clod
/klɒd/ (bre, ipa) · /klɑːd/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈkläd How to pronounce clod (audio)/ (ame, mw)
clod — noun
- clodsingular
- clodsplural
1. a chunk of dirt or clay that stays together as one lump.
a chunk of dirt or clay that stays together as one lump.
After the rain, Jiwoo kicked a clod of mud off the path.
a clod of + mud
A clod of dry earth broke loose from the flowerpot.
a clod of + earth
Tomás scraped the last clod of clay from his boots.
Heavy clods of soil lay across the field after ploughing.
文法句型
a clod of + mud/earth/clay
clods of soil
用法筆記
Usually appears with of plus earth, mud, clay, or soil. Unlike sense 2, this sense names a physical lump of ground, not a foolish person.
2. a person who seems slow to understand simple things and behaves foolishly.
a person who seems slow to understand simple things and behaves foolishly.
Everyone laughed when Ari called himself a clod for missing the easy answer.
call someone a clod
Don't be such a clod and leave the freezer door open.
such a clod
The coach muttered, "What a clod," after the player ran the wrong way.
Esme felt like a clod after waving at the wrong teacher.
- genius
someone extremely clever rather than foolish
文法句型
call someone a clod
such a clod
what a clod
用法筆記
Used as a blunt insult for someone who seems dense or awkward, sometimes in a joking way. Unlike sense 1, it refers to a person rather than a lump of earth.