Wood

  • 61wood — See: CAN T SEE THE WOOD FOR THE TREES, KNOCK ON WOOD, SAW WOOD …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 62wood — See: CAN T SEE THE WOOD FOR THE TREES, KNOCK ON WOOD, SAW WOOD …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 63wood — See: can t see the wood for the trees, knock on wood, saw wood …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 64wood — 1. noun /wʊd/ a) The substance making up the central part of the trunk and branches of a tree. Used as a material for construction, to manufacture various items, etc. or as fuel. Teak is much used for outdoor benches, but a number of other woods… …

    Wiktionary

  • 65wood — [OE] The ancestral meaning of wood is probably ‘collection of trees, forest’; ‘tree’ (now obsolete) and ‘substance from which trees are made’ are secondary developments. The word goes back to prehistoric Germanic *widuz, which also produced… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 66wood — n 1. American a shortened form of pecker wood 2. British an erection, as in get wood …

    Contemporary slang

  • 67wood's — at·wood s; wood s; …

    English syllables

  • 68wood — see fields have eyes, and woods have ears don’t halloo till you are out of the wood hunger drives the wolf out of the wood …

    Proverbs new dictionary

  • 69wood — [OE] The ancestral meaning of wood is probably ‘collection of trees, forest’; ‘tree’ (now obsolete) and ‘substance from which trees are made’ are secondary developments. The word goes back to prehistoric Germanic *widuz, which also produced… …

    Word origins

  • 70Wood — noun a) An English topographic surname for someone who lived in or near a wood. b) An English occupational surname for a woodsman …

    Wiktionary