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sod
1[sod]
noun
a section cut or torn from the surface of grassland, containing the matted roots of grass.
the surface of the ground, especially when covered with grass; turf; sward.
verb (used with object)
to cover with sods or sod.
sod
2[sod]
verb
simple past tense of seethe.
sod
3[sod]
noun
verb (used with object)
to damn.
Sod the bloody bastard!
verb phrase
to leave (usually as an imperative).
Why don't you just sod off!
sod
1/ ɒ /
noun
a person considered to be obnoxious
a jocular word for a person
the poor sod hasn't been out for weeks
slangnothing
interjection
a strong exclamation of annoyance
sod
2/ ɒ /
noun
a piece of grass-covered surface soil held together by the roots of the grass; turf
poeticthe ground
verb
(tr) to cover with sods
Other 51Թ Forms
- sodless adjective
- ˈǻ徱Բ adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of sod1
Origin of sod2
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of sod1
Origin of sod2
Example Sentences
Michael described himself as a "very awkward, slightly porky, very strange-looking bloke" who walked into his first day of school with a mop of curly hair and wearing "sodding great big window-frame glasses."
Is there really anything to be gained from being served yet another reminder every single time we open a sodding email?
Midway through the novel, Lennon tells Anton he’s his father’s “sodding Cyrano de Bergerac.”
“This path must be laid out like a sodding maze,” said Alice.
Despite the rain he jolted around the grounds to direct planting and sodding and every morning at dawn attended Burnham’s mandatory muster of key men.
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