| 释义 | pad·dock I. \ˈpadə̇k, -dēk\ noun
 also pad·dow \-də\
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English paddok, from pad, pade toad + -ok -ock; akin to Old Norse padda toad, Middle Low German padde, pedde toad, and perhaps to Old English pæth path — more at path
 1. chiefly dialect  : frog
 2. chiefly dialect  : toad
 II. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: alteration of parrock
 1.
 a. chiefly Britain  : a small area (as a field) often enclosed and typically adjoining or near a building (as a house or stable) and often used for a pasture
 b. Australia  : an often extensive area (as of grassland) usually fenced in and often used as a pasture
 2.
 a.  : a turfed enclosure where horses are kept (as on a stud farm)
 b.  : an enclosure where racehorses are saddled and paraded before a race
 3.  : a space or platform near the mouth of a shaft or excavation for temporary storage of ore or wash dirt
 III. transitive verb
 (-ed/-ing/-s)
 1.
 a.  : to put (an animal) into an enclosed area (as a field)
 b.  : to shut up in or as if in an enclosed area
 2.  : to store (as ore) temporarily in a space or on a platform near the mouth of a mining shaft or excavation
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