"doddard" meaning in English

See doddard in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Noun

Forms: doddards [plural]
Etymology: Possibly from dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard. The Scottish National Dictionary, a Scots dictionary, defining doddard as “A foolish old man, a dotard”, and providing an 1823 quotation, gives the etymology as either a variant of dotard, comparing Early Modern English dodart, or perhaps related to doddered, with spelling influenced by dotard. Etymology templates: {{suffix|en|dodder<t:to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age>|ard}} dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard Head templates: {{en-noun}} doddard (plural doddards)
  1. A frail old man. Related terms: dotard
    Sense id: en-doddard-en-noun-~RolYziz Categories (other): English entries with incorrect language header, English terms suffixed with -ard, Pages with 1 entry, Pages with entries Disambiguation of English entries with incorrect language header: 84 16 Disambiguation of English terms suffixed with -ard: 85 15 Disambiguation of Pages with 1 entry: 88 12 Disambiguation of Pages with entries: 93 7
The following are not (yet) sense-disambiguated
Etymology number: 1

Noun

Forms: doddards [plural]
Etymology: Possibly from dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard. The Scottish National Dictionary, a Scots dictionary, defining doddard as “A foolish old man, a dotard”, and providing an 1823 quotation, gives the etymology as either a variant of dotard, comparing Early Modern English dodart, or perhaps related to doddered, with spelling influenced by dotard. Etymology templates: {{suffix|en|dodder<t:to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age>|ard}} dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard Head templates: {{en-noun}} doddard (plural doddards)
  1. (rare) A moribund or decayed tree. Tags: rare
    Sense id: en-doddard-en-noun-9-w0P99-
The following are not (yet) sense-disambiguated
Etymology number: 1

Inflected forms

{
  "etymology_number": 1,
  "etymology_templates": [
    {
      "args": {
        "1": "en",
        "2": "dodder<t:to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age>",
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      },
      "expansion": "dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard",
      "name": "suffix"
    }
  ],
  "etymology_text": "Possibly from dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard. The Scottish National Dictionary, a Scots dictionary, defining doddard as “A foolish old man, a dotard”, and providing an 1823 quotation, gives the etymology as either a variant of dotard, comparing Early Modern English dodart, or perhaps related to doddered, with spelling influenced by dotard.",
  "forms": [
    {
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      "tags": [
        "plural"
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  "head_templates": [
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      "expansion": "doddard (plural doddards)",
      "name": "en-noun"
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  "lang": "English",
  "lang_code": "en",
  "pos": "noun",
  "senses": [
    {
      "categories": [
        {
          "_dis": "84 16",
          "kind": "other",
          "name": "English entries with incorrect language header",
          "parents": [
            "Entries with incorrect language header",
            "Entry maintenance"
          ],
          "source": "w+disamb"
        },
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          "_dis": "85 15",
          "kind": "other",
          "name": "English terms suffixed with -ard",
          "parents": [],
          "source": "w+disamb"
        },
        {
          "_dis": "88 12",
          "kind": "other",
          "name": "Pages with 1 entry",
          "parents": [],
          "source": "w+disamb"
        },
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          "_dis": "93 7",
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      "examples": [
        {
          "ref": "1934, Sigurd Christiansen, translated by Isaac Anderson, “The Storm”, in Chaff Before the Wind, New York, N.Y.: Liveright Publishing Corporation, page 266:",
          "text": "You are too old and too exacting to be satisfied with a blank page. You would certainly prefer one upon which life has written something. It is more interesting. Young girls are only for youths and for certain brainless doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1937 March 25, B. C. Hagglund, “[Views and Reviews] The Collective Instinct”, in Tri-County Forum, volume V, number 51, Thief River Falls, Minn., page two, column 5:",
          "text": "President Roosevelt and the former King Edward collect stamps, along with thousands of others, ranging from six-year-olds to ninety-seven year old^([sic]) doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1939, Jean Sarment, translated by Frances Keene and Adrienne Foulke, “Rude Awakening”, in Eisig Silberschlag, Frederick Lehner, editors, Poet Lore: A Quarterly of World Literature, volume XLV, numbers 3–4, Boston, Mass., page 257:",
          "text": "Nelly. There are some people who enjoy Sunday. / Renny. Yes . . . the old doddards who listen to military bands in the public park.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1942 October 1, The Art Digest, volume XVII, number 1, New York, N.Y.: The Art Digest, Inc., page 6, column 3:",
          "text": "Comments John Garth, critic of the San Francisco Argonaut: “When the young student leaves art school and starts his career as a producing artist, his utter contempt for those moss-backed old doddards, the Old Masters, is complete and vocal. After ten years of the heat of the struggle, he stands silent before the Old Masters and removes his hat.”",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1947, Marcus Cheke, chapter XXVII, in Carlota Joaquina, Queen of Portugal, Freeport, N.Y.: Books for Libraries Press, published 1969, →ISBN, page 190:",
          "text": "Secondly, the members of the Oporto Junta were no better than inept doddards, none of whom possessed any personal prestige.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1955, W[ieder] David Sievers, Freud on Broadway: A History of Psychoanalysis and the American Drama, New York, N.Y.: Cooper Square Publishers, Inc., published 1970, →ISBN, page 57:",
          "text": "The doctor is interested only in getting the three old doddards out of their ruts, and that is accomplished not by Freud but by cops and robbers, romance, and sentimental complications out of Scribe and Pinero.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1955, Van Wyck Brooks, The Confident Years: 1885-1915 (Everyman’s Library), New York, N.Y.: E. P. Dutton and Company, Inc.; London: J. M. Dent and Sons, Limited, →LCCN, page 511:",
          "text": "Pound challenged one poet to a duel because he was “stupid,” as he attacked the “elderly muttonheads” and the Victorian “doddards” much in the manner of Mencken, his friend, at home.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1961, “Thomas R. Coward”, in Gerald Gross, editor, Publishers on Publishing, London: Secker & Warburg, published 1962, page 148:",
          "text": "Publishers, he has been told, are literary brigands, lying in wait for talented but defenseless authors, ready to rob them of their ideas. Those who aren’t brigands are doddards who have no real taste or appreciation and don’t know a good thing then they see it and unless you know someone who knows someone who knows the publisher it is impossible even to get a reading of your manuscript.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1968, Jon Horn, Bondage Trash, New York, N.Y.: The Olympia Book Society, page 79:",
          "text": "So it is not surprising that her joint was raided while she was revealed in an attitude most indicative of her general attitude (“action fotos” were taken by the go-getter chief of local police, who organized the raid), as she was, like a real trouper, trying indefatigably to ascertain the precise wishes of a party of old roués and impotent old doddards . . . then she was caught and she swore like a real trooper.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1969 July, Norman Spinrad, “The Last Hurrah of the Golden Horde”, in New Worlds, number 192, London: New Worlds Publishing, page 26, column 1:",
          "text": "Flaccid adrenals urged near-moribund hearts to beat faster. They flayed their ponies with the shafts of their spears. Drool flecked the lips of doddards and ponies alike. Their backbrains smelled blood and fire in the air.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1972, Edward M. Scott, “Overview”, in The Adolescent Gap: Research Findings on Drug Using and Non-Drug Using Teens, Springfield, Ill.: Charles C Thomas, →ISBN, pages 3–4:",
          "text": "Furthermore, reaction and tension between adults and the younger folk is nothing new. In Faust, a student rants, / While half the world beneath our yoke is brought. What have you doddards done? Nothing thought, dreamed, and considered drafting plan on plan!",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1972, John Garry Clifford, The Citizen Soldiers: The Plattsburg Training Camp Movement, 1913–1920, Lexington, Ky.: The University Press of Kentucky, →ISBN, page 272:",
          "text": "Wood’s comment, when he first learned of the March plan, is interesting. “We have a lot of doddards toddling into the military situation now. The General Staff which is such only in name is quoted in last night’s paper as being opposed to universal service and training and recommending a standing army of 500,000 men. These are on a par with the group of microcephaloids, who twice sent me when I was Chief of Staff, a unanimous recommendation from the War College in favor of a bounty system as against universal service.” Wood to Theodore Roosevelt, December 12, 1918, Wood MSS.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1977, Patricia Gallagher, Mystic Rose, New York, N.Y.: Avon, →ISBN, page 125:",
          "text": "“I’ll tell you the trouble. Our army is commanded by doddards left over from the Revolution, and the spirit of ’76 is not only dead but decayed. Military tactics change like everything else, and old men lose their vigor and perception and incentive. Worse still, their courage.”",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1978, Phyllis Hastings, The Feast of the Peacock, London: Corgi Books, Transworld, published 1980, →ISBN, page 148:",
          "text": "He would have no choice, it seemed, but to saunter around the house or join the other doddards who with the aid of walking-sticks tottered along the length of Cheyne Walk.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1980, “Art Notes”, in Harriet Zinnes, editor, Ezra Pound and the Visual Arts, New York, N.Y.: New Directions Publishing, →ISBN, page 109:",
          "text": "The statement that influenza rages in England does not imply that the disease is not rampant elsewhere. The Mercure de France for March 16 brings evidence that Paris is as much plagued by doddards as we are.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1984, Elizabeth Hewitt, Captain Black, New York, N.Y.: Signet, New American Library, →ISBN, page 57:",
          "text": "Penny whist, the game of shabby genteel dowagers and doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1987, Vivian Elliot, editor, Dear Mr Shaw: Selections from Bernard Shaw’s Postbag, London: Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN, page 309:",
          "text": "There are men of all ages and all types, from wild-eyed adolescents to crinkled doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2000, Thomas Harlan, The Gate of Fire (The Oath of Empire; 2), New York, N.Y.: w; Tor Books, →ISBN, page 475:",
          "text": "Too, they were men like him, younger and more vigorous than the doddards who served on Heraclius’ staff.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2004, Sylvia Andrew, A Very Unusual Governess, Richmond: Mills & Boon, →ISBN, page 72:",
          "text": "He was starting to lose patience with the old doddards at the Foreign Office, too, and beginning to think he was wasting his time on them.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2006, E. E. Knight [pseudonym; Eric Frisch], Dragon Avenger (Age of Fire; 2), New York, N.Y.: Roc, →ISBN, page 164:",
          "text": "“That’s for the Directory. All sound and no presence. Those doddards couldn’t muster an Imperial Host if Hypat itself had barbarians climbing the First Walls.”",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2008, Robert Dessaix, Arabesques: A Tale of Double Lives, Syndey, N.S.W.: Picador, published 2009, →ISBN, page 261:",
          "text": "All over Western Europe, wherever the School’s influence was felt, men and women nonetheless continued to turn into puckered, rheumy old doddards, just as they’d always done, sinking at an alarmingly early age into smelly decrepitude before toppling gnarled and half-blind into their graves, often with a hefty push from the younger members of their families.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2010, Robert Scholes, Clifford Wulfman, Modernism in the Magazines: An Introduction, New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 315:",
          "text": "The creative faculty may, and often does, outlast the critical. On the whole, about all an old critic can do, if he is to stay in the ring, is to use himself and his position as a megaphone for some younger man’s ideas, a course where his conceit usually prevents and forestals him. A few doddards should, of course, be preserved, to run wode when the wind blows; to act as a sort of barometer for the energy of new work.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2012, E. B. Boatner, M-o-t-h-e-r Spells Murder, Bloomington, Ind.: iUniverse, →ISBN, page 20:",
          "text": "What I’m trying to say is that she could be delightful when she wanted to be. Here, she had no reason to extend herself for what she called ‘a bunch of old doddards.’",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2018, Neil Foster MacPhail, Beowulf and Other Tales, [Morrisville, N.C.]: [Lulu.com], →ISBN, page 241:",
          "text": "Male characters showing up as young heroes-in-the-making or sage old doddards, and female characters being maidens, matrons or crones?",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2018, Zygmunt Krasiński, translated by Charles S. Kraszewski, Dramatic Works, London: Glagoslav Publications, →ISBN:",
          "text": "I shall replenish it with Roman blood. / Who here has sworn, and then failed to keep his oath? Simeon of Corinth. Who has cringed unto the dust and let fall the sword from his hand? You, brethren. And at this moment, in the city, nothing more is needed for Caesar and the city’s gods to perish than the resurrection of the saints. Ha! Leave the old doddards among the graves! With me, now!",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2023, Brent Weeks, “The Time and Place for Honor”, in Night Angel Nemesis (The Kylar Chronicles), New York, N.Y.: Orbit, →ISBN:",
          "text": "These are not imperial soldiers. These are ship guards, trained in directing doddards to the latrines and dealing with drunk noblemen, not killing.",
          "type": "quote"
        }
      ],
      "glosses": [
        "A frail old man."
      ],
      "id": "en-doddard-en-noun-~RolYziz",
      "links": [
        [
          "frail",
          "frail"
        ],
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          "old",
          "old"
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          "man",
          "man"
        ]
      ],
      "related": [
        {
          "word": "dotard"
        }
      ]
    }
  ],
  "wikipedia": [
    "Scottish National Dictionary"
  ],
  "word": "doddard"
}

{
  "etymology_number": 1,
  "etymology_templates": [
    {
      "args": {
        "1": "en",
        "2": "dodder<t:to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age>",
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      },
      "expansion": "dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard",
      "name": "suffix"
    }
  ],
  "etymology_text": "Possibly from dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard. The Scottish National Dictionary, a Scots dictionary, defining doddard as “A foolish old man, a dotard”, and providing an 1823 quotation, gives the etymology as either a variant of dotard, comparing Early Modern English dodart, or perhaps related to doddered, with spelling influenced by dotard.",
  "forms": [
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  "lang_code": "en",
  "pos": "noun",
  "senses": [
    {
      "categories": [],
      "examples": [
        {
          "ref": "1693, Aulus Persius Flaccus, John Dryden, transl., “[The Satires of Aulus Persius Flaccus.] The Fifth Satyr”, in The Satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English Verse. […] Together with the Satires of Aulus Persius Flaccus. […], London: Printed for Jacob Tonson […], →OCLC, page 63, lines 77–80:",
          "text": "[…] / Another ſhakes the Bed; diſſolving there, / Till knots upon his Gouty Joints appear, / And Chalk is in his crippled Fingers found; / Rots like a Doddard Oke, and piecemeal falls to the ground.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1955, Ivor Brown, Chosen Words, London: Jonathan Cape, […], page 179:",
          "text": "Trees when lopped were dodded and became doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1985, Nicholas Smart, John Andrews, Birds and Broadleaves Handbook: A Guide to Further the Conservation of Birds in Broadleaved Woodland, Sandy, Beds: Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, →ISBN, page 114:",
          "text": "All the old pollards on the site should be maintained and any old, ill-formed or inaccessible individuals left to over-maturity. At present there is a dearth of older dying and decaying material. In areas being restocked, planting up close to these old doddards and pollards should be avoided.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1987, Phil Colebourn, Bob Gibbons, Britain’s Natural Heritage: Reading Our Countryside’s Past, London: Book Club Associates, →OCLC, page 96, column 3:",
          "text": "A famous survey of 1608 revealed 123,927 trees (197,405 loads) fit for the Navy and another 118,072 loads of ‘doddards’ (ancient decayed trees). The high proportion of ‘doddards’ shows the lack of replacement, caused by the grazing. From the outbreak of the Civil War many of these trees were being rapidly felled, whole woods being stripped of their oak. Even doddards were cut wholesale to provide ‘knees’ and ‘crooks’ used in ship frames.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2001, Colin R. Tubbs, The New Forest: History, Ecology & Conservation, 2nd edition, Lyndhurst, Hants.: New Forest Ninth Centenary Trust, →ISBN, page 199:",
          "text": "From 1612, oak was felled in the forest for the navy yards at Deptford and Woolwich and from 1632 also for Portsmouth and other local yards. Felling for the navy continued for the remainder of the century and, periodically, during the 18th and into the 19th century. Besides oak, small amounts of beech and large numbers of ‘doddards’ (probably moribund oak, that provided big limbs, crooks and knees) were also taken.",
          "type": "quote"
        }
      ],
      "glosses": [
        "A moribund or decayed tree."
      ],
      "id": "en-doddard-en-noun-9-w0P99-",
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          "tree"
        ]
      ],
      "raw_glosses": [
        "(rare) A moribund or decayed tree."
      ],
      "tags": [
        "rare"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "wikipedia": [
    "Scottish National Dictionary"
  ],
  "word": "doddard"
}
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    "English terms suffixed with -ard",
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  "etymology_number": 1,
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      "args": {
        "1": "en",
        "2": "dodder<t:to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age>",
        "3": "ard"
      },
      "expansion": "dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard",
      "name": "suffix"
    }
  ],
  "etymology_text": "Possibly from dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard. The Scottish National Dictionary, a Scots dictionary, defining doddard as “A foolish old man, a dotard”, and providing an 1823 quotation, gives the etymology as either a variant of dotard, comparing Early Modern English dodart, or perhaps related to doddered, with spelling influenced by dotard.",
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  "pos": "noun",
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  "senses": [
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      "categories": [
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      ],
      "examples": [
        {
          "ref": "1934, Sigurd Christiansen, translated by Isaac Anderson, “The Storm”, in Chaff Before the Wind, New York, N.Y.: Liveright Publishing Corporation, page 266:",
          "text": "You are too old and too exacting to be satisfied with a blank page. You would certainly prefer one upon which life has written something. It is more interesting. Young girls are only for youths and for certain brainless doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1937 March 25, B. C. Hagglund, “[Views and Reviews] The Collective Instinct”, in Tri-County Forum, volume V, number 51, Thief River Falls, Minn., page two, column 5:",
          "text": "President Roosevelt and the former King Edward collect stamps, along with thousands of others, ranging from six-year-olds to ninety-seven year old^([sic]) doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1939, Jean Sarment, translated by Frances Keene and Adrienne Foulke, “Rude Awakening”, in Eisig Silberschlag, Frederick Lehner, editors, Poet Lore: A Quarterly of World Literature, volume XLV, numbers 3–4, Boston, Mass., page 257:",
          "text": "Nelly. There are some people who enjoy Sunday. / Renny. Yes . . . the old doddards who listen to military bands in the public park.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1942 October 1, The Art Digest, volume XVII, number 1, New York, N.Y.: The Art Digest, Inc., page 6, column 3:",
          "text": "Comments John Garth, critic of the San Francisco Argonaut: “When the young student leaves art school and starts his career as a producing artist, his utter contempt for those moss-backed old doddards, the Old Masters, is complete and vocal. After ten years of the heat of the struggle, he stands silent before the Old Masters and removes his hat.”",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1947, Marcus Cheke, chapter XXVII, in Carlota Joaquina, Queen of Portugal, Freeport, N.Y.: Books for Libraries Press, published 1969, →ISBN, page 190:",
          "text": "Secondly, the members of the Oporto Junta were no better than inept doddards, none of whom possessed any personal prestige.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1955, W[ieder] David Sievers, Freud on Broadway: A History of Psychoanalysis and the American Drama, New York, N.Y.: Cooper Square Publishers, Inc., published 1970, →ISBN, page 57:",
          "text": "The doctor is interested only in getting the three old doddards out of their ruts, and that is accomplished not by Freud but by cops and robbers, romance, and sentimental complications out of Scribe and Pinero.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1955, Van Wyck Brooks, The Confident Years: 1885-1915 (Everyman’s Library), New York, N.Y.: E. P. Dutton and Company, Inc.; London: J. M. Dent and Sons, Limited, →LCCN, page 511:",
          "text": "Pound challenged one poet to a duel because he was “stupid,” as he attacked the “elderly muttonheads” and the Victorian “doddards” much in the manner of Mencken, his friend, at home.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1961, “Thomas R. Coward”, in Gerald Gross, editor, Publishers on Publishing, London: Secker & Warburg, published 1962, page 148:",
          "text": "Publishers, he has been told, are literary brigands, lying in wait for talented but defenseless authors, ready to rob them of their ideas. Those who aren’t brigands are doddards who have no real taste or appreciation and don’t know a good thing then they see it and unless you know someone who knows someone who knows the publisher it is impossible even to get a reading of your manuscript.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1968, Jon Horn, Bondage Trash, New York, N.Y.: The Olympia Book Society, page 79:",
          "text": "So it is not surprising that her joint was raided while she was revealed in an attitude most indicative of her general attitude (“action fotos” were taken by the go-getter chief of local police, who organized the raid), as she was, like a real trouper, trying indefatigably to ascertain the precise wishes of a party of old roués and impotent old doddards . . . then she was caught and she swore like a real trooper.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1969 July, Norman Spinrad, “The Last Hurrah of the Golden Horde”, in New Worlds, number 192, London: New Worlds Publishing, page 26, column 1:",
          "text": "Flaccid adrenals urged near-moribund hearts to beat faster. They flayed their ponies with the shafts of their spears. Drool flecked the lips of doddards and ponies alike. Their backbrains smelled blood and fire in the air.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1972, Edward M. Scott, “Overview”, in The Adolescent Gap: Research Findings on Drug Using and Non-Drug Using Teens, Springfield, Ill.: Charles C Thomas, →ISBN, pages 3–4:",
          "text": "Furthermore, reaction and tension between adults and the younger folk is nothing new. In Faust, a student rants, / While half the world beneath our yoke is brought. What have you doddards done? Nothing thought, dreamed, and considered drafting plan on plan!",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1972, John Garry Clifford, The Citizen Soldiers: The Plattsburg Training Camp Movement, 1913–1920, Lexington, Ky.: The University Press of Kentucky, →ISBN, page 272:",
          "text": "Wood’s comment, when he first learned of the March plan, is interesting. “We have a lot of doddards toddling into the military situation now. The General Staff which is such only in name is quoted in last night’s paper as being opposed to universal service and training and recommending a standing army of 500,000 men. These are on a par with the group of microcephaloids, who twice sent me when I was Chief of Staff, a unanimous recommendation from the War College in favor of a bounty system as against universal service.” Wood to Theodore Roosevelt, December 12, 1918, Wood MSS.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1977, Patricia Gallagher, Mystic Rose, New York, N.Y.: Avon, →ISBN, page 125:",
          "text": "“I’ll tell you the trouble. Our army is commanded by doddards left over from the Revolution, and the spirit of ’76 is not only dead but decayed. Military tactics change like everything else, and old men lose their vigor and perception and incentive. Worse still, their courage.”",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1978, Phyllis Hastings, The Feast of the Peacock, London: Corgi Books, Transworld, published 1980, →ISBN, page 148:",
          "text": "He would have no choice, it seemed, but to saunter around the house or join the other doddards who with the aid of walking-sticks tottered along the length of Cheyne Walk.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1980, “Art Notes”, in Harriet Zinnes, editor, Ezra Pound and the Visual Arts, New York, N.Y.: New Directions Publishing, →ISBN, page 109:",
          "text": "The statement that influenza rages in England does not imply that the disease is not rampant elsewhere. The Mercure de France for March 16 brings evidence that Paris is as much plagued by doddards as we are.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1984, Elizabeth Hewitt, Captain Black, New York, N.Y.: Signet, New American Library, →ISBN, page 57:",
          "text": "Penny whist, the game of shabby genteel dowagers and doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1987, Vivian Elliot, editor, Dear Mr Shaw: Selections from Bernard Shaw’s Postbag, London: Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN, page 309:",
          "text": "There are men of all ages and all types, from wild-eyed adolescents to crinkled doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2000, Thomas Harlan, The Gate of Fire (The Oath of Empire; 2), New York, N.Y.: w; Tor Books, →ISBN, page 475:",
          "text": "Too, they were men like him, younger and more vigorous than the doddards who served on Heraclius’ staff.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2004, Sylvia Andrew, A Very Unusual Governess, Richmond: Mills & Boon, →ISBN, page 72:",
          "text": "He was starting to lose patience with the old doddards at the Foreign Office, too, and beginning to think he was wasting his time on them.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2006, E. E. Knight [pseudonym; Eric Frisch], Dragon Avenger (Age of Fire; 2), New York, N.Y.: Roc, →ISBN, page 164:",
          "text": "“That’s for the Directory. All sound and no presence. Those doddards couldn’t muster an Imperial Host if Hypat itself had barbarians climbing the First Walls.”",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2008, Robert Dessaix, Arabesques: A Tale of Double Lives, Syndey, N.S.W.: Picador, published 2009, →ISBN, page 261:",
          "text": "All over Western Europe, wherever the School’s influence was felt, men and women nonetheless continued to turn into puckered, rheumy old doddards, just as they’d always done, sinking at an alarmingly early age into smelly decrepitude before toppling gnarled and half-blind into their graves, often with a hefty push from the younger members of their families.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2010, Robert Scholes, Clifford Wulfman, Modernism in the Magazines: An Introduction, New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 315:",
          "text": "The creative faculty may, and often does, outlast the critical. On the whole, about all an old critic can do, if he is to stay in the ring, is to use himself and his position as a megaphone for some younger man’s ideas, a course where his conceit usually prevents and forestals him. A few doddards should, of course, be preserved, to run wode when the wind blows; to act as a sort of barometer for the energy of new work.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2012, E. B. Boatner, M-o-t-h-e-r Spells Murder, Bloomington, Ind.: iUniverse, →ISBN, page 20:",
          "text": "What I’m trying to say is that she could be delightful when she wanted to be. Here, she had no reason to extend herself for what she called ‘a bunch of old doddards.’",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2018, Neil Foster MacPhail, Beowulf and Other Tales, [Morrisville, N.C.]: [Lulu.com], →ISBN, page 241:",
          "text": "Male characters showing up as young heroes-in-the-making or sage old doddards, and female characters being maidens, matrons or crones?",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2018, Zygmunt Krasiński, translated by Charles S. Kraszewski, Dramatic Works, London: Glagoslav Publications, →ISBN:",
          "text": "I shall replenish it with Roman blood. / Who here has sworn, and then failed to keep his oath? Simeon of Corinth. Who has cringed unto the dust and let fall the sword from his hand? You, brethren. And at this moment, in the city, nothing more is needed for Caesar and the city’s gods to perish than the resurrection of the saints. Ha! Leave the old doddards among the graves! With me, now!",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2023, Brent Weeks, “The Time and Place for Honor”, in Night Angel Nemesis (The Kylar Chronicles), New York, N.Y.: Orbit, →ISBN:",
          "text": "These are not imperial soldiers. These are ship guards, trained in directing doddards to the latrines and dealing with drunk noblemen, not killing.",
          "type": "quote"
        }
      ],
      "glosses": [
        "A frail old man."
      ],
      "links": [
        [
          "frail",
          "frail"
        ],
        [
          "old",
          "old"
        ],
        [
          "man",
          "man"
        ]
      ]
    }
  ],
  "wikipedia": [
    "Scottish National Dictionary"
  ],
  "word": "doddard"
}

{
  "categories": [
    "English countable nouns",
    "English entries with incorrect language header",
    "English lemmas",
    "English nouns",
    "English terms suffixed with -ard",
    "Pages with 1 entry",
    "Pages with entries"
  ],
  "etymology_number": 1,
  "etymology_templates": [
    {
      "args": {
        "1": "en",
        "2": "dodder<t:to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age>",
        "3": "ard"
      },
      "expansion": "dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard",
      "name": "suffix"
    }
  ],
  "etymology_text": "Possibly from dodder (“to shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age”) + -ard. The Scottish National Dictionary, a Scots dictionary, defining doddard as “A foolish old man, a dotard”, and providing an 1823 quotation, gives the etymology as either a variant of dotard, comparing Early Modern English dodart, or perhaps related to doddered, with spelling influenced by dotard.",
  "forms": [
    {
      "form": "doddards",
      "tags": [
        "plural"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "head_templates": [
    {
      "args": {},
      "expansion": "doddard (plural doddards)",
      "name": "en-noun"
    }
  ],
  "lang": "English",
  "lang_code": "en",
  "pos": "noun",
  "senses": [
    {
      "categories": [
        "English terms with quotations",
        "English terms with rare senses"
      ],
      "examples": [
        {
          "ref": "1693, Aulus Persius Flaccus, John Dryden, transl., “[The Satires of Aulus Persius Flaccus.] The Fifth Satyr”, in The Satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis. Translated into English Verse. […] Together with the Satires of Aulus Persius Flaccus. […], London: Printed for Jacob Tonson […], →OCLC, page 63, lines 77–80:",
          "text": "[…] / Another ſhakes the Bed; diſſolving there, / Till knots upon his Gouty Joints appear, / And Chalk is in his crippled Fingers found; / Rots like a Doddard Oke, and piecemeal falls to the ground.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1955, Ivor Brown, Chosen Words, London: Jonathan Cape, […], page 179:",
          "text": "Trees when lopped were dodded and became doddards.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1985, Nicholas Smart, John Andrews, Birds and Broadleaves Handbook: A Guide to Further the Conservation of Birds in Broadleaved Woodland, Sandy, Beds: Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, →ISBN, page 114:",
          "text": "All the old pollards on the site should be maintained and any old, ill-formed or inaccessible individuals left to over-maturity. At present there is a dearth of older dying and decaying material. In areas being restocked, planting up close to these old doddards and pollards should be avoided.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1987, Phil Colebourn, Bob Gibbons, Britain’s Natural Heritage: Reading Our Countryside’s Past, London: Book Club Associates, →OCLC, page 96, column 3:",
          "text": "A famous survey of 1608 revealed 123,927 trees (197,405 loads) fit for the Navy and another 118,072 loads of ‘doddards’ (ancient decayed trees). The high proportion of ‘doddards’ shows the lack of replacement, caused by the grazing. From the outbreak of the Civil War many of these trees were being rapidly felled, whole woods being stripped of their oak. Even doddards were cut wholesale to provide ‘knees’ and ‘crooks’ used in ship frames.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2001, Colin R. Tubbs, The New Forest: History, Ecology & Conservation, 2nd edition, Lyndhurst, Hants.: New Forest Ninth Centenary Trust, →ISBN, page 199:",
          "text": "From 1612, oak was felled in the forest for the navy yards at Deptford and Woolwich and from 1632 also for Portsmouth and other local yards. Felling for the navy continued for the remainder of the century and, periodically, during the 18th and into the 19th century. Besides oak, small amounts of beech and large numbers of ‘doddards’ (probably moribund oak, that provided big limbs, crooks and knees) were also taken.",
          "type": "quote"
        }
      ],
      "glosses": [
        "A moribund or decayed tree."
      ],
      "links": [
        [
          "moribund",
          "moribund"
        ],
        [
          "decayed",
          "decayed"
        ],
        [
          "tree",
          "tree"
        ]
      ],
      "raw_glosses": [
        "(rare) A moribund or decayed tree."
      ],
      "tags": [
        "rare"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "wikipedia": [
    "Scottish National Dictionary"
  ],
  "word": "doddard"
}

Download raw JSONL data for doddard meaning in English (15.8kB)


This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-12-21 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-12-04 using wiktextract (d8cb2f3 and 4e554ae). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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