What is the meaning of TOD. Phrases containing TOD
See meanings and uses of TOD!Slangs & AI meanings
n penis. “Tadger,” “todge” and “tadge” have been known to slip in too. As it were.
Alone. Looks like I'm on my Todd tonight.
Ain't today story is Jamaican slang for a woman who looks younger than she really is.
Todger dodger is British slang for a lesbian.
Hot toddy is London Cockney rhyming slang for a sexual attractive body.
Phrs. On one's own. E.g."He was like an excited puppy when I visited, having spent the whole weekend on his billy tod."
Todger is British slang for the penis.
Noun. See 'on one's tod'.
Noun. A lesbian. From, avoiding (dodges) contact with the penis (todger). See 'todger'.
Phrs. Alone. Rhyming slang from Tod Sloan, the name of an American jockey.
Tod Sloane is London Cockney rhyming slang for alone.
On one's tod is slang for being alone.
Toddle off is slang for to casually leave.
n alone; on oneÂ’s own: Ever since his dog died, heÂ’s been sitting on his tod at the end of the bar with a whiskey in front of him. I donÂ’t think itÂ’s doing him any good, but what can you do?
Richard Todd is London Cockney rhyming slang for cod.
Sweeney Todd is London Cockney rhyming slang for the flying squad.
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n.
A large bale or package of wool, containing eighty tods, or 2,240 pounds, in weight.
n.
A toddling walk.
v. i.
To walk with short, tottering steps, as a child.
n.
A mixture of spirit and hot water sweetened.
n.
A grove or clump of trees; as, a toddy tope.
n.
A juice drawn from various kinds of palms in the East Indies; or, a spirituous liquor procured from it by fermentation.
v. i.
To walk in a wavering, unsteady manner; to toddle; to topple.
v. t. & i.
To weigh; to yield in tods.
imp. & p. p.
of Toddle
v. t.
To rip open; todisembowel.
v. i.
To walk with short steps, swaying the body from one side to the other, like a duck or very fat person; to move clumsily and totteringly along; to toddle; to stumble; as, a child waddles when he begins to walk; a goose waddles.
n.
One who toddles; especially, a young child.
n.
An old weight used in weighing wool, being usually twenty-eight pounds.
n.
The king tody. See under King.
n.
Any one of several species of small insectivorous West Indian birds of the genus Todus. They are allied to the kingfishers.
n.
A bush; a thick shrub; a bushy clump.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Toddle
n.
A fox; -- probably so named from its bushy tail.
n.
A species of palm (Borassus flabelliformis) having a straight, black, upright trunk, with palmate leaves. It is found native along the entire northern shores of the Indian Ocean, from the mouth of the Tigris to New Guinea. More than eight hundred uses to which it is put are enumerated by native writers. Its wood is largely used for building purposes; its fruit and roots serve for food, its sap for making toddy, and its leaves for thatching huts.
n.
A local name for the igneous rocks of Derbyshire, England; -- said by some to be derived from the German todter stein, meaning dead stone, that is, stone which contains no ores.
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