Crossword clues for soddy
soddy
- Like most cemetery plots
- Like some outfields
- Like golf course greens
- Nobelist Frederick ___, pioneer in radiochemistry
- A house built of sod or adobe laid in horizontal courses
- English chemist whose work on radioactive disintegration led to the discovery of isotopes (1877-1956)
- Nobelist in Chemistry: 1921
- Like some new lawns
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Soddy \Sod"dy\, a. [From Sod.]
Consisting of sod; covered with sod; turfy.
--Cotgrave.
Wiktionary
n. (alternative form of soddie English)
WordNet
n. a house built of sod or adobe laid in horizontal courses [syn: sod house, adobe house]
English chemist whose work on radioactive disintegration led to the discovery of isotopes (1877-1956) [syn: Frederick Soddy]
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 4809
Land area (2000): 23.034319 sq. miles (59.658611 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.789686 sq. miles (2.045276 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 23.824005 sq. miles (61.703887 sq. km)
FIPS code: 69560
Located within: Tennessee (TN), FIPS 47
Location: 35.258538 N, 85.176996 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Soddy-Daisy
Soddy, TN
Soddy
Wikipedia
Soddy is an eroded lunar impact crater lying on the far side of the Moon, invisible from the Earth, to the south-southeast of the prominent crater King. Material from the ray system surrounding King covers the sides and interior of Soddy. Less than one crater diameter to the west of Soddy is the smaller Heron.
This crater has been heavily worn and eroded, so that only a remnant of a crater depression survives. There are small craterlets along the rim edge to the southwest and southeast. The interior is uneven and almost indistinguishable from the surrounding terrain.
Soddy may refer to:'''
- Frederick Soddy (1877–1956), English chemist
- Soddy (crater), a lunar crater named for Frederick Soddy
- Sod house or Soddy, a house built using patches of sod
- Soddy, a community in southeast Tennessee
Usage examples of "soddy".
We can lay it out inside the soddy while Espinel stakes the horses out.
The Grebe place was sold to Philip Wendell, who was buying up any farmland that was being vacated by discouraged homesteaders, and he paid the going price: three thousand dollars for 1,280 acres plus the house, with the soddy thrown in.
In 1913, the British chemist Frederick Soddy (1877-1956), advanced the isotope concept based on his studies of the elements produced in the course of radioactive decay.