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the+plod

  • 1 plod

    [plod]
    past tense, past participle - plodded; verb
    1) (to walk heavily and slowly: The elderly man plodded down the street.) vliecť sa
    2) (to work slowly but thoroughly: They plodded on with the work.) moriť sa

    English-Slovak dictionary > plod

  • 2 fruit

    [fru:t] 1. noun
    1) (the part of a plant that produces the seed, especially when eaten as food: The fruit of the vine is the grape.) plod
    2) (a result; something gained as a result of hard work etc: the fruit of his hard work.) plod
    2. verb
    (to produce fruit: This tree fruits early.) plodiť, rodiť, dávať plody
    - fruition
    - fruitless
    - fruitlessly
    - fruity
    * * *
    • výsledok
    • výnos
    • zisk
    • príjem
    • plod
    • ovocie

    English-Slovak dictionary > fruit

  • 3 growth

    [-Ɵ]
    1) (the act or process of growing, increasing, developing etc: the growth of trade unionism.) rast
    2) (something that has grown: a week's growth of beard.) porast
    3) (the amount by which something grows: to measure the growth of a plant.) vzrast
    4) (something unwanted which grows: a cancerous growth.) výrastok
    * * *
    • výrastok
    • vzrast
    • rast
    • plodina
    • plod
    • nádor
    • názvuk
    • narastanie

    English-Slovak dictionary > growth

  • 4 mangosteen

    ['mæŋɡəsti:n]
    1) (the dark brown, orange-shaped fruit of an East Indian tree.) mangostana
    2) (the tree.) mangostana
    * * *
    • plod mangostany
    • mangostana lahodná

    English-Slovak dictionary > mangosteen

  • 5 cassia

    ['kæsiə, 'kæʃə]
    (any of several types of tropical tree or shrub of the pea family with small yellow or pink flowers.) kasia
    * * *
    • druh nekvalitnej škorice
    • kasia-strom i plod

    English-Slovak dictionary > cassia

См. также в других словарях:

  • plod (the plod) — n British the police force or a uniformed police man. From P.C. Plod , a character from the popular children s stories featuring Noddy, written by Enid Blyton in the 1950s. The term additionally evokes a slow witted, literal and figurative plod… …   Contemporary slang

  • plod — I. /plɒd / (say plod) verb (plodded, plodding) –verb (i) 1. to walk heavily; trudge; move laboriously. 2. to work with dull perseverance; drudge. –verb (t) 3. to walk heavily over or along. –noun 4. the act or a course of plodding. 5. a sound of… …  

  • plod — term for police (in/on a vehicle, originally british bollocks! The plod just flashed his cherries! …   Dictionary of american slang

  • plod — term for police (in/on a vehicle, originally british bollocks! The plod just flashed his cherries! …   Dictionary of american slang

  • plod´ding|ly — plod «plod», verb, plod|ded, plod|ding, noun. –v.i. 1. to walk heavily or slowly; trudge: »The old man plods wearily along the road. SYNONYM( …   Useful english dictionary

  • plod´der — plod «plod», verb, plod|ded, plod|ding, noun. –v.i. 1. to walk heavily or slowly; trudge: »The old man plods wearily along the road. SYNONYM( …   Useful english dictionary

  • Plod — redirects here, an acronym for Purple Label of Death , associated with Comic Guaranty LLC .Plod or P.C.Plod is a British slang term used to refer to a a police officer, particularly one slow witted or dull, or more recently the police force in… …   Wikipedia

  • plod — [plɔd US pla:d] v past tense and past participle plodded present participle plodding [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: From the sound or the action] [I always + adverb/preposition] to walk along slowly, especially when this is difficult plod… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Plod — Plod, v. t. To walk on slowly or heavily. [1913 Webster] The ploughman homeward plods his weary way. Gray. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • plod — 1560s, of uncertain origin, perhaps imitative of the sound of walking heavily or slowly. Related: Plodded; plodding. The latter, in the sense diligent and dull is attested from 1580s …   Etymology dictionary

  • plod — [pläd] vi. plodded, plodding [of echoic orig.] 1. to walk or move heavily and laboriously; trudge 2. to work steadily and monotonously; drudge n. 1. the act of plodding 2. the sound of a heavy step plodder n. ploddingly …   English World dictionary

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