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| a fool or simpleton; ninny. |
| an extraordinary or unusual thing, person, or event; an exceptional example or instance. |
| tread (trɛd) | |
| —vb (when intr, | |
| 1. | to walk or trample in, on, over, or across (something) |
| 2. | to crush or squash by or as if by treading: to tread grapes; to tread on a spider |
| 3. | to subdue or repress, as by doing injury (to): to tread on one's inferiors |
| 4. | (tr) to do by walking or dancing: to tread a measure |
| 5. | (tr) (of a male bird) to copulate with (a female bird) |
| 6. | tread lightly to proceed with delicacy or tact |
| 7. | tread on someone's toes to offend or insult someone, esp by infringing on his sphere of action, etc |
| 8. | tread water to stay afloat in an upright position by moving the legs in a walking motion |
| —n | |
| 9. | a manner or style of walking, dancing, etc: a light tread |
| 10. | the act of treading |
| 11. | the top surface of a step in a staircase |
| 12. | the outer part of a tyre or wheel that makes contact with the road, esp the grooved surface of a pneumatic tyre |
| 13. | the part of a rail that wheels touch |
| 14. | the part of a shoe that is generally in contact with the ground |
| 15. | vet science an injury to a horse's foot caused by the opposite foot, or the foot of another horse |
| 16. | a rare word for footprint |
| [Old English tredan; related to Old Norse trotha , Old High German tretan, Swedish träda] | |
| 'treader | |
| —n | |