Sheep vs Paddock - What's the difference?
sheep | paddock |
A woolly ruminant of the genus Ovis .
A timid, shy person who is easily led by others.
(chiefly, humorous)
(archaic except in dialects) A frog or toad.
* Wycliffe
* Spenser
* Shakespeare
A small enclosure or field of grassland, especially for horses.
*
(Australia, New Zealand) A field of grassland of any size, especially for keeping sheep or cattle.
An area where horses are paraded and mounted before a race and unsaddled after a race.
Land, fenced or otherwise delimited, which is most often part of a sheep or cattle property.
(motor racing) An area at circuit where the racing vehicles are parked and worked on before and between races.
To provide with a paddock. To keep in, or place in, a paddock.
English words suffixed with -ock
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As nouns the difference between sheep and paddock
is that sheep is a woolly ruminant of the genus ovis while paddock is (archaic except in dialects) a frog or toad or paddock can be a small enclosure or field of grassland, especially for horses.As a verb paddock is
to provide with a paddock to keep in, or place in, a paddock.sheep
English
Noun
(sheep)Synonyms
* See alsoDerived terms
* black sheep * sheepdog * sheepfold * sheepish * sheeple * sheepskin * shoop (chiefly-humorous back-formation)Descendants
* Abenaki: (l)See also
* * Aries * ewe * lamb * mutton * ovine * ram * teg * tup * wetherExternal links
* * (wikipedia) * (Ovis)References
Anagrams
* * 1000 English basic words ----paddock
English
(wikipedia paddock)Etymology 1
From (etyl) paddok, equivalent to .Alternative forms
* (l) (obsolete)Noun
(en noun)- Soothly if thou wilt not deliver, lo! I shall smite all thy terms with paddocks . (Exodus 8:2)
- The grisly toadstool grown there might I see, / And loathed paddocks lording on the same.
- Paddock calls (Macbeth 1.1.10)
Derived terms
* paddock pipe * paddock stone * paddock stoolEtymology 2
Alteration of (etyl) parrok, . Related to (l), (l).Noun
(en noun)- the two of them usually spent their Sundays together in the small paddock beyond the orchard, grazing side by side and never speaking.