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Meaning of Paddock | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C2 Specialized
ˈpædək

Definitions

  1. A small enclosure or field of grassland, especially one used to exercise or graze horses or other animals.
  2. An English surname.
  3. A frog.
    Australia, New-Zealand, Northern-England, Northern-Ireland, Scotland, transitive
  4. An enclosure next to a racecourse where horses are paraded and mounted before a race and unsaddled after a race.
  5. A toad.
    Australia, New-Zealand, Northern-England, Northern-Ireland, Scotland, transitive
  6. An area at a racing circuit where the racing vehicles are parked and worked on before and between races.
  7. A contemptible, or malicious or nasty, person.
    Australia, New-Zealand, Northern-England, Northern-Ireland, Scotland, derogatory, transitive
  8. A field on which a game is played; a playing field.
  9. A simple, usually triangular, sledge which is dragged along the ground to transport items.
  10. A field of grassland of any size, either enclosed by fences or delimited by geographical boundaries, especially a large area for keeping cattle or sheep.
    Australia, New-Zealand, broadly
  11. A place in a superficial deposit where ore or washdirt (“earth rich enough in metal to pay for washing”) is excavated; also, a place for storing ore, washdirt, etc.
    Australia, New-Zealand, broadly

Equivalents

العربية الحلبة
Bosanski ливада
Čeština výběh
Eesti koppel
Français enclos paddock
Hrvatski ливада
Bahasa Indonesia pedok
Te Reo Māori pātiki
Македонски ливада пасиште
Português boxe paddock padoque pasto piquete
Русский выгон
Српски ливада
Українська вигул

Examples

“Upon this information, they instantly passed through the hall once more, and ran across the lawn after their father, who was deliberately pursuing his way towards a small wood on one side of the paddock.”
“A jargonell pear tree at one end of the cottage, a rivulet, and flower-plot of a rood in extent, in front, and a kitchen-garden behind; a paddock for a cow, and a small field, cultivated with several crops of grain rather for the benefit of the cottager than for sale, announced the warm and cordial comforts which Old England, even at her most northern extremity, extends to her meanest inhabitants.”
“[H]e has delineated estates of romance, from which their actual possessions are shanties and paddocks.”
“They were not members of a country where literature is confined to its little paddock, without influence on the larger field (part lawn, part marsh) of the social world: they were readers in sympathetic action with thinkers and literary artists.”
“There was only the extent of a wide paddock and a lawn between the hall-door and that grand old gateway, and the house, though substantial and capacious, hardly pretended to the dignity of a mansion.”
“The Queen of Hearts was floodlit behind the petrol pumps: a Tudor barn converted, a vestige of a farmyard left in the arrangement of the restaurant and bars: a swimming pool where the paddock had been.”
“[T]he two of them [Benjamin the donkey and Boxer the cart-horse] usually spent their Sundays together in the small paddock beyond the orchard, grazing side by side and never speaking.”
“We left the carriage, bought programmes, and walked across the infield and then across the smooth thick turf of the course to the paddock. […] The paddock was fairly well filled with people and they were walking the horses around in a ring under the trees behind the grand stand.”
“You remind me of a two-year-old, Dinny—one of those whipcordy chestnuts that kick up their heels in the paddock, get left at the post, and come in first after all.”
“Cold as a paddock.”
“Also the Lord seide to Moises, Entre thou to Farao, and thou schalt seie to hym, The Lord seith these thingis, Delyuere thou my puple, that it make sacrifice to me; sotheli if thou nylt delyuere, lo! Y schal smyte alle thi termys with paddoks; and the flood schal buyle out paddokis, […]”

Also the Lord said to Moses, enter thou to Pharaoh, and thou shalt say to him, The Lord saith these things, Deliver thou my people, that it make sacrifice to me; soothly [truly] if thou nilt [wilt not] deliver, lo! I shall smite all thy terms [lands] with paddocks; and the flood shall boil out paddocks; […]

“It is apparent that there be three kinds of Frogs of the earth, the firſt is the little greene Frog: the ſecond is this Padocke, hauing a crooke back, called in Latine Rubeta Gibboſa, and the third is the Toade, commonly called Rubotax, Bufo. […] As ſoone as theſe Paddocks come once into the ayre, out of their cloſe places of generation and habitation, they ſvvell and ſo die.”
“The vvater-Snake, vvhom Fiſh and Paddocks fed, / VVith ſtaring Scales lies poyſon'd in his Bed: […]”
“Ower mony maisters—ower mony maisters, as the paddock said to the harrow, when every tooth gae her a tig.”
“He put out his hand with repulsion; it lay like a cold paddock on her knee.”
“Where I was wont to ſeeke the honey Bee, / Working her formall rowmes in Wexen frame: / The grieſlie Todeſtoole growne there mought I ſe / And loathed Paddocks lording on the ſame.”

Where I was wont to seek the honey bee, / Working her formal rooms in waxen frame: / The grisly toadstool grown there might I see / And loathed paddocks lording on the same.

“Padock calls anon: faire is foule, and foule is faire, / Houer through the fogge and filthie ayre.”
“[F]rom the hall wherein the mourners died / A grey wolf glared, and o'er his head the bat / Hung, and the paddock on the hearth-stone sat.”
“[T]here was grandfaither's siller tester in the puddock’s heart of him.”
“But 64-year-old Stephen C. Paddock flew low under the radar. He avoided interaction with many of the people around him, and his manner was direct and brusque.”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
See all C2 English words →

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