spud

spud
1. noun /spʌd/
a) A tool, similar to a spade, used for digging out weeds etc.

He leans over to one side to get the light, as he darns a hole in the heel of a sock. He is getting pretty smart at it now, and no longer makes spuds in the sock to chafe his heels.

b) A potato.

He was getting tall too, and his trousers were short even though his turn-ups had been turned down, and hed got a spud in his socks where his shoe rubbed where he trod over trying to walk bow-legged to look like a cowboy.

2. verb /spʌd/
a) To begin drilling an oil well.
b) To remove the roofing aggregate and most of the bituminous top coating by scraping and chipping.

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  • spud — spud; spud·der; spud·dle; spud·dy; …   English syllables

  • spud — [spud] n. [ME spudde, prob. < Scand, as in ON spjōt, a spear (for IE base see SPIKE1): SPUD sense 2 from the use of the implement in potato digging] 1. any of various sharp, spadelike or chisel like tools used for rooting out weeds, stripping… …   English World dictionary

  • Spud — (sp[u^]d), n. [Cf. Dan. spyd a spear.] 1. A sharp, narrow spade, usually with a long handle, used by farmers for digging up large rooted weeds; a similarly shaped implement used for various purposes. [1913 Webster] My spud these nettles from the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • spud — /spud/, n., v., spudded, spudding. n. 1. Informal. a potato. 2. a spadelike instrument, esp. one with a narrow blade, as for digging up or cutting the roots of weeds. 3. a chisellike tool for removing bark. 4. a pointed leg or stake for staying… …   Universalium

  • spud — [spʌd] n [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: spud small spade (17 20 centuries)] informal a ↑potato …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • spud — ► NOUN 1) informal a potato. 2) a small, narrow spade for cutting the roots of weeds. ► VERB (spudded, spudding) 1) dig up or cut (weeds) with a spud. 2) make the initial drilling for (an oil well) …   English terms dictionary

  • spud — [ spʌd ] noun count MAINLY BRITISH INFORMAL a potato …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • spud — mid 15c., small or poor knife, of uncertain origin probably related to Dan. spyd, O.N. spjot spear, Ger. Spiess spear, lance ). Meaning spade is from 1660s; sense of short or stumpy person or thing is from 1680s; that of potato is first recorded… …   Etymology dictionary

  • spud|dy — «SPUHD ee», adjective, di|er, di|est. short and fat or thick: »spuddy hands …   Useful english dictionary

  • spud — [spad] 1. n. a potato. □ I’d like a few more spuds. □ Mashed spuds are the best of all. 2. n. vodka. (Presumed to be made from potatoes.) □ How about a glass of spud? □ …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

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