rod
1 Americannoun
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a stick, wand, staff, or the like, of wood, metal, or other material.
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a straight, slender shoot or stem of any woody plant, whether still growing or cut from the plant.
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(in plastering or mortaring) a straightedge moved along screeds to even the plaster between them.
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a stick used for measuring.
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Archaic. a unit of linear measure, 5.5 yards or 16.5 feet (5.029 meters); linear perch or pole.
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Archaic. a unit of square measure, 30.25 square yards (25.29 sq. m); square perch or pole.
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a stick, or a bundle of sticks or switches bound together, used as an instrument of punishment.
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punishment or discipline.
Not one to spare the rod, I sent him to bed without dinner.
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a wand, staff, or scepter carried as a symbol of office, authority, power, etc.
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authority, sway, or rule, especially when tyrannical.
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a slender bar or tube for draping towels over, suspending a shower curtain, etc.
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Bible. a branch of a family; tribe.
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a pattern, drawn on wood in full size, of one section of a piece of furniture.
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Slang.
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a pistol or revolver.
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Vulgar. the penis.
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Anatomy. one of the rodlike cells in the retina of the eye, sensitive to low intensities of light.
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Bacteriology. a rod-shaped microorganism.
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Also called stadia rod. Also called leveling rod. Surveying. a light pole, conspicuously marked with graduations, held upright and read through a surveying instrument in leveling or stadia surveying.
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Metallurgy. round metal stock for drawing and cutting into slender bars.
verb (used with object)
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to furnish or equip with a rod or rods, especially lightning rods.
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to even (plaster or mortar) with a rod.
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Metallurgy. to reinforce (the core of a mold) with metal rods.
noun
noun
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a slim cylinder of metal, wood, etc; stick or shaft
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a switch or bundle of switches used to administer corporal punishment
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any of various staffs of insignia or office
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power, esp of a tyrannical kind
a dictator's iron rod
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a straight slender shoot, stem, or cane of a woody plant
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See fishing rod
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Also called: pole. perch.
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a unit of length equal to 5 1/ 2 yards
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a unit of square measure equal to 30 1/ 4 square yards
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a straight narrow board marked with the dimensions of a piece of joinery, as the spacing of steps on a staircase
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a metal shaft that transmits power in axial reciprocating motion Compare shaft
piston rod, con(necting) rod
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surveying another name (esp US) for staff 1
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Also called: retinal rod. any of the elongated cylindrical cells in the retina of the eye, containing the visual purple (rhodopsin), which are sensitive to dim light but not to colour Compare cone
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any rod-shaped bacterium
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a slang word for penis
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slang name for pistol
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short for hot rod
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One of the rod-shaped cells in the retina of the eye of many vertebrate animals. Rods are more sensitive to light than cones and are responsible for the ability to see in dim light. However, rods are insensitive to red wavelengths of light and do not contribute greatly to the perception of color.
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Compare cone
Usage
What else does rod mean? Rod can refer to a stick, handgun, car, parts of the eye, and even, well, the penis, among many other things. ROD can additionally serve as an acronym for the slang expression ride or die.
Other Word Forms
- rodless adjective
- rodlike adjective
Etymology
Origin of rod
before 1150; Middle English rodd, late Old English; akin to Old Norse rudda club
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.
A valve designed to drain water from the plant’s fuel rods stuck open, yet operators mistakenly shut down water pumps, causing a partial meltdown.
The radiant orange-gold liquid can then be cast into sheets or rods.
“We have 11 landfills across California that have been granted waivers by the government to basically ‘hot rod’ the landfill,” Williams said.
From Los Angeles Times
The application also noted that police seized five sticks, iron rods and bricks from the accused, but found no firearms or swords, contrary to what Akhlaq's wife had stated in her complaint.
From BBC
The Home Office removed the need to consult local authorities about hotel use in 2020 and they've become lightning rods for protests.
From BBC
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.