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ford
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
ford
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
ford a river (=cross a river on foot, in a vehicle, or on a horse, without using a bridge)
▪ The water was shallow enough for us to be able to ford the river.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
Fords and bridge sites often change little over the years and Watkins cites several examples of leys crossing rivers at fords.
▪ At any rate, Ramsay reached the Town ford relieved to find no one there.
▪ By dawn the creek was out of its banks and roaring over the concrete ford.
▪ Chariots can not move over obstacles or difficult terrain except to cross a river at a bridge or ford.
▪ Hiding and sleeping by day, they were watching a ford of the river by night.
▪ Once across the ford leave the track and walk through the fields by the burn side.
▪ So the hiding-places must be reasonably near a suitable ford of Teviot.
▪ The colours of the stripes stand ford courage and sacrifice, truth and peace and faith and chivalry.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ford

Ford \Ford\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Forded; p. pr. & vb. n. Fording.] To pass or cross, as a river or other water, by wading; to wade through.

His last section, which is no deep one, remains only to be forted.
--Milton.

Ford

Ford \Ford\ (f[=o]rd), n. [AS. ford; akin to G. furt, Icel. fj["o]r[eth]r bay, and to E. fare. [root]78. See Fare, v. i., and cf. Frith arm of the sea.]

  1. A place in a river, or other water, where it may be passed by man or beast on foot, by wading.

    He swam the Esk river where ford there was none.
    --Sir W. Scott.

  2. A stream; a current.

    With water of the ford Or of the clouds.
    --Spenser.

    Permit my ghost to pass the Styg?an ford.
    --Dryden.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
ford

"to cross a body of water by walking on the bottom," 1610s, from ford (n.). Related: Forded; fording.

ford

Old English ford "shallow place where water can be crossed," from Proto-Germanic *furduz (cognates: Old Frisian forda, Old High German furt, German Furt "ford"), from PIE *prtu- "a going, a passage" (cognates: Latin portus "harbor," originally "entrance, passage;" Old Welsh rit, Welsh rhyd "ford;" Old English faran "to go;" see port (n.1)). The line of automobiles (company founded 1903) is named for U.S. manufacturer Henry Ford (1863-1947).

Wiktionary
ford

n. 1 A location where a stream is shallow and the bottom has good footing, making it possible to cross from one side to the other with no bridge, by walking, riding, or driving through the water; a crossing. 2 A stream; a current. vb. To cross a stream using a ford.

WordNet
Gazetteer
Ford, KS -- U.S. city in Kansas
Population (2000): 314
Housing Units (2000): 121
Land area (2000): 0.419623 sq. miles (1.086819 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.419623 sq. miles (1.086819 sq. km)
FIPS code: 23725
Located within: Kansas (KS), FIPS 20
Location: 37.635977 N, 99.753013 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 67842
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Ford, KS
Ford
Ford -- U.S. County in Illinois
Population (2000): 14241
Housing Units (2000): 6060
Land area (2000): 485.899192 sq. miles (1258.473076 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.517324 sq. miles (1.339862 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 486.416516 sq. miles (1259.812938 sq. km)
Located within: Illinois (IL), FIPS 17
Location: 40.552455 N, 88.223413 W
Headwords:
Ford
Ford, IL
Ford County
Ford County, IL
Ford -- U.S. County in Kansas
Population (2000): 32458
Housing Units (2000): 11650
Land area (2000): 1098.498110 sq. miles (2845.096923 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.788199 sq. miles (2.041426 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1099.286309 sq. miles (2847.138349 sq. km)
Located within: Kansas (KS), FIPS 20
Location: 37.720186 N, 99.912921 W
Headwords:
Ford
Ford, KS
Ford County
Ford County, KS
Wikipedia
Ford (vehicles)
Ford (mango)

The 'Ford' mango is a named mango cultivar that originated in south Florida.

Ford (ward)

Ford is a Metropolitan Borough of Sefton ward in the Bootle Parliamentary constituency that covers the northern part of the locality of Litherland and all of Ford.

Ford (crossing)

A ford is a shallow place with good footing where a river or stream may be crossed by wading, or inside a vehicle getting its wheels wet. A ford is mostly a natural phenomenon, in contrast to a low water crossing, which is an artificial bridge that allows crossing a river or stream when water is low.

Ford (disambiguation)

Ford is an automobile manufacturer founded by Henry Ford.

Ford may also refer to:

  • Ford (crossing), a shallow crossing on a river
  • Ford (surname), a surname (and list of people with the name)
Ford (surname)

The surname Ford has several origins. In some cases it originated as a name for someone who lived in near a ford, and is therefore derived from the Old English and Middle English ford. In some cases, the surname is derived from places named Ford. Examples of such places include Ford in Northumberland (from Old English ford), a place in Somerset, Ford in Shropshire (from Old English ford), Ford in West Sussex (from Old English ford), and Forde in Dorset.

In other cases, the surname is sometimes an anglicised form of three Irish surnames. Two such surnames are Mac Giolla na Naomh, a name meaning "son of Gilla na Naomh"; and Mac Conshámha, a name meaning "son of Conshnámha". These surnames were anglicised Ford because their final syllable was once erroneously thought to be the Irish áth ("ford"). Another Irish surname anglicised Ford is Ó Fuartháin, a name meaning "descendant of Fuarthán". The personal name Fuartháin, derived from the Irish fuar ("cold"), was once taken to represent the Irish fuarathán ("cold little ford"), which led the name to be erroneously translated "ford". The former two Irish surnames were borne by septs centred in the province of Connacht, whilst the latter was borne by a sept centred in County Cork (in the province of Munster).

In some cases the surname Ford is an americanized form of like-sounding Jewish surnames, or else a translated form of the German Fürth. Early instances of the surname Ford include de la forda in the eleventh century, æt Fordan in the twelfth-century, de la Forthe in the thirteenth-century, and Foorde and de Furd in the fifteenth century. The surname Ford, when found in Ireland, may be of English or Irish origin since many Ford families have immigrated to Ireland at various times in history. For example, a particular noted family of the name in County Meath emigrated from Devon in the fourteenth century. In Ireland, birth records for the year 1890 reveal that the surname Ford was much less common than the variant Forde (154 births compared to only 39).

Usage examples of "ford".

Brattleboro, whither Akeley drove in his Ford car along the lonely Vermont back roads.

He also heard from Prior Alcock that for a month past, the forest below Malvern Abbey, about the Rhydd ford, had been the haunt of a body of outlaws who had committed numerous depredations of an alarming character.

Some ten minutes later, as the CBA anchorman entered the streets of Larchmont, the Ford Tempo followed discreetly at a distance, stopping well short of the Sloane house which was located on Park Avenue, facing Long Island Sound.

Flipping through her photos Andi found no Volvos or Ford trucks, but she did have shots of the Mustang coming and going--six grainy photos with the vague shape of driver or driver and passenger.

July twelfth Norman Ashkenazi drove the old Ford of the Israeli relocation team from Sousse to Ez-Zahra to tell Sharon Hoyt that it was Bastille Day and they ought to celebrate by having a picnic and going to the beach.

Kreiss nosed his rented Ford 150 van into the truck stop off the Van Dorn Street Beltway exit in Alexandria.

The road from Eastthorpe running westerly and parallel with the river at a distance of about a mile from it sends out at the fourth milestone a byroad to the south, which crosses the river by a stone bridge, and there is no doubt that before the bridge existed there was a ford, and that there was also a chapel hard by where people probably commended their souls to God before taking the water.

I had a doozy the other night about Harrison Ford, a peacock feather, and a bottle of canola oil.

Diane Robards regarded Officers John Carnegie and Leland Ford as wannabes.

Diane and her two acolytes Ford and Carnegie supplied with croissants and coffee.

Cowans Ford had been a river crossing used by the Catawba tribe in the 1600s, and later by the Cherokee.

In the early 1960s the Duke Power Company had dammed the Catawba River at Cowans Ford and created Lake Norman, which stretches almost thirty-four miles.

We had forded the Catawba River and were skirting the northwestern flank of an odd rectangular plateaumaking as rapid a progress as we could, since we were expecting a pursuit of some kind in the absence of an eruptionwhen a terrible earthquake occurred.

That second road ran through flat country and led to the passable fords that crossed the Coa further south.

It was the road that went to the safe fords across the Coa, the road which went home, the road to security, but all that was left to guard it were the nine squares of infantry, a battery of light guns and the cavalry who had survived the fight south of Poco Velha.