pad
1 Americannoun
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a cushionlike mass of soft material used for comfort, protection, or stuffing.
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a soft, stuffed cushion used as a saddle; a padded leather saddle without a tree.
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a number of sheets of paper glued or otherwise held together at one edge to form a tablet.
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a soft, ink-soaked block of absorbent material for inking a rubber stamp.
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Anatomy, Zoology. any fleshy mass of tissue that cushions a weight-bearing part of the body, as on the underside of a paw.
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the foot, as of a fox, hare, or wolf.
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a piece or fold of gauze or other absorbent material for use as a surgical dressing or a protective covering.
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Zoology. a pulvillus, as on the tarsus or foot of an insect.
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a lily pad.
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Rocketry. launch pad.
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Slang.
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one's living quarters, as an apartment or room.
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one's bed.
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a room where people gather to take narcotics; an addicts' den.
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Slang.
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money paid as a bribe to and shared among police officers, as for ignoring law violations.
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a list of police officers receiving such money.
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Electricity. a nonadjustable attenuator consisting of a network of fixed resistors.
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Shipbuilding.
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a metal plate riveted or welded to a surface as a base or attachment for bolts, hooks, eyes, etc.
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a piece of wood laid on the back of a deck beam to give the deck surface a desired amount of camber.
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Carpentry.
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a handle for holding various small, interchangeable saw blades.
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Also a socket in a brace for a bit.
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Metallurgy. a raised surface on a casting.
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a small deposit of weld metal, as for building up a worn surface.
verb (used with object)
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to furnish, protect, fill out, or stuff with a pad or padding.
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to expand or add to unnecessarily or dishonestly.
to pad a speech; to pad an expense account.
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Metallurgy. to add metal to (a casting) above its required dimensions, to insure the flow of enough metal to all parts.
verb (used without object)
idioms
noun
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a dull, muffled sound, as of footsteps on the ground.
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a road horse, as distinguished from a hunting or working horse.
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a highwayman.
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British Dialect. a path, lane, or road.
verb (used with object)
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to travel along on foot.
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to beat down by treading.
verb (used without object)
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to travel on foot; walk.
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to walk so that one's footsteps make a dull, muffled sound.
abbreviation
noun
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a thick piece of soft material used to make something comfortable, give it shape, or protect it
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a guard made of flexible resilient material worn in various sports to protect parts of the body
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Also called: stamp pad. ink pad. a block of firm absorbent material soaked with ink for transferring to a rubber stamp
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Also called: notepad. writing pad. a number of sheets of paper fastened together along one edge
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a flat piece of stiff material used to back a piece of blotting paper
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the fleshy cushion-like underpart of the foot of a cat, dog, etc
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any of the parts constituting such a structure
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any of various level surfaces or flat-topped structures, such as a launch pad
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entomol a nontechnical name for pulvillus
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the large flat floating leaf of the water lily
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electronics a resistive attenuator network inserted in the path of a signal to reduce amplitude or to match one circuit to another
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slang a person's residence
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slang a bed or bedroom
verb
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to line, stuff, or fill out with soft material, esp in order to protect or give shape to
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(often foll by out) to inflate with irrelevant or false information
to pad out a story
verb
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(intr; often foll by along, up, etc) to walk with a soft or muffled tread
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to travel (a route) on foot, esp at a slow pace; tramp
to pad around the country
noun
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a dull soft sound, esp of footsteps
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archaic short for footpad
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archaic a slow-paced horse; nag
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a path or track
a cattle pad
Etymology
Origin of pad1
First recorded in 1550–60; originally special uses of obsolete pad “bundle to lie on,” perhaps a blend of pack 1 and bed
Origin of pad2
First recorded in 1545–55; noun from Middle Dutch or Low German pad “path” (originally thieves' and beggars' slang); hence, apparently, “highwayman” and “horse”); verb from Middle Dutch padden “to make or follow a path,” cognate with Old English pæththan “to traverse,” derivative of pæth; path ( def. ); pad 2 defs. 1, 8 perhaps represent an independent expressive word that has been influenced by other senses
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
“It looks like a football player wearing shoulder pads,” she says with a giggle.
From Literature
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But it never even opened as the shopping center it was meant to be, with a five-star hotel and a helicopter pad.
From Barron's
The manticore padded closer, and its meat-thick breath was hot as an oven on Christopher.
From Literature
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Earlier this month, Joshua shared online footage of himself returning to the gym, hitting pads with a trainer for what he called "mental strength therapy".
From Barron's
The photo showed children on padded floor mats with silver Mylar thermal blankets, walled in by chain-link fencing.
From Los Angeles Times
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.