TREAD


Meaning of TREAD in English

I. ˈtred verb

( trod ˈträd ; also treaded ; trodden ˈträd ə n ; or trod also tread ; treading ; treads )

Etymology: Middle English treden, from Old English tredan; akin to Old High German tretan to step, tread, Old Norse trotha, Gothic trudan to tread, and perhaps to Greek dramein to run, Old English treppan to step — more at trap

transitive verb

1.

a. : to step or walk on : move about over especially by walking

went on to tread the great smooth dome of the … summit — G.W.Murray

the south pole, never before trodden by the foot of human beings — A.L.Kroeber

b. : to step or walk along : follow , pursue

the avenue … she had trodden — Kathleen Freeman

the safest road to tread — H.J.Laski

has trod the thin line between abstraction and strict realism — R.M.Coates

2.

a.

(1) : to step firmly or walk with pressure on (as a person) in an effort to crush, beat down, injure or destroy — usually used in phrases

tread to dirt the rest of mankind — John Milton

being trod to death like a frog — Jonathan Swift

they wee trodden under foot

(2) : to thresh (as grain) usually by trampling on a threshing floor — sometimes used with out

(3) : to press out the juice of (grapes) by trampling usually in a vat

(4) : to wash (as clothes) by trampling usually in a washtub

b. : to subdue or repress as if by trampling : conquer by crushing or oppressing : treat with contemptuous cruelty — usually used with an adv.

the masses were a good deal trodden down — F.E.Gretton

3. : to copulate with (a hen) : cover — used of a male bird

4. : to form or make by the action of the feet in walking : beat

countless footsteps have trodden a path to his door

— sometimes used with out

herds … trod out great lanes of habitual migration — C.D.Forde

5. : to press down by walking or stamping upon

tread soil

6. : to execute by stepping or dancing

tread a measure

7. : to get, bring, or put into or out of some condition by walking or trampling — used with an adv.

tread a grass fire out

slippers trodden down at the heel

8. : to step upon (as a treadle or pedal) in order to impart motion : press downward with the foot or feet (as in treadling or pedaling)

this wheel … was trodden by a donkey — John Higgs

9. : to brace (an archer's bow) by pressing the foot against the center

10. : to apply the tread to (an automotive tire)

intransitive verb

1.

a. : to move on foot : set down the feet in walking : pace , step , walk

they trod cautiously, drawing closer and closer — O.E.Rölvaag

where … the foot of a white man had rarely trod — Leslie Gardiner

b. : to proceed as if by walking

in 18th century English history the author treads with his accustomed ease and mastery — Times Literary Supplement

2. : to step or set foot on something

fools rush in where angels fear to tread — Alexander Pope

as

a. : to set foot so as to press, crush, or injure : trample — used with on or upon

tread upon the grapes

b. : to put one's foot down upon something especially in an accidental or unintentional manner

c. : to press firmly on something with a foot

resolutely trod on the accelerator — James Lord

3. : copulate — usually used of a male bird

4. chiefly dialect : to yield to treading or being trodden upon : become affected by tramping or trampling — used especially of soil

- tread on one's toes

- tread the boards

- tread the steps of

- tread water

II. noun

( -s )

Usage: often attributive

Etymology: Middle English trede, tred, from treden, v.

1. : a mark (as a footprint, a rut of a wheel, or the imprint of a tire) made by or as if by treading

2.

a.

(1) : the action of treading

that incessant tread of feet wearing the rough stones smooth — Charles Dickens

(2) : an act or an instance of treading : step

b. : manner of stepping : style of walking

walked with a springy, catlike tread — Tom Marvel

the careful tread of one conscious of his alcoholic load — Thomas Hardy

c. : the sound of treading

I hear the tread of hateful steps — John Milton

the corner echoed … with the tread of feet — Charles Dickens

3. Scotland

a. : habitual course or manner of action : custom , practice

b. : customary occupation : regular business : employment , labor , trade

4.

a. archaic : the action of a male bird in copulation

b. : chalaza 1

5. : an injury of one foot by another foot of a horse (as in overreaching)

6.

a.

(1) : the part of the bottom surface of a shoe including or excluding the heel that touches level ground

(2) : the part of a wheel that bears on a road or rail ; especially : the thickened face of an automobile tire

(3) : caterpillar tread

b. : the design (as a raised or inset pattern of corrugations) on a tread

a recognizable hobnail tread — Frank Cameron

7. : the distance in inches between the central points of contact with the ground of the two front wheels or the two rear wheels of a vehicle — compare wheelbase

8.

a. : the upper horizontal part of a step (as in a stair) on which the foot is placed

b. : the width of such a part of a step : the horizontal distance between consecutive risers

a stair with a 12-inch tread

c. : the flat or gently sloping surface of one of a series of steplike geologic landforms

the tread of a terrace

9. : the length of the keel of a ship

10. : the part of a rail on which the wheels of a railroad car bear

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.