excessive dose (of pills or alcohol); attempt at suicide by the ingestion of an excess of pills (Slang)
take excessive dose (of pills or alcohol); attempt suicide by ingesting an excess of pills (Slang)
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Od Definition from Language, Idioms & Slang Dictionaries & Glossaries
(n.)
An alleged force or natural power, supposed, by Reichenbach and others, to produce the phenomena of mesmerism, and to be developed by various agencies, as by magnets, heat, light, chemical or vital action, etc.; -- called also odyle or the odylic force.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter. AboutAn alleged force or natural power, supposed, by Reichenbach and others, to produce the phenomena of mesmerism, and to be developed by various agencies, as by magnets, heat, light, chemical or vital action, etc.; -- called also odyle or the odylic force.
od
\od\ (?), n. [g., fr. gr. &?; passage.] (physics) an alleged force or natural power, supposed, by reichenbach and others, to produce the phenomena of mesmerism, and to be developed by various agencies, as by magnets, heat, light, chemical or vital action, etc.; -- called also odyle or the odylic force. [archaic] that od force of german reichenbach which still, from female finger tips, burnt blue. browning.
od
n
1. a doctor's degree in optometry [syn: doctor of optometry, od]
2. the right eye [syn: oculus dexter, od]
od
optical disk
Overdose - on drugs The man was died because of a drug OD.
Od = n. what is clear; snow, a notable, excellent; odd, conj. it
1. overdose, especially of an injected addictive drug, as heroin; 2. (police, etc.) person who has overdosed; 3. surfeit; oversupply: “a major chocolate OD”
1. give oneself a drug overdose; 2. (jocular) have or consume to excess; have a surfeit of: “I OD'd on ice-cream”; “OD'ing on sex”
Noun
1. a doctor's degree in optometry
(synonym) Doctor of Optometry
(hypernym) doctor's degree, doctorate
2. the right eye
(synonym) oculus dexter
(hypernym) eye, oculus, optic
Od Definition from Business & Finance Dictionaries & Glossaries
Outside diameter of pipe; CD and ID (inside diameter) are initials used in specifying pipe sizes, e.g., 4 1/2-inch OD, 8 5/8-inch 10.
Od Definition from Government Dictionaries & Glossaries
operational detachment; other detainee
Source: U.S. Department of Defense, Joint Doctrine Division. ( About )
Ordnance Data; Ordnance Directive; Operations Directive; Optical Digital Data Disk
Od Definition from Science & Technology Dictionaries & Glossaries
Optical Disc
Abbreviation for optical density.
For a given wavelength, an expression of the transmittance of an optical element. Note 1: Optical density is expressed by log10(1/T ) where T is transmittance. (188 ) Note 2: The higher the optical density, the lower the transmittance. Note 3: Optical density times 10 is equal to transmission loss expressed in decibels, e.g. , an optical density of 0.3 corresponds to a transmission loss of 3 dB.
Od Definition from Computer & Internet Dictionaries & Glossaries
(abbr.) Outdoors. Any spell that cannot be cast indoors, although once cast, it's effects may remain upon entering an indoor area.
Od Definition from Encyclopedia Dictionaries & Glossaries
OD or Od may refer to:
Non abbreviated meanings of OD
- The Odh or Od, a community in India and Pakistan and their language
- Od, a life force - see Odic force
- Od, a Nordic god - see Óðr
- Od, a replacement for "God" in some minced oaths
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In Norse mythology, Óðr (Old Norse for "mad, frantic, furious, vehement, eager", as a noun "mind, feeling" and also "song, poetry"; Orchard (1997) gives "the frenzied one") or Óð, sometimes angliziced as Odr or Od, is a figure associated with the major goddess Freyja. The Prose Edda and Heimskringla, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson, both describe Óðr as Freyja's husband and father of her daughter Hnoss. Heimskringla adds that the couple produced another daughter, Gersemi. A number of theories have been proposed about Óðr, generally that he is somehow a hypostasis of the deity Odin due to their similarities.
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Od Definition from Law Dictionaries & Glossaries
Synonymous with absorbance. Absorbance is the logarithm of the ratio of incident to transmitted radiant power through a sample.
Source: The President's DNA Initiative ( About )Od Definition from Sports Dictionaries & Glossaries
Od Definition from Entertainment & Music Dictionaries & Glossaries
Od Definition from Religion & Spirituality Dictionaries & Glossaries
Od; Odylic or Odic Force [od poss from Hebrew 'ud to surround, enclose as by a mist, emanation, or cloud] Names given by Baron Karl von Reichenbach, German industrialist and chemist, to a cosmic force or fluid which he believed he had discovered (1845). His extensive experimental investigations on the luminous emanations from the human body, from magnets, plants, and minerals, aroused much interest among students of animal magnetism. But his results depended upon the evidence of sensitives, often invalids and people in the somnambulic condition and, as is usual under such circumstances, do not coordinate well with results obtained by others. This class of phenomena cannot be considered as entirely objective, so much being dependent on the seer. He made too broad generalizations on too narrow a basis; he was, unconsciously to himself, working with effects originating largely on the astral plane and, in spite of its delusiveness, he did discover some facts which can be related to what theosophists call prana and the astral light; but he lacked the power and knowledge to coordinate them and thus to render his researches of practical use.
Od is also used, together with the Hebrew words ob ('ob ) and aour ('or ), by Eliphas Levi to denote aspects of the astral light. Ob is a well-known word for sorcery and necromancy, for a sorcerer or necromancer, as well as occasionally signifying an astral shade or spook. Aour, on the contrary, signifies light, brilliance, and hence revelation and the light of initiation.
Od is also used, together with the Hebrew words ob ('ob ) and aour ('or ), by Eliphas Levi to denote aspects of the astral light. Ob is a well-known word for sorcery and necromancy, for a sorcerer or necromancer, as well as occasionally signifying an astral shade or spook. Aour, on the contrary, signifies light, brilliance, and hence revelation and the light of initiation.
Od Definition from Medicine Dictionaries & Glossaries
(oculus dexter) Latin abbreviation for "right eye."
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