Boor vs Clod - What's the difference?
boor | clod | Related terms |
A peasant.
A Boer, white South African of Dutch or Huguenot descent
A yokel, country bumpkin,
An uncultured person
A lump of something, especially of earth or clay.
* Milton
* E. Fairfax
* Francis Bacon
* T. Burnet
* 2010 ,
The ground; the earth; a spot of earth or turf.
* Jonathan Swift
A stupid person; a dolt.
Part of a shoulder of beef, or of the neck piece near the shoulder.
To pelt with clods.
(Scotland) To throw violently; to hurl.
To collect into clods, or into a thick mass; to coagulate; to clot.
* G. Fletcher
Boor is a related term of clod.
As nouns the difference between boor and clod
is that boor is bear while clod is a lump of something, especially of earth or clay.As a verb clod is
to pelt with clods.boor
English
Noun
(en noun)Anagrams
* ----clod
English
Noun
(en noun)- clods of iron and brass
- clods of blood
- The earth that casteth up from the plough a great clod', is not so good as that which casteth up a smaller ' clod .
- this cold clod of clay which we carry about with us
- "What a bunch of hooey," I said under my breath, tossing a dirt clod over my shoulder against the locked-up garden shed.
- the clod where once their sultan's horse has trod
- (Dryden)
Verb
(clodd)- (Jonson)
- (Sir Walter Scott)
- clodded gore
- Clodded in lumps of clay.