rod
oxford
views updated May 29 2018rod / räd/ •
n. 1. a thin straight bar, esp. of wood or metal. ∎ a wand or staff as a symbol of office, authority, or power. ∎ a slender straight stick or shoot growing on or cut from a tree or bush. ∎ a stick used for caning or flogging. ∎ (the rod) the use of such a stick as punishment: if you'd been my daughter, you'd have felt the rod. ∎ vulgar slang a penis.2. a fishing rod.3. hist. a linear measure, esp. for land, equal to 51/2 yards (approx. 5.029 m). ∎ (also square rod) a square measure, esp. for land, equal to 160th of an acre or 301/4 square yards (approx. 25.29 sq m).4. inf. a pistol or revolver.5. Anat. a light-sensitive cell of one of the two types present in large numbers in the retina of the eye, responsible mainly for monochrome vision in poor light. Compare with cone (sense 3).PHRASES: ride the rods steal rides on freight trains: hundreds of young men took to riding the rods in search of employment.rule someone or something with a rod of iron control or govern someone or something very strictly or harshly.DERIVATIVES: rod·less adj.rod·let / -lət/ n.rod·like / -ˌlīk/ adj.
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
rod
oxford
views updated May 18 2018rod In the
retina of the vertebrate eye, the more common of the two types of light receptor (compare
CONE), which is sensitive to very low levels of stimulation. Many rods (in humans about 150) are connected by bipolar cells to a single ganglion cell whose axon is a nerve fibre in the optic tract; stimuli to the rods are summated (i.e. added together) to produce a total stimulus that must exceed a threshold before an impulse is discharged by the ganglion cell. Because the contribution of many individual rods is summated to produce a single impulse the resulting perceived image is not clearly defined. There are estimated to be about 65 × 10
6 rods in a single human retina and the eyes of some animals (e.g. opossums) have retinas containing only rods and no cones.
A Dictionary of Zoology MICHAEL ALLABY
rod
oxford
views updated Jun 08 2018rod A type of light-sensitive receptor cell present in the
retinas of vertebrates. Rods contain the pigment
rhodopsin and are essential for vision in dim light. They are not evenly distributed on the retina, being absent in the
fovea and occupying all of the retinal margin. See also
dark adaptation. Compare
cone.
A Dictionary of Biology
rod
oxford
views updated May 21 2018rod (rod) n. one of the two types of light-sensitive cells in the retina of the eye (compare
cone). Rods are necessary for seeing in dim light. They contain the pigment rhodopsin, which is bleached in the light and regenerated in the dark. When all the pigment is bleached (i.e. in bright light) the rods no longer function. See also
dark adaptation,
light adaptation.
A Dictionary of Nursing
rod
oxford
views updated Jun 11 2018rod a thin straight bar, especially of wood or metal. In former British usage, a
rod was a unit of measurement, the equivalent of a
perch.
make a rod for one's own back do something likely to cause difficulties for oneself later.
rule with a rod of iron control or govern very strictly or harshly.
spare the rod and spoil the child if children are not physically punished when they do wrong their personal development will suffer. It is proverbial, from the early 11th century, and often with biblical allusion to Proverbs 13:24.
The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable ELIZABETH KNOWLES
rod
oxford
views updated May 23 2018rod straight slender wand XII; stick for measuring with; measure of length and of area XV. Late OE.
rodd, synon. with Continental forms cited S.V.
ROOD, but formally distinct; prob. rel. to ON.
rudda club.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD