Associations to the word «Tod»
Noun
- Tucker
- Emile
- Macbeth
- Corbett
- Starring
- Peggy
- Mod
- Copper
- Hitchcock
- Virgil
- Knowles
- Pius
- Fullback
- Corvette
- Irene
- Coordinator
- Isabella
- Fox
- Cam
- Sweeney
- Greenwich
- Melanie
- Fleming
- Morris
- Friedrich
- Otis
- Perrin
- Premiere
- Olson
- Huntington
- Horror
- Carnival
- Unknown
- Hermann
- Anthropology
- Maggie
- Caldwell
- Williams
- Auguste
- Solo
- Sociology
- Lament
- Sebastian
- Della
- Gall
- Christi
- Nielsen
- Griffin
- Lecturer
- Op
- Ko
- Todd
- Tomas
- Kinsman
- Dispersion
- Inlet
- Screenwriter
- Screenplay
- Ohio
- Scarlet
- Death
- Davies
- Na
- Bourne
- Lionel
- Bowen
- Quixote
- Johann
- Glasgow
- Shipbuilding
- Potter
- Es
- Vampire
- Ecology
- Till
- Irvine
- Crawford
- Quentin
- Venice
- Scottish
- Friedman
- Basel
- Dame
- Malcolm
- Luigi
- Para
- Hollywood
- Drama
- Joan
- Capt
- Norm
- Sheila
- Noel
- Piano
- Hans
- Brigadier
Adjective
Wiktionary
TOD, noun. (now UK dialect) A fox.
TOD, noun. A male fox; a dog; a reynard.
TOD, noun. Someone like a fox; a crafty person.
TOD, noun. A bush; used especially of ivy.
TOD, noun. An old English measure of weight, usually of wool, containing two stone or 28 pounds (13 kg).
TOD, verb. (obsolete) To weigh; to yield in tods.
Dictionary definition
TOD, noun. A unit of weight for wool equal to about 28 pounds.
TOD, adjective. Alone and on your own; "don't just sit there on your tod".
Wise words
A wise man hears one word and understands two.