a dull, muffled sound, as of footsteps on the ground.
a road horse, as distinguished from a hunting or working horse.
a highwayman.
BritishDialect. a path, lane, or road.
verb (used with object),pad·ded,pad·ding.
to travel along on foot.
to beat down by treading.
verb (used without object),pad·ded,pad·ding.
to travel on foot; walk.
to walk so that one's footsteps make a dull, muffled sound.
Origin of pad
2
First recorded in 1545–55; (noun) from Middle Dutch or Low German pad “path” (originally argot; hence, apparently, “highwayman” and “horse”); (verb) from Middle Dutch padden “to make or follow a path,” cognate with Old English pæththan “to traverse,” derivative of pæth; see origin at path; defs. 1, 8 perhaps represent an independent expressive word that has been influenced by other senses
However, the smart folks brought along these river-specific sleeping pads.
The Gear You Need to Bring on a 225-Mile River Trip|Mitch Breton|September 6, 2020|Outside Online
Rocket Lab says it has monthly launches scheduled for the rest of 2020, including the company's first flight from a new pad at Wallops Island, Virginia.
Rocket Report: Musk updates Super Heavy plan, China to launch spaceplane?|Eric Berger|September 4, 2020|Ars Technica
You’ll feel better, be back on your couch bingeing Selling Sunset before you know it, and you won’t be stinking up your pad.
Working out at home? Here’s how to keep your house from smelling like a gym.|Harry Guinness|September 3, 2020|Popular Science
This keyboard is a speed machine with a comfortable wrist pad for sustained comfort.
Serious upgrades for your computer keyboard|PopSci Commerce Team|September 2, 2020|Popular Science
Marry that with the adventures that nature offers, and the pandemic could serve as a launch pad to teach kids outdoor life skills that will come in handy.
Is School Out Forever?|Daniel Malloy|August 9, 2020|Ozy
He described in painful detail the composition of the bars and the heavy shackles on the pad locks.
I Shot Bin Laden|Elliot Ackerman|November 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Next he laced on first the right skate, with a pad of cotton under the tongue, and then the left.
Gordie Howe Hockey’s Greatest War Horse|W.C. Heinz|May 31, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The agent across from Todashev is said to have presented him with a pad and he began to write a confession.
How Local Police Missed a Chance to Stop Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011|Michael Daly|July 12, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Some believe this was all a ploy by the Dean to pad his resume.
Who Wants To Be Prime Minister? Not Rami Hamdallah|Maysoon Zayid|June 21, 2013|DAILY BEAST
I always have a pad on my bedside, in case I want to write straight away.
Oliver Sacks: How I Write|Noah Charney|December 19, 2012|DAILY BEAST
When the gold is pressed into the impressions of the tools with the pad of cotton-wool, they should be plainly visible through it.
Bookbinding, and the Care of Books|Douglas Cockerell
The speaking-tube used was of woven material, not of rubber, and a pad of felt was kept in the tube near the diaphragm box.
Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1|Various
This formed a pad fast at both ends but separate in the middle.
Forty Years Among the Indians|Daniel W. Jones
It was not big enough for the mark of a pad, and it was not the place for the saddle to make it.
The History of Gambling in England|John Ashton
When it has stopped bleeding put a pad of linen upon it, and keep it wet.
With Lee in Virginia|G. A. Henty
British Dictionary definitions for pad (1 of 2)
pad1
/ (pæd) /
noun
a thick piece of soft material used to make something comfortable, give it shape, or protect it
a guard made of flexible resilient material worn in various sports to protect parts of the body
Also called: stamp pad, ink pada block of firm absorbent material soaked with ink for transferring to a rubber stamp
Also called: notepad, writing pada number of sheets of paper fastened together along one edge
a flat piece of stiff material used to back a piece of blotting paper
the fleshy cushion-like underpart of the foot of a cat, dog, etc
any of the parts constituting such a structure
any of various level surfaces or flat-topped structures, such as a launch pad
entomol a nontechnical name for pulvillus
the large flat floating leaf of the water lily
electronicsa resistive attenuator network inserted in the path of a signal to reduce amplitude or to match one circuit to another
slanga person's residence
slanga bed or bedroom
verbpads, paddingorpadded(tr)
to line, stuff, or fill out with soft material, esp in order to protect or give shape to
(often foll by out)to inflate with irrelevant or false informationto pad out a story
Word Origin for pad
C16: origin uncertain; compare Low German pad sole of the foot
British Dictionary definitions for pad (2 of 2)
pad2
/ (pæd) /
verbpads, paddingorpadded
(intr; often foll by along, up, etc)to walk with a soft or muffled tread
(when intr, often foll by around) to travel (a route) on foot, esp at a slow pace; trampto pad around the country
noun
a dull soft sound, esp of footsteps
archaic short for footpad
archaic, ordialecta slow-paced horse; nag
Australiana path or tracka cattle pad
Word Origin for pad
C16: perhaps from Middle Dutch paden, from padpath