Mod

mod


 * 1) moderate, as in: low, moderate, high
 * 2)  modulus

Noun

 * 1)  An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses.
 * 2)  a 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker.
 * 3)  A modification to an object, computer game, etc., typically for the purpose of individualizing and/or enhancing the performance of the object.
 * 4)  A moderator, for example on a forum.
 * 5)  A module (file containing a tracker music sequence).
 * 6) * 1992, "Jordan K. Hubbard", How to convert Amiga mods to Arch? (on Internet newsgroup comp.sys.acorn)
 * I'd like to convert some of the arch [sic] mods back into Amiga mods since I don't have the original Amiga versions.
 * 1)  A moderately difficult route.

Verb

 * 1)  To modify an object from its original condition, typically for the purposes of individualizing and/or enhancing the performance of the object.
 * His friends were particularly impressed with the way he modded his Ruckus.
 * 1) To moderate; to punish a rule-breaking user on a forum, especially when done by a moderator.
 * Don't break the rules or you'll be modded.

Synonyms

 * trick, trick out

Derived terms

 * moddable
 * modder

Thesaurus
a la mode, advanced, all the rage, all the thing, avant-garde, contemporary, current, far out, fashionable, forward-looking, hip, in, in fashion, in style, in vogue, modern, modernistic, modernized, modish, new, newfashioned, now, popular, present-day, present-time, prevalent, progressive, smart, streamlined, trendy, twentieth-century, ultra-ultra, ultramodern, up-to-date, up-to-datish, up-to-the-minute, way out

Anagrams

 * dom, Dom, dom., DOM

Noun

 * 1) courage

Synonyms

 * courage, kurage
 * tapperhed

Preposition

 * 1) against
 * 2) versus
 * 3) towards
 * 4) into
 * 5) from

Synonyms

 * imod

Noun

 * 1) heart, mind, feeling
 * 2) courage, pride, grief, anger
 * 3) state of mind

Etymology
From, from. Cognate with Old High German muot: (German Mut:), Old Saxon mod: (Dutch moed:), Old Norse móðr: (Swedish mod:), Gothic 𐌼𐍉𐌸𐍃:. The Indo-European root was also the source of Ancient Greek μῶθαι: and Latin mos:.

Derived terms

 * mōdġehygd

Descendants

 * English: mood

Noun

 * 1) mode, fashion, style, way

Etymology
From mode:.

Noun
mod


 * 1) courage