Half an acre, or eighty rods, of land.., is sufficient to keep a cow during a year.
1861 Amer. Agriculturist July 204/1 Made 61 gallons first quality syrup from 30 rods of high hazel ground.
1913 A. Abram Eng. Life & Manners Later Middle Ages xiii. 179 The Earl of Suffolk paid 12d. a year, for a garden named Goswell, containing three rods of land, in the parish of St. Botulph.
1991 M. K. McIntosh Community Transformed ii. 110 The map..shows the number of acres, rods, and perches in every field in the manor.
2000 J. Whittle Devel. Agrarian Capitalism iii. 142 Hugh Geffrey succeeded in 4 acres and 1 rod by William his youngest (second) son and in 1 acre 1 rod by John his eldest son.
c. A length or depth of 40 fathoms (240 feet, approx. 73.2 m). Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1630 Order in R. Griffiths Ess. Jurisdict. Thames (1746) 81 No Fisherman..shall lay any more or greater Quantity [of Lampern-Leaps] than only one Rod of forty Fathom, containing seven Dozen of Leaps.
d. A measure of the extent of brickwork equivalent to an area of one square rod. Cf. rood n. 7b. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > clay compositions > baked clay > brick > [noun] > measure of brickwork
rod1661
1661 J. Brown Descr. & Use Joynt-rule xvii. 106 (heading) A Table of the number of bricks in a rodd of Walling at any Feet high, from 1 to 20 for 1 and 1½.
1663 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders 56 Brick-layers do work at twenty seaven shillings the Rod.
1702 R. Neve Apopiroscopy i. 4 By a Rod of Brick-work, is meant, Sixteen Foot and half Square, at a Brick and half thick.
1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 550 A rod of standard brick-work, making the necessary allowance for mortar and waste, will require 4500 bricks.
1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. ii. iii. 620 Consequently 272 feet is universally taken as the superficial standard content of a rod.
1851 W. Laxton Builder's Price Bk. 12 A rod of brickwork requires 1½ cubic yard of chalk lime, and 3 single loads or yards of drift.
1911 F. N. Taylor Man. Civil Engin. Pract. xxx. 515 A rod contains 4300 bricks, and a house contains many rods.
1961 F. Jenkins Architect & Patron vii. 129 The craftsman agreed to carry out the work for certain rates—for example, so much per rod of brickwork.
1999 E. McKellar Birth Mod. London iv. 87 The rate for the standard constructional brickwork for the 1690s and 1700s is quoted as being £5 5s per rod.
9.
a. A long stick of wood or metal bar used for measuring with, esp. in surveying land. Cf. levelling rod n. at levelling n. Compounds, measuring rod n. at measuring n. Compounds 1.Earliest in meterod n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > measurement > measuring instrument > [noun] > for measuring length > measuring rod or stick
yardc1000
meteyardOE
reedc1350
ell-yardc1400
yard-wand14..
scantillona1425
gad1440
metewand1440
meterod1473
rod1473
ell1474
gad-wand1487
ell-wand?a1500
measuring rod1546
scantling1556
metepole1571
meting pole1606
wand1614
yardstick1797
yard-measure1838
gad-stick1866
meting-rod1881
1473 in J. Raine Fabric Rolls York Minster (1859) 82 (MED) Pro greas, tallow, et pakthred, pro carpentariis ac metroddes, et pro j situla pro fonte cementariorum, 15 d.
1495 Trevisa's Bartholomeus De Proprietatibus Rerum (de Worde) xvii. clxxv. sig. Viiijv/1 Philosophers, kynges & maysters vsed a rodde, and so dooth he that meetyth, kepyth & departyth feldes.
c1503 R. Arnold Chron. f. lxvi/1 In dyuers odur placis in this lande they mete grounde by polis gaddis and roddis som be of xviij. foote som of xx. fote and som xxi. fote in lengith.
1599 J. Skene De Verborum Significatione at Particata Ane rod is ane staffe, or gade of tymmer, quhairwith land is measured.
1648 H. Hexham Groot Woorden-boeck Een Roede, a Rod of ten foot long, to measure grounds or fields.
1679 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. vii. 129 (heading) Of the Ten-foot Rod, and thereby to measure and describe the Ground-plot.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. Ezechiel's Reed, or Rod, a Scripture Measure computed by late Writers to amount to 1 English Foot, 11 Inches, ⅓ of an Inch.
1791 I. Landman in G. Adams Geom. & Graphical Ess. 436 When the line is short, it is generally measured with a ten foot rod.
1823 P. Nicholson New Pract. Builder 386 The Rod is from five to ten feet in length, and is used for measuring lengths, heights and breadths.
1844 H. Stephens Bk. of Farm I. 509 The rod, divided into feet and inches, is put down to ascertain the depth of the drain.
1898 H. Gannett Aims & Methods Cartogr. 330 The rods are commonly 14 feet in length and hinged so as to close to 7 feet. The intervals upon the rods are of one foot each.
1922 B. H. M. Hewitt & S. Johannesson Shield & Compressed Air Tunneling xiv. 345 With the tunnel in use..the lengths of the diameters must be measured with rods or steel tapes.
2000 J. N. Wilford Mapmakers (2002) xx. 362 Hassler had averaged less than a kilometer a day in measuring his base line by rods.
b. In plural. Mathematics = Napier's bones n. Occasionally in singular: each of the sticks making up a set of Napier's bones. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical instruments > [noun] > arithmetical instrument
mesograph1579
mesolabe1579
quipu1581
rods1618
Napier's bones1647
Napier's rods1678
reckoner1757
counter1803
adding machine1822
operameter1830
virgulaa1831
adder1856
computer1869
arithmometer1876
perforation gauge1882
Cuisenaire rod1954
number line1964
number cruncher1966
cruncher1971
1618 T. Bretnor Newe Almanacke & Prognost. To Mathem. There is..an excellent treatise of Rabdologia, or Arithmeticall Rods, inuented and published by the learned Lord of Merchiston.
1667 W. Leybourn Art of Numbring i. 1 Rabdologie is the Art of Counting by Numbering Rods.
1709 G. Vaux tr. J. C. Sturm Mathesis Juvenilis I. 34 Some make these Rods in the form of Cylinders (keeping the same Order of the Numbers) but I find it more convenient and ready to make them of thin Columns of Paste-board.
1825 Ann. Philos. New Ser. 9 147 A box of rods, named the Rhabdological Abacus... These rods were invented by Mr. Goodwyn for the purpose of facilitating the multiplication of long numbers.
1911 Encycl. Brit. XIX. 174/2 Each rod therefore contains on two of its faces multiples of digits which are complementary to those on the other two faces.
2004 B. Bunch & A. Hellemans Hist. Sci. & Technol. 180/2 It can be used by moving several rods to show a pair of factors; the product then can be read from other numbers on the rods.
c. Joinery. A narrow length of wood used as an aid to construction, on which the dimensions of the thing being assembled are marked, usually in horizontal and vertical section.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for marking out work > [noun] > templates
mitre box1678
temple1688
profile1751
curb1792
rod1793
template1819
turning-piece1823
mitring box1845
mitre block1846
former1847
sweep1885
1793 P. Nicholson Carpenter's New Guide ii. 59 Mark the places of the ordinates upon a rod.
1898 B. F. Fletcher & H. P. Fletcher Carpentry & Joinery xxv. 275 Commence by drawing a floor line AB on the rod.
1907 P. N. Hasluck Cassell's Carpentry & Joinery 289/1 A rod stands in the same relation to a craftsman as a scaled drawing does to a designer.
1950 M. T. Telling Carpentry & Joinery i. 38 A joiner's working drawing usually consists of a horizontal and vertical section of the job set out on a board 9 in. or so in width, and from this drawing or rod the timber is marked directly.
1979 A. B. Emary Woodworking viii. 38 Figure 8.2 illustrates how to make a rod for the door and shows that two drawings are required, a full-size vertical section and a full-size horizontal section through the work.
2002 P. Brett Bench Joinery 34 Before working drawings and rods can be produced, it is often necessary to make a site survey to check the actual measurements.
III. Extended uses.
10. slang. The penis, esp. when erect. Cf. ramrod n. 2.Chiefly punningly in earlier use.Earlier currency is probably implied in the name Shortrod, given to Harebrain in Act V of Thomas Middleton's Mad World, my Masters (1608).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > sex organs > male sex organs > [noun] > penis > erect
Priapusc1487
Priap1561
Priapian1598
polec1600
Jack1604
maypole1607
stalk1609
rod1641
bone1654
stick1707
ramrod1768
horn1785
phallus1807
phallos1885
ithyphallus1889
boner1960
stiff1980
stonker1987
1641 J. Johnson Acad. Love 82 The liberall Geometritian, if he make use of his golden Rod, may measure..his prostrate Lindabrides without difficulty; it is not to be understood, that hee shall onely use this Rod, but let him give it to her, and she will direct him.
1705 Diverting Post 19–26 May (single sheet) Priapus, who scares the Wild-Fowls, And Rules with a far more Scepter-like Rod.
c1790 Festival of Anacreon (ed. 7) 57 If instead of his lyre he had shewn her a rod,..From such a temptation Miss Daphne had never fled.
1877 F. W. Benteen Let. 8 Dec. in J.M. Carroll Camp Talk (1983) 112 A rude representation of the rod of correction can be found in the background.
1880 Pearl May 131 She stroked my limber instrument till it grew into a stately rod.
1934 E. Pound Eleven New Cantos xxxix. 46 His rod hath made god in my belly.
1960 A. West Trend is Up x. 454 ‘I want you to love me and cherish me all the days of my life.’ ‘You want the rod, you silly bitch.’
1991 T. Marshall Changelings (1992) ix. 144 That excited me. My rod was beginning to be as hard as a flagpole, pressing up against my pants.
2008 Courier Mail (Queensland) (Nexis) 27 Oct. 45 I might call it his arousal. Or his erection. Or I might call it his rock-hard rod.
11. A piece of any material occurring as or formed into a long, thin stick; (also) a long, thin stream of a fluid.With quot. 1905 cf. stair-rod n. at stair n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > condition of being long in relation to breadth > [noun] > long, narrow and straight object
sticka1475
wand1508
spill1594
rod1820
1820 W. I. Monson Extracts from Jrnl. 64 The vendors are obliged to be always on the alert to drive away with small rods of paper the swarms [sc. of flies] that settle.
c1860 M. Faraday Var. Forces Nature iii. 50 A continuous rod of fluid mercury.
1905 Athenæum 22 Apr. 487/2 In the cry of the wind, in the grey rods of rain, and in all the shifting shows of the universe.
1932 C. E. B. Roberts Truth about Spiritualism vi. 126 In the view of..most Spiritualists, proving that an ectoplasmic rod had been extruded by her to lift the table.
1957 R. H. Thomson Naturally Occurring Quinones iii. 134 Echinochrome B forms carmine-red rods, m.p. 173–175°.
2006 Granta Summer 22 He..purchased the pink-and-white Styrofoam-like rods of fish food and showed us how to feed the sparkling hordes.
12. Biology. An animal or plant structure having an elongated slender form; (Bacteriology) a bacillus.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > physical aspects or shapes > shape > [noun] > parts of other shape
network1658
strangulation1828
rod1844
zipper1937
the world > plants > part of plant > part defined by form or function > [noun] > parts of specific shape
finger?a1425
saucer1578
umbrella1658
neck1673
discus1687
cord1776
wing1776
starlet1787
ribbon1854
rat-tail1871
peltation1881
rod1884
1844 R. Willis tr. R. Wagner Elements Physiol. iii. §ii. ii. 548 Were simple conduction the principal consideration, a single unarticulated rod of bony substance would have been a much more efficient instrument than a chain of bones interrupted by articulations.
1878 F. J. Bell & E. R. Lankester tr. C. Gegenbaur Elements Compar. Anat. 264 The rods..become united, and form a special structure, the ‘rhabdom’.
1884 F. O. Bower & D. H. Scott tr. H. A. de Bary Compar. Anat. Phanerogams & Ferns 85 Examples of the aggregated rods are found on the white Eucalypti.
1930 H. G. Newth Marshall & Hurst's Junior Course Pract. Zool. (ed. 11) xi. 195 The parts of the pharyngeal wall between the successive slits are narrow bars..each of which is strengthened by an axial rod of a chitinous substance.
1953 R. W. Fairbrother Text-bk. Bacteriol. (ed. 7) xxx. 371 Listerella organisms are Gram-positive, non-sporing rods.
2007 Jrnl. Cell Biol. 179 1022/1 Since rod segment 2 does not contribute to F-actin binding or branching, it is potentially free to interact with other partner proteins.
13. Originally: any of the light-sensitive cells in the retina of the eye. In later use: spec. any of a class of cells containing the visual pigment rhodopsin which have a cylindrical outer segment and are primarily responsible for monochrome vision in low light; (also) the outer segment of such a cell. Cf. rod cell n. 2. Contrasted with cone n.1 10.The rods were first distinguished from the cones by Kölliker in 1852.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > sense organ > sight organ > parts of sight organ > [noun] > retina > rods or cones
rod1844
cone1867
rod cell1877
myoid1900
1843 W. Baly tr. J. Müller Elements Physiol. (new ed.) vi. 727 These ultimate sentient portions of the retina may be the papillæ or rod-shaped bodies of its internal lamina.]
1844 Brit. & Foreign Med. Rev. July 144 The true retina is seen to consist of..prisms sharp at one end, and blunt at that turned inwards towards the central part of the eye. These Dr. Hannover terms ‘Staavene’, staves or rods.
1846 W. Hamilton in Wks. Thomas Reid (1863) 862/2 The retina, as first shown by Treviranus, is a pavement of perpendicular rods terminating in papillæ.
1866 T. H. Huxley Lessons Elem. Physiol. ix. 223 This is the layer of rods and cones, and occupies about a quarter of the whole thickness [of the retina].
1905 A. Flint Handbk. Physiol. xxvi. 658 The rods are regular cylinders, their length corresponding to the thickness of the layer.
1937 A. J. Carlson & V. Johnson Machinery of Body xi. 447 At the point where the optic nerve enters the retina there are no rods and cones.
1958 K. G. Brocklehurst & H. Ward Gen. School Biol. xiv. 185 Rods are more numerous near the periphery of the retina, and cones..near its centre.
2001 P. Ball Bright Earth ii. 47 This little pit [sc. the fovea centralis] is devoid of rods, which outnumber cones everywhere else on the retina.
14. slang (originally and chiefly U.S.). A gun, esp. a pistol.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > small-arm > [noun]
handgun1411
piece1575
small arms1685
popper1751
shooting-iron1775
pelter1827
squib1839
shooter1840
shooting-stick1845
Betsy1856
smoke-wagon1891
rod1903
gat1904
belt gun1905
roscoe1914
smoke-stick1927
heat1928
heater1929
smoke-pole1929
John Roscoe1932
1903 H. Hapgood Autobiogr. Thief xii. 289 The dago dropped the smoke-wagon and the bartender threatened to put him in prison for pulling a rod on respectable people.
1929 D. Runyon in Cosmopolitan Oct. 201/1 Dave the Dude takes personal charge of Wild William and removes a rod from his pants pocket.
1953 K. Tennant Joyful Condemned iv. 34 What's wrong with you, waving that rod about like a bloody half-wit.
1978 J. Carroll Mortal Friends ii. iv. 179 I ain't getting my ass blown off because you're stupid. You won't get near Zorelli with a rod anyways.
1992 K. H. Trocheck Every Crooked Nanny xxviii. 230 ‘You packing a rod?’ he said offhandedly. ‘You mean a gun? You've been reading too much Mickey Spillane.’
2006 J. A. Ward USA from Chevrolet 114 Warren was dead right that ‘nobody would ever want to debate with Sugar-Boy’, but it was not because he was packing a rod.
15. slang (originally and chiefly U.S.). A motor vehicle specially modified to give high power and speed; a hot rod (hot rod n. 2).See also street rod n. at street n. and adj. Compounds 4.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > motor car > [noun] > hot rod or dragster
hot rod1943
rod1947
rail1953
dragster1954
street rod1954
muscle car1966
1947 School Musician Oct. 36/2 A..‘hot rod’ out here on the West Coast is a car that has been ordered or altered to produce a desired performance... The party driving a ‘rod’ enjoys himself.
1957 J. Kerouac On the Road i. xii. 79 A burly blond kid in a souped-up rod.
1978 Hot Car June 91/1 Brian saw some US rods in Chicago and planned to build himself a C Cab on his return to this country.
2001 D. Parks How to build Hot Rod Model A Ford ii. 35/1 Some of the clones or restorations of certain vintage rods use bias-ply tires.

Phrases

P1.
a. rod of correction (also discipline) [compare post-classical Latin virga disciplinae (Vulgate)] : (frequently with the) a rod used as an instrument of punishment; (more generally) corporal punishment; figurative (a means of) discipline or punishment; cf. sense 1.Often with biblical allusion: see quot. 1535.
ΚΠ
?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 299 (MED) Þei wolen neiþir haue þe hound of þe conscyence, ne þe staf of riȝtwiisenesse, ne þe rodde of correccioun.
1479 Earl Rivers tr. Cordyal (Caxton) ii. ii Our lorde shal aske vs, yf we haue corrected our body with the Rodde of discipline in refraynyng hit from Rebellion and other vayne Iolitees.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Prov. xxii. B Foolishnes sticketh in the herte of ye lad, but ye rod of correccioun driueth it awaye.
1566 A. Rush President for Prince sig. M.jv A Prince..muste retayne the seueritie of Lawes, chastening by them, as it were the rod of discipline.
1624 J. Norden Imitation of David v. 103 A Father, if he loue his childe, will with the rod of correction restraine him from things dangerous.
1668 H. More Two Last Dialogues iv. xxvii. 151 For King Henry.., gave his bare body to the Rod of Discipline, and the Covent of the Monks of Canterbury being assembled, he received of each of them a Lash.
1714 J. Hunt Dissenters no Schismaticks 24 Where a Church is numerous, and no Rod of Discipline, what can such a Church come to?
1776 Gen. Evening Post 4 Jan. She [sc. Great-Britain] held out the olive-branch when she ought, perhaps, to have stretched forth the rod of correction.
1846 Englishwoman's Mag. 1 Apr. 622 Men in power are often used by God as a rod of correction to punish his people for their iniquity.
1880 Every Week 7 Apr. 228/2 You are a wayward, unsophisticated child, and need the rod of discipline.
1914 W. C. Bagley School Discipline xi. 193 On the whole, the doing away with the rod of correction has constituted a most wholesome reform in school practice.
1988 J. E. Hartley Bk. of Job 125 Misfortune is God's rod of discipline; it reveals his loving care for humanity.
2012 Daily News (South Africa) (Nexis) 28 Aug. 8 The government is trying to make it illegal for parents to smack their children. I am a Christian. My Holy Bible says that I can use the rod of correction to a certain degree.
b. a rod in pickle (also †lye, †piss): a punishment in store. Cf. pickle n.1 1b. Now rare.See also to have a rod in stale at stale n.5 1b.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > [noun] > punishment in store
a rod in pickle (also lye, piss)?1553
a rod in piss?1553
a rod in pickle1625
?1553 Respublica (1952) iii. v. 28 Some woulde in no wyse to owre desyres applye. But we have Roddes in pysse for them.
1593 G. Harvey Pierces Supererogation 118 I know One, that experimentally prooued what a rod in lye could do with the curstest boy in a Citty.
1648 J. Dillingham in Ld. Montagu of Beaulieu's P. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) 163 No doubt there are many rods in pickle against many great ones.
1723 B. Mandeville Fable Bees (ed. 2) i. 331 I see a Thousand Rods in Piss, and the whole Posse of diminutive Pedants against me.
1798 Anti-Jacobin 5 Mar. 135/2 He keeps for Pitt a rod in pickle.
1848 A. Jameson Sacred & Legendary Art II. 60 He has, as certainly, a rod in pickle for the idle and unruly.
1892 Deseret Weekly (Salt Lake City, Utah Territory) 30 Apr. 609/3 The ‘rod in pickle’..which the agent of the Secret Service Department may have for some person or corporation, has no terrors for the ‘Mormon Church’.
1931 M. D. Calvocoressi Princ. & Methods Musical Crit. (ed. 2) i. ii. 37 The more definite the statements in a confession, the likelier the critic is to find that by uttering it he has laid a rod in pickle for himself.
1983 S. G. Bell & K. M. Offen Women, Family, & Freedom II. ix. 315 The liability of imprisonment for non-payment of maintenance remains..a rod in pickle for impetuous lovers.
c. to have a rod under (also at) one's girdle: to be beaten with a rod. Also to put a rod under a person's girdle. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > corporal punishment > [noun] > with whip or scourging > instance of
swepinga1300
stripec1485
flagellation1490
whipping1566
whipping-cheer1578
to have a rod under (also at) one's girdle1580
switchinga1640
horsewhipping1829
rawhiding1848
bashing1877
1580 J. Lyly Euphues (new ed.) f. 2v They put gold into the hands of youth, wher they should put a rod vnder their girdle.
1591 J. Lyly Endimion ii. ii. sig. C4v Away peeuish boy, a rodde were better vnder thy girdle, than loue in thy mouth.
1601 B. Jonson Every Man in his Humor v. i. sig. Mv You signior shall be carried to the market crosse, and be there bound: and so shall you sir, in a large motlie coate, with a rodde at your girdle . View more context for this quotation
P2. by the rod: (of the granting, holding, or surrendering of copyhold land tenure): by means of a ceremony during which the transfer of the tenure is symbolized by the handing over of a rod. Cf. verge n.1 4b, yard n.2 1c. Now historical.In later use simply referring to the granting, holding, or surrendering of copyhold tenure, without the symbolic ceremony.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > transfer of property > putting in possession > [phrase] > manner of taking or surrendering land
by the yard1523
by the rod1607
1607 J. Cowell Interpreter sig. Sss3v Tenent by the Verge in auncient demesn..is he that is admitted by the rod in the court of auncient demesne.
?1617 in A. Munday et al. Stow's Surv. London (1633) 720/2 All Copies of Court Rolls of the same Mannors,..for the same Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments, have beene made, and ought to be made, to hold of the Lord by the Rod.
1670 T. Blount Resol. Judges Statutes Bankrupts xiii. 217 Edward Leventhrop..granted the said House, Lands, and Close, to the said Richard Heydon, and his Heirs, by the Rod, at the Will of the Lord, according to the Custome of the said Mannor.
1736 Brasenose Coll. Doc. C2 88 Came and surrendered by the rod into the hands of the Lords of the fee, a cottage [etc.].
1792 D. Lysons Environs London I. 437 Lands in this manor are held by the rod, or copy of court-roll, and descend to the youngest son.
1805 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. V. 536 An attorney who makes a surrender ought to pursue the usual form, as by the rod, &c. according to the custom of the manor.
1877 Notes & Queries 8 150/2 The surrender and admittance ‘by the rod’ may perhaps be traced to the handing over of the steward's rod..on completion of the transaction.
1906 Trans. Essex Archaeol. Soc. 9 118 The steward granted to John out of the lord's hands, by copy of court-roll, lands called Tumours, Croyes, Calpole, and others, to hold by the rod.
1996 P. R. Schofield in Z. Razi & R. Smith Medieval Society & Manor Court xii. 437 Cottagers holding unfree land ‘by the rod’ came increasingly to act as chief pledges in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive, objective, instrumental, and parasynthetic, as rod carrier, rod divination, rod grower, rod merchant, etc.; rod-shaped adj.
ΚΠ
1648 R. Robins Whip for Marshalls Court sig. C3v It had need of A Thousand Rodde Carryers, and beadells to whip them out of this peece.
1651 J. F. tr. H. C. Agrippa Three Bks. Occult Philos. ii. lix. 366 Mercury is called..the rod-bearer, winged on his feet, eloquent, bringer of gain, [etc.].
1761 G. Noarth Bill of Lading 3 Sept. in H. Bouquet Papers (1942) 2nd Ser. 98 Shipped..One Cover'd Hamper, One Rod Hamper.
1777 J. Brand Observ. Pop. Antiq. 96 (note) Our vulgar Notion of the Hazel's Tendency to a Vein of Lead Ore..seems to be a Vestige of this Rod Divination.
1851 Census Great Brit. (1854) Rod grower, dealer 12.
1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Rod-merchant, a dealer in osiers or birch and alder rods for basket-making, etc.
1876 Nature 30 Nov. 108/1 Very minute rod-shaped spicules.
1924 Times 24 Aug. 13/3 Perrin, Mr. William Alfred,..rod merchant and basket manufacturer.
1947 Physical Rev. 72 21/2 The inhour is useful as a measure of rod displacement.
1995 G. Birdsall Feng Shui Compan. 196 Rod dowsing uses a forked tree branch or ‘L’ rod.
2003 Times (Nexis) 12 Dec. (Features section) 8 The Martian meteorite contained what looked like rod-shaped fossil imprints.
b. In sense 5, as rod-bender, rod-case, rod-fishing, rod-holder, rod licence, rod-ring, rod-stand, rod-season, etc.; rod-caught adj.
ΚΠ
1792 J. Smith in J. Sinclair Statist. Acct. Scotl. IV. xviii. 150 Sportsmen look upon the water of Cricht, as one of the finest rivers for rod-fishing.
1806 Gazetteer Scotl. (ed. 2) at Ericht or Erocht It is said to afford better rod-fishing than any other river in the kingdom.
1852 C. M. Yonge Two Guardians i. 2 His numerous equipments, consisting of a long rod-case, a fishing-basket and landing-net.
1879 Cassell's Techn. Educator (new ed.) II. 356 They..thus decrease the rental of waters either from net or rodholders.
1898 Westm. Gaz. 5 May 4/2 The spring rod season for salmon is nearly over.
1901 Scotsman 4 Mar. 10/1 He landed his record rod-caught fish—a salmon of sixty-seven pounds.
1902 Chambers's Jrnl. July 425/1 Any trout-rod, even after a brief life spent in such a manner, might have accepted its pensioner peg on the rod-stand.
1956 People 13 May 12/6 He reckons that morning and evening are the best times for rod-benders, using bread flake and paste, on a 16- or 18-hook, for roach.
1972 Shooting Times & Country Mag. 1 July 12/1 Take care to ensure that the line can still run through the rod rings.
1976 Eastern Daily Press (Norwich) 19 Nov. 21/4 The proposed new charges..will be in addition to, and completely separate from, the rod licence charge.
1991 Alabama Game & Fish Mar. 55/1 Mounted on each gunwale, are special removable rod holders for inshore trolling use for stripers and bluefish.
c. In sense 13.
rod fibre n.
ΚΠ
1864 Brit. & Foreign Medico-chirurg. Rev. Apr. 524 The isolated appearance of the rod-fibres..appears to me an irrefragable proof for the constancy of this formation.
2004 M. Glickstein in L. M. Chalupa & J. S. Werner Visual Neurosciences I. i. 4/1 The rod fibers, which have exquisite fine varicosities, also end in the internal granular layer.
rod-free adj.
ΚΠ
1892 A. S. Lea Chem. Basis Animal Body 265 It..is not found either in the fovea centralis of the human retina, or in the rod-free retina of reptiles.
2003 Wildlife Soc. Bull. 31 686/1 Rod-assisted color vision is especially likely in species such as the white-tailed deer, whose retinas lack rod-free areas.
rod pigment n.
ΚΠ
1892 Jrnl. Morphol. 7 183 These fibrils, lens fibrils, appear thus to perforate the line indicating the boundary of the rod pigment.
2003 Wildlife Soc. Bull. 31 684 The eyes of deer are characterized by..a short-wavelength-sensitive rod pigment.
rod vision n.
ΚΠ
1902 J. M. Baldwin Dict. Philos. & Psychol. II. 795/1 The rod-vision, when it is not reinforced by the visual purple, is the same sort of thing, as regards its brightness-values, as vision with the cones.
1999 Hobart (Tasmania) Mercury (Nexis) 1 June A small proportion of people who cannot see in colour (having only rod vision) often report problems in dealing with moving objects.
C2. attributive, with the sense ‘having the form of a rod’.
a. Of metal, as rod bolt, rod iron, rod lead, rod screw, etc.
ΚΠ
1690 Act 2 Will. & Mary c. 4 Every Hundred Weight of Iron slit or hammered into Rods, commonly known by the Name of Rod Iron.
1720 Let. to Member Parl. concerning Naval-store Bill 12 No Forge..shall be erected..for the making, working, or converting any Sows, Pigs, or cast Iron, into Bar or Rod-Iron.
1799 J. Barnes Let. 20 June in T. Jefferson Papers (2004) XXXI. 130 You have..recd letter of advice, and shipment of Rod Iron from Mr Roberts.
1805 R. W. Dickson Pract. Agric. I. Pl. 48 The rod screw for the auger, four feet.
1833 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Cottage Archit. §84 To have Norfolk thumb latches..and eight-inch rod bolts.
1868 F. H. Joynson Metals in Constr. 58 Hammered and rolled into the various sections known in commerce as bar, rod iron, and the like.
1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) 220/2 Rod Lead... In this form it is used in the manufacture of compressed bullets.
1897 Outing 30 371/1 I..unfolded my patent rod-lock, and left my wheel supported by this device.
1951 A. L. Hunt Confessions 40 Armed with a long spear of rod iron, we ‘diggers’ tested these hillocks for gum.
1991 R. Cooke Paintball 34/1 The pump is twin-sided and attached by twin brass rod-bolts.
b. Of organic structures, as rod bacillus, rod bacterium, rod body, etc.
ΚΠ
1877 Q. Jrnl. Microsc. Sci. 17 276 Numerous rod-bodies were observed to be shot out of a fresh section just as in Geoplana.
1914 J. W. Bergen & O. W. Caldwell Introd. Bot. 200 The rod bacteria vary in length and in diameter.
1967 Brain 90 817 Other terms used have been myogranular myopathy..and rod-body myopathy.
2005 D. B. Jacobi et al. Encycl. Family Health (ed. 3) 670 (caption) Rod bacilli attack directly if swallowed in food.
C3.
rod bat n. rare a lever used to change the position of the coulter of a plough.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > tools and implements > ploughing equipment > [noun] > other ploughing equipment
trainc1450
rod bat1842
sidewiper1842
porter1864
stubble-turner1875
1842 C. W. Johnson Farmer's Encycl. 981/1 The ploughman next changes the position of the coulter to the opposite side, by what is called the ‘rod bat’, that is, a wood-set stick with a crook in it.
1937 M. Quennell & C. H. B. Quennell Hist. Everyday Things in Eng. (ed. 3) I. iii. 166 The coulter was adjustable and kept in position by the rod bat.
rod chisel n. now rare a chisel fixed to the end of a rod, used esp. in cutting hot metal.
ΚΠ
1843 C. Holtzapffel Turning & Mech. Manip. I. iii. xi. 217 Mortices..are usually made by punching a hole of the full width at each end, and cutting out a strip of metal between them, by two long incisions with the rod-chisel.
1901 Spons' Mechanics' Own Bk. (ed. 6) 67 A rod chisel is thin for cutting hot iron, and thick for cutting cold iron.
1974 Bull. Assoc. Preserv. Technol. 6 16 The shank might be barbed along its corners by the smith, cutting them while hot with his rod chisel.
rodfall n. (a) (in Essex) an allowance of timber given to a tenant whose land adjoins a wood, on the condition that he or she repairs the boundary fence; the custom or right of claiming this timber (obsolete); (b) (in Kent) an area of a wood about a rod deep, having a different owner and felled at a different time (obsolete); (c) historical = roodfall n. at rood n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > [noun] > felling trees > belt cut separately
rodfall1664
1664 MS. Agreement, Maldon, Essex Bdl. 97 f. 3 Parcell of land called Withers, with ye rodfall and other appurtenances.
1685 J. Keble Rep. Cases King's Bench (1908) 211 According to the custome of the countrey, viz. Essex, allowing a rodfall in the measure to the buyer who is to repair the fence.
1795 T. Astle Acct. Tenures, Customs of Great Tey 6 The tenants were allowed to take the overplus of the underwoods so cut, to their own use; and from this service grew a custom, which prevails at this day, called rod fall.
1832 J. Morton Monastic Ann. Teviotdale 308 Henry Stylle gave them an acre and four rodfalls.
1887 W. D. Parish & W. F. Shaw Dict. Kentish Dial. (at cited word) The wood belongs to Mus' Dean, but there's a rodfall joins in with Homestall.
1927 G. H. Tupling Econ. Hist. Rossendale 53 A ‘rodfall’ or ‘fall’ of land corresponded to our square pole or perch.
1970 A. N. Webb Cartulary Burscough Priory 138 Grant in free alms..by Geoffrey Bussel..of part of his land in Longton, i.e. the 5 rodfalls upon Stanfurlong granted in the preceding charter.
rod-horse n. Obsolete the member of a pair or team of horses pulling a vehicle which is harnessed in the shafts; a shaft-horse.
ΚΠ
1736 R. Ainsworth Thes. Linguæ Latinæ I. (at cited word) A rode, or roddle horse (filler), equus carro proxime subjectus.
1882 H. Lansdell Through Siberia I. xii. 138 The speed soon increases, first because the rod-horse cannot help it, and next because an impetus is desired to carry you up the opposite hill.
rod-machine n. a machine which forms smooth, rounded sticks of wood.
ΚΠ
1868 F. Douglas U.S. Patent 81,761 2 A new and improved Self-Feeding Rod-Machine... The knives which reduce the stick to a round rod are so arranged that one of them scores directly into the stick.
1919 Lancaster Law Rev. 36 133/2 The machines in the defendant's factory, consisting of..four rip-saws, two 26-inch planers, one rod machine, two cut-off saws, [etc.].
1991 D. Vizard How to rebuild your Small-block Chevy vi. 56/2 The bore can..be resized on a rod-machine.
rod mill n. Manufacturing Technology (a) a rolling mill which produces iron or steel rods; (b) a mechanism for grinding ore, minerals, etc., comprising a large revolving cylinder containing loose metal rods; cf. ball mill n. at ball n.1 Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > workplace > places for working with specific materials > place for working with metal > [noun] > rod- or tube-mill
rod mill1817
tube-mill1909
1817 W. Pitt Topogr. Hist. Staffs. 197 About a mile above Kinver..is a place..where..the first mill for rolling or slitting iron..was erected in England... At Stourton is one of these rod-mills.
1905 J. W. Hall in F. W. Harbord Metall. of Steel xv. 287 A modern [rolling] mill will produce ten or twenty times as much, and a rod mill fifty to a hundred times as much in a given time.
1916 Trans. Internat. Engin. Congr. 1915 313 Another departure from standard tube-mill practice is the Marathon, or rod-mill. Iron or steel rods..are substituted for the usual balls or pebbles.
1995 R. Protheroe-Jones Welsh Steel 49 (caption) The rollerman now controls the machinery from his control pulpit as seen here at GRN's newly built rod mill..in 1976.
2002 J. F. Richardson & J. H. Harker Coulson & Richardson's Chem. Engin. (ed. 5) II. ii. 130 In the rod mill, high carbon steel rods about 50 mm diameter and extending the whole length of the mill are used in place of balls.
rod planer n. Engineering (now rare) a machine tool for shaping rods and bars.
ΚΠ
1875 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. III. 1961/2 Rod-planer, a special machine-tool for planing locomotive connecting-rods, guide-bars, and similar work.
1900 Cassier's Mag. 18 209/2 The rod planer..has been superseded in the United States during late years by improved milling machines.
1918 M. V. O' Shea et al. World Bk. VI. 4696/2 Planing machines for metal..are usually named according to the articles they are intended to plane, as nut planer, rod planer, plate-edge planer, etc.
rod pod n. Angling (chiefly British) a metal frame used to support a fishing rod; cf. pod n.5
ΚΠ
1991 Coarse Fishing Feb. 42/1 My trusty old North Western SS6s lay motionless in the rod pod.
2001 Financial Times (Nexis) 24 Feb. 17 Having arranged your weaponry on an adjustable rack called a ‘rod pod’, and while waiting for your bite alarm to sound, you need to be warm and comfortable.
rod puppet n. a puppet operated and supported by a rod or rods, typically having one central, vertical rod attached to the head, and a shorter rod attached to each hand.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > puppetry > [noun] > puppet
poppin1440
mammet1461
puppet1538
poppet1551
motion1602
puppy1640
neurospast1642
marionettea1645
poupée1785
fantoccini1791
scaramouch1815
shadow figure1851
Judy puppet1897
shadow puppet1923
rod puppet1930
string puppet1937
1930 Puppetry i. 64 Stick or Rod Puppets.
1976 Jrnl. Royal Soc. Arts Apr. 254/1 A larger form of glove puppet can be produced by placing the figure on a rod; this is called a rod puppet.
2004 Time Out N.Y. 16 Dec. 94/3 Expect rod-puppets, weird masks, found objects and a taped soundtrack.
rod rest n. Angling a stand used to support (one end of) a fishing rod.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > rod > [noun] > support for rod
fork1726
rest1726
rod rest?1881
bankstick1964
?1881 G. Little Angler's Compl. Guide & Compan. 187 Rod rest..0/9 and 1/6 per pair.
1946 Newark (Ohio) Advocate & Amer. Tribune 21 Oct. 15/1 He was also declared winner of..a Penn reel for the weekly sailfish award, and a rod rest for a weekly bonito prize.
2002 J. Goddard Fly Fisher's Refl. Introd. 15 During the first half of the last century the average coarse fisher's kit was confined to a rod and reel, a tackle bag, and possibly a rod rest and a stool.
rod-rider n. North American colloquial a person, esp. a hobo, who (habitually) travels on the railways without paying by riding on the connecting draw rod of a railway carriage or truck; cf. sense 6b.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > [noun] > traveller by rail > types of
commutation passenger1856
commuter1865
train jumper1879
tube traveller1903
rod-rider1904
1904 L. G. Meushaw Plea of Toiler 6 The more daring members of the trampdom fraternity..are the hobo, yegg, tourist, rod rider..and the like.
1952 L. Hughes Laughing to keep from Crying 60 The rod-riders got off nowhere near the station.
1992 Gazette (Montreal) (Nexis) 5 Dec. a13 Hitchhikers and rod-riders in from the West poured into those terminal yards.
rod-riding adj. U.S. colloquial (now rare) that travels on the railways without paying by riding on the connecting draw rod of a railway carriage or truck; cf. sense 6b.
ΚΠ
1917 Black Cat Feb. 13/1 Everybody in Goveland knew the rod-riding flea's life that Petey Streams led.
1985 United Press Internat. Newswire (Nexis) 3 Aug. The convention will die out when all the true rod-riding tramps pass on.
rod roller n. a person employed to form metal into rods by means of rollers.
ΚΠ
1828 Sheffield Directory & Guide Alphabetical List of Names 160 Naylor and Sanderson, tilt, sheet, and rod rollers, Attercliffe Forge.
1901 Westm. Gaz. 10 Dec. 10/2 Upon the basis on which rod rollers are paid to-day.
1998 Valley Independent (Monessen, Pa.) 10 Jan. 4 a Mr. Semekoski was a retired rod roller at U.S. Steel, Donora works.
rod-rope n. Coal Mining Obsolete rare a rope attached to a bore rod.
ΚΠ
1839 A. Ure Dict. Arts 966 Substituting for the wheel and axle, a number of ropes attached to the rod-rope.
rod white n. now rare the colourless visual sensation resulting from the stimulation of rods in the retina.
ΚΠ
1904 Nature 18 Feb. 379/1 The light red colour seen in gazing at the platinum plate changes in indirect vision into a peculiar colourless white, the ‘rod-white’.
1916 Pop. Mech. Apr. 586/2 Reds appear black to us at night and certain blues and greens seem to be whitish in color, or ‘rod white’ as it is termed.
rod-woman n. Obsolete a seller of twigs.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > selling > seller > sellers of specific things > [noun] > sellers of other specific things
soaper?c1225
oilman1275
smear-monger1297
upholder1333
basket-seller?1518
broom-seller?1518
upholster1554
rod-woman1602
starchwoman1604
pin manc1680
colour seller1685
potato-woman1697
printseller1700
rag-seller1700
Greenwich barber1785
sandboy1821
iceman1834
umbrella man1851
fly-boy1861
snuff-boxera1871
pedlar1872
snake-boy1873
bric-a-brac man1876
tinwoman1884
resurrectionist1888
butch1891
paanwallah1955
1602 T. Dekker Blurt Master-Constable sig. C4v My Mistris cries like the rod-woman: quicke, quick, quick, buy any Rosemary and Bayes?
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

rodn.2

Brit. /rɒd/, U.S. /rɑd/, Scottish English /rɔd/
Forms:

α. pre-1700 road, pre-1700 roid, pre-1700 rood, pre-1700 1700s rode.

β. pre-1700 rodde, pre-1700 1700s– rod, pre-1700 1900s– rodd.

Origin: Of uncertain origin. Perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: road n.
Etymology: Origin uncertain. Perhaps related to road n., although the nature of any relationship is unclear: see detailed discussion at that entry. Compare roddin n. N.E.D. (1909) conjectures that the word may have arisen by metanalysis of an unattested compound such as *fōttrod (ostensibly < foot n. + trod n.), which it postulates on the basis of Older Scots fute rode, fute rod, fit rod ‘footpath’ (a1560); however, this seems less likely than that fute rode simply shows a compound of the present word.
Scottish. Now rare.
A path or way; a track; a road. Also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > [noun]
streetOE
wayOE
gatec1175
roda1231
roddin1502
fare1509
highpad1567
pad1567
road1581
chimin1613
ribbon1923
α.
a1231 in J. Spottiswoode Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh (1847) 249 Per Malcolmes Rode sursum usque ad Styrkerden.
c1446 in C. Innes Registrum Episcopatus Aberdonensis (1845) I. 247 Ascendand west a grete lech til it cum oure a rode to the brede of an akyr the quhilk rod strekis fra Bischop Brynnes the nerrast gate our the mos to the kyrk of Ellon.
1489 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (Adv.) x. l. 571 Ik wsyt lang that trawaling Swa that I kan that roid [1487 St. John's Cambr. rod] ga rycht.
1539 in W. Chambers Charters Burgh Peebles (1872) 58 Thare landis..myris mossis merches wayis gaitis roidis.
1553 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Eneados i. vii. 2 [They] hastit furth thare way As the rode [a1522 Cambr. rod] led thame.
1600 Reg. Privy Counc. Scot. VI. 125 Making of roidis, gaittis and passageis throw the landis, and taking of..wair furth thairof.
c1650 in A. J. Warden Dundee Burgh Laws (1872) 40 The cornes quhilkes ar vrangously savin benith the gait at the rode and vther grounds properly pertaining to this brugh.
1679 Processes Kirkcudbright Sheriff Court No. 312 The onlie accustomacie road being be a liggitt of the said John Boddans possession.
a1722 J. Lauder Jrnls. (1900) 122 Upon the rode bothe of England and France we meit wt noblemens incloseurs wheir would [be] 2 or 300 dears.
1768 A. Ross Fortunate Shepherdess 7 A dainty stirrah had, twa years out gane, An' he was now well ta'en the rode him lane.
β. 1414 in J. Slater Early Scots Texts (Ph.D. thesis, Univ. of Edinb.) (1952) No. 10 With all appertenances..alswele vndir erde as abone in hauking in fysching in fouling in wais in roddis in vivaris [etc.].1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) vi. 237 A litill rod he fand Vp toward the crag strikand.a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1959) vi. vii. l. 43 The hydlys held thai and the roddis darn.1567 Compend. Bk. Godly Songs (1897) 197 Preistis, wirschip God, And put away zour Imagerie,..To hell the way and rod.1581 N. Burne in Catholic Tractates (S.T.S.) 160 Ane edder in the hie vay, and serpent in the rod.1649 Boyds of Penkill Family Papers May No. 195 The forsaid persones..mackis comone hie wayes rods and passages therthrow on hors and foot quheir ther non wount to be of befoir.1700 in R. Renwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Peebles (1910) 162 The great skaith done to the kirkland through the rod comeing doun through fra the park nook to the highgait.a1722 J. Lauder Jrnls. (1900) 6 I almost thought I saw a woman walking..over a hil throw the beaten rod.1775 J. Moir Scholar's Vade Mecum Callis, a beaten rod, a path made by beasts, a foot path.1834 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Dec. 852 Finin' and imprisonin' folk for some folly o' theirs about some folly o' his, somehoo or ither conneckit wi' the threecolore, and the Cherburgh rods, and the Tyne Louisa, and the Newcastle colliers.1867 A. Allardyce Goodwife 49 Are ye jist for awa, An' it sic clorty rod?1913 G. M. Gordon Auld Clay Biggin' 26 John..set himsel' doon i' the keeper's lodge, whaur he leeved a' his lane, nigh til the auld druv rod ower the hills atween Shalloch Braes an' Glenvernoch Hoose.1916 J. J. H. Burgess Rasmie's Smaa Murr May [No. 15] Tak da rodd ta Heeven or da rodd ta Hell, an ye'll aye finn a hairpreen.1932 Aberdeen Univ. Rev. Mar. 104 In a thinly populat destrick like this, ony kin' o' accident micht happen tull a body at nicht on a lonely rodd.?2002 I. W. D. Forde Hale ir Sindries 121 Ower the rodd wes Tammas's houss.2004 L. Johnson Divinin for Cables in New Shetlander No. 229 10/2 Dey wir makkin a rodd ta da pier.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

rodv.

Brit. /rɒd/, U.S. /rɑd/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: rod n.1
Etymology: < rod n.1
1. transitive. Originally: †to fit (a wall) with laths as a groundwork for plastering (obsolete). Later more generally: to provide or fit with a rod or rods.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > build or provide with specific parts [verb (transitive)] > provide with wall(s) > provide with studding or laths
stud1448
rod1591
stoothe1825
1591 R. Percyvall Bibliotheca Hispanica Dict. at Ripiar pared To lath, to rod a wall.
1740 P. Pineda New Dict., Spanish & Eng. (new ed.) To rod a Wall, ripar la pared.
1806 B. M'Mahon Amer. Gardener's Cal. 2 They will never produce, especially the tall growing kinds, one third as many as if they were properly rodded.
1875 Florist & Pomologist Jan. 7 The general cultivation consists in keeping the soil open, and in rodding them as soon as possible, with small, twiggy sticks.
1892 3rd Biennial Rep. Board of Railway Commissioners Vermont 41 All of those [bridges] of recent construction have been..more heavily rodded, arched or otherwise strengthened to meet the increased weight.
1909 J. M. Tate & M. O. Stone Foundry Pract. iv. 126 Larger cores are rodded in all directions so as to tie the whole together firmly. The rods are bent to conform to the desired shape.
1991 Better Roads Nov. 30/2 A stock metal cone which has had its top cut off so that it forms a frustum is placed on a flat..surface..and rodded with a 5/8-in. rod, 24-in. long.
2. transitive. U.S. To fit (a building) with lightning conductors (cf. lightning rod n. 1). Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > protect or defend [verb (transitive)] > furnish with specific protective device or substance
bastion1654
cushion1836
rod1877
mask1916
1877 E. Abbott Long Look House xix. 135 I'd like to rod your house, first rate.
1891 Boston (Mass.) Jrnl. 11 Feb. 2/3 An old man down the country refused to have me rod his dwelling.
1918 Michigan Rep. 194 591 The day on which Sheldon finished rodding the house he filled up a blank application for insurance on the house and barn.
1950 H. N. MacCracken Hickory Limb 114 He thought my insistence on rodding the Library and the Students Building quite supererogatory.
3. intransitive. English regional (Lincolnshire). To cut and peel osier rods. rare.
ΚΠ
1886 R. E. G. Cole Gloss. Words S.-W. Lincs. 121 They kep' the childer away rodding.
4. transitive. To push a rod through (a drain or pipe) in order to clear it.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > clearing of refuse matter > clear of refuse [verb (transitive)] > clear drain
scour1412
flush1789
plonging1851
rod1897
1897 Sanitary Rec. 9 Apr. 312/1 Mr. Thomas Kemp's model of his improved system of house drainage shows a new invention for rodding drains.
1924 E. G. Blake Plumbing I. xvii. 149 A manhole should be provided at each alteration of the direction of the drain... This will enable any obstruction to be cleared by rodding the drain.
1949 L. B. Escritt & S. F. Rich Work of Sanitary Engineer (ed. 2) xxii. 275 The disconnecting trap..is provided with a rodding arm which permits the outgoing line of pipe to be rodded.
2007 Sunderland Echo (Nexis) 8 Oct. Drains were supposed to have been rodded but were not.
5. intransitive. U.S. slang. With up. To arm oneself with a gun or guns. Cf. rod n.1 14, rodded adj. 4. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > arming or equipping with weapons > arm [verb (intransitive)] > with a gun
rod1929
1929 [implied in: D. Runyon in Cosmopolitan Oct. 201/1 None of the guests are supposed to come rodded up, this being strictly a social matter. (at rodded adj. 4)].
1935 N. Ersine Underworld & Prison Slang 63 Rod up and we'll blow.
1950 Harper's Mag. Feb. 75/2 They do not rod up, or arm themselves.
6. transitive. U.S. slang. With up. To modify (a car) to give extra power and speed; to convert (a car) into a hot rod. Cf. rod n.1 15. rare.
ΚΠ
1972 J. Gores Dead Skip v. 32 A young man with an old car (hence, probably rodding it up, hence, probably, a car-lover).
2000 M. Bishop & V. Tardel How to build Trad. Ford Hot Rod (rev. ed.) 11/1 Many had already been rodded in the 1930s with hopped-up four bangers.
2005 B. F. Gibbons Billy F. Gibbons 190/4 Rudy Rodriguez of Fullerton Fabrications rodded this 1932 Ford highboy with a French-built V-8 flathead.

Derivatives

ˈroddable adj.
ΚΠ
1949 L. B. Escritt & S. F. Rich Work of Sanitary Engineer (rev. ed.) xxiv. 283 The outlet should..be arranged so that it is easily roddable.
1991 R. Matthews Pract. House Building iii. xvii. 101/1 There are two other forms of access into drains: ‘Back inlet gullies’ can be obtained in roddable versions.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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