sod – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
מילים נרדפות: ground,
land,
soil,
enzyme,
degenerate,
pervert,
deviant,
deviate,
guy,
bozo,
cat,
hombre,
cover
sod
v.
cover with turf or sod, cover with a layer of grass and soil
n.
section of grass that has been cut or uprooted from the earth; turf, uppermost layer of soil containing grass roots and plants; homosexual (British Slang); guy, fellow, chap (British Slang); obnoxious child, brat (British Slang)
Sod
Sod or
turf is
grass and the part of the
soil beneath it held together by the
roots, or a piece of thin material.
Sod (disambiguation)
Sod is grass and the part of the soil beneath it held together by the roots.
SOD
Noun
1. an enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of superoxide into hydrogen peroxide and oxygen; "oxygen free radicals are normally removed in our bodies by the superoxide dismutase enzymes"
(synonym) superoxide dismutase
(hypernym) enzyme
sod
Noun
1. surface layer of ground containing a matt of grass and grass roots
(synonym) turf, sward, greensward
(hypernym) land, ground, soil
(hyponym) divot
2. someone who engages in anal copulation (especially a male who engages in anal copulation with another male)
(synonym) sodomite, sodomist, bugger
(hypernym) pervert, deviant, deviate, degenerate
3. an informal British term for a youth or man; "the poor sod couldn't even buy a drink"
(hypernym) guy, cat, hombre, bozo
(classification) United Kingdom, UK, Great Britain, GB, Britain, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Verb
1. cover with sod
(hypernym) cover
(derivation) turf, sward, greensward
Sod
of Seethe
imp. of Seethe.
(v. t.)
To cover with sod; to turf.
(n.)
The rock dove.
(n.)
That stratum of the surface of the soil which is filled with the roots of grass, or any portion of that surface; turf; sward.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
Sod
Sod (Hebrew) Originally to appoint, place, or found; later an assembly, people placed or appointed or founded to do some duty or work; hence a secret or occult assembly or company of individuals united for some specific purpose, corresponding almost exactly to the Greek mysterion (mystery).
Sod occurs frequently in the Old Testament, translated as secret or assembly, where Mysteries would be a more correct rendering: e.g., "Jacob called unto his sons, and said . . . Simeon and Levi are brethren; instruments of cruelty are in their habitations. . . . come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly" (Genesis 49:1, 5-6). The Bible is "a series of historical records of the great struggle between white and black Magic, between the Adepts of the right path, the Prophets, and those of the left, the Levites, the clergy of the brutal masses. . . . The great schism that arose between the sons of the Fourth Race, as soon as the first Temples and Halls of Initiation had been erected under the guidance of 'the Sons of God,' is allegorized in the Sons of Jacob. That there were two schools of Magic, and that the orthodox Levites did not belong to the holy one, is shown in the words pronounced by the dying Jacob" (SD 2:211).
The secret learning of the Hebrews was often termed Sod (plural, Sodim), Sodei Torah (secrets or mysteries of the Law), or Razei Torah.