🇬🇧 en pl 🇵🇱

rod noun

  /ɹɑd/ , /ɹɒd/
  • A stick, pole, or bundle of switches or twigs (such as a birch), used for personal defense or to administer corporal punishment by whipping.
rózga, kij
  • A straight bar that unites moving parts of a machine, for holding parts together as a connecting rod or for transferring power as a driveshaft.
pręcik
  • An implement held vertically and viewed through an optical surveying instrument such as a transit, used to measure distance in land surveying and construction layout; an engineer's rod, surveyor's rod, surveying rod, leveling rod, ranging rod. The modern (US) engineer's or surveyor's rod commonly is eight or ten feet long and often designed to extend higher. In former times a surveyor's rod often was a single wooden pole or composed of multiple sectioned and socketed pieces, and besides serving as a sighting target was used to measure distance on the ground horizontally, hence for convenience was of one rod or pole in length, that is, 5+1⁄2 yards.
wędka, pałeczka, pręcik
  • (slang, vulgar) The penis.
drążek
  • (fishing) A long slender usually tapering pole used for angling; fishing rod.
pałeczka, pręcik
  • A straight, round stick, shaft, bar, cane, or staff.
  • A stick used to measure distance, by using its established length or task-specific temporary marks along its length, or by dint of specific graduated marks.
  • (archaic) A unit of length equal to 1 pole, a perch, 1⁄4 chain, 5+1⁄2 yards, 16+1⁄2 feet, or exactly 5.0292 meters (these being all equivalent).
  • (biology) Any of a number of long, slender microorganisms.
pręt

Rod properNoun

  • The god of the family, ancestors and fate in Slavic mythology.
Rod

🇵🇱 pl en 🇬🇧

rod noun

  /rɔt/
  • (chemia, chemiczny) pierwiastek chemiczny o symbolu Rh i liczbie atomowej 45;
rhodium

ród noun

  /rut/
  • duża, wielopokoleniowa rodzina
family, house

Rod

Rod
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