Footpad
101ὁδοιδόκου — ὁδοιδόκος footpad masc gen sg …
102ὁδοιδόκους — ὁδοιδόκος footpad masc acc pl …
103ὁδοιδόκων — ὁδοιδόκος footpad masc gen pl …
104padder — A footpad; a highwayman on foot; a robber. Literally, one who pads. See pad …
105pad — [16] English has two words pad, both of them borrowed from Low German or Dutch. The ancestral meaning of pad ‘cushion’ seems to be ‘sole of the foot’, although that sense did not emerge in English until the 18th century. Flemish pad and Low… …
106path — [OE] Path is a West Germanic word of uncertain ultimate origin. Its cousins German pfad and Dutch pad point back to a prehistoric West Germanic ancestor *patha, but no one is too sure where this came from (one possibility is that it was borrowed… …
107pad — pad1 [pad] n. [echoic, but infl. by PAD3] the dull sound made by a footstep or staff on the ground pad2 [pad] n. [? var. of POD1] 1. a soft, stuffed saddle 2. anything made of or stuffed wi …
108highjacker — noun 1. someone who uses force to take over a vehicle (especially an airplane) in order to reach an alternative destination • Syn: ↑hijacker • Derivationally related forms: ↑hijack (for: ↑hijacker), ↑highjack • …
109hijacker — noun 1. a holdup man who stops a vehicle and steals from it (Freq. 1) • Syn: ↑highjacker, ↑highwayman, ↑road agent • Derivationally related forms: ↑hijack, ↑highjack (for: ↑ …
110padder — noun a highwayman who robs on foot • Syn: ↑footpad • Hypernyms: ↑highjacker, ↑highwayman, ↑hijacker, ↑road agent …