What is the difference between plod and trod?
plod | trod |
A slow or labored walk or other motion or activity.
To walk or move slowly and heavily or laboriously (+ on, through, over).
* 1883 , (Robert Louis Stevenson), (Treasure Island) Part One, Chapter 1
** I remember him as if it were yesterday, as he came plodding to the inn door, his sea chest following behind him in a handbarrow;
To trudge over or through.
To toil; to drudge; especially, to study laboriously and patiently.
* Drayton
the police, police officers
(UK, mildly, derogatory, countable) a police officer, especially a low-ranking one.
To walk heavily or laboriously; plod; tread
* 1813 , The Parliamentary history of England from the earliest period to the year 1803
*:Sir ; to me the noble lord seems to trod close in the foot-steps of his fellow-labourers in the ministerial vineyard, and u crow over us with the same reason
* 1833 , Timothy Flint, The history and geography of the Mississippi Valley
* 1866 , Fanny Fisher, Ainsworth's heir
*:They bore him to his chamber, where he lay all pale and tearless, like some broken reed, Some helpless shrub, all crushed and trodded down
* 1895 , Uchimura Kanzo, The Diary of a Japanese Convert
*:Yet alas! I see around me the trodding of the same old paths, each trying to excel the other how to ape the good old ministers who were "very much liked by their parishioners."
* 1962 , American Motorcyclist , February, page 16
*:Land of mystery and enchantment, continent of contrast and extremes, where adventure awaits those who dare to defy convention and choose to trod the unfamiliar path.
*{{quote-news, year=2007, date=December 23, author=Matt Weiland, title=Walker in the City, work=New York Times
, passage=Happily, he writes the way he walks: at a vigorous lope, both attentive to the varied soils of the ground he trods and curious about the dust and dandelions over the next hill. }}
*{{quote-news, year=2009, date=March 18, author=Sonia Day, title=Nip that gardening zeal in the bud, work=Toronto Star
, passage=And avoid trodding on the inevitably wet soil around the base of the shrubs as you work. }}
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As verbs the difference between plod and trod
is that plod is to walk or move slowly and heavily or laboriously (+ on, through, over) while trod is simple past of tread.As a noun plod
is a slow or labored walk or other motion or activity.plod
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) *.Noun
(-)- We started at a brisk walk and ended at a plod .
Verb
(plodd)- plodding schoolmen
Derived terms
* (l) * (l) * (English Citations of "plod")Etymology 2
From (etyl) plod. Cognate with (etyl) .Etymology 3
From (PC Plod)Noun
(en-noun)Synonyms
* (the police) see * (police officer) seetrod
English
Etymology 1
Etymology 2
Verb
(trodd)- It renders the paths, and the banks of the bayous in that region almost impassable in autumn, until the cattle have trodded it down.
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