Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Clodhopper
Clod′hopˊper
,Noun.
 A rude, rustic fellow.  
Webster 1828 Edition
Clodhopper
CLODHOPPER
,Noun.
  Definition 2025
clodhopper
clodhopper
English
Noun
clodhopper (plural clodhoppers)
-  A strong shoe for heavy-duty use, a boot.
-  1830, Margaret Hundy, "First Epistle from Mrs. Margaret Hundy", The Lady's Magazine:
- ...who had got on his "hill shoes," as he calls a pair of clodhoppers as thick as a ploughman's, and stuck round with nails.
 
 
-  1830, Margaret Hundy, "First Epistle from Mrs. Margaret Hundy", The Lady's Magazine:
-  (US) Any kind of shoe.
-  1959, Claude F. Koch, "A Matter of Family":
- We had to walk slow because of his wooden clod-hoppers, and that was the way I wanted it now
 
 
-  1959, Claude F. Koch, "A Matter of Family":
-  (military slang) United States Navy ankle length work shoes, distinct from dress shoes or combat boots.
-  1943, "Senators go global: Five will fly to all fronts", LIFE Magazine, August 16:
- Smiling Jim Mead of New York tries on his GI clodhopper boots. He decided to return them "because we couldn't make any altitude with those aboard."
 
 
-  1943, "Senators go global: Five will fly to all fronts", LIFE Magazine, August 16:
-  A peasant or yokel.
-  1719, René Le Bossu; Pierre François le Courayer and Peter Anthony Motteux, translators, Monsieur Bossu's Treatise of the Epick Poem, J. Knapton and H. Clements, OCLC 714190298, page 332:- […] now a book is no greater rarity than bacon and greens in Virginia; and the clodhopper of this country returns from his daily labours to a book […]
 
-  1869, Richard Doddridge Blackmore, Lorna Doone, ch. 14:
- 'Nephew Jack,' he cried, looking at me when I was thinking what to say, and finding only emptiness, 'you are a heavy lout, sir; a bumpkin, a clodhopper; and I shall leave you nothing, unless it be my boots to grease.'
 
 
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-  (Britain) A clumsy or foolish person.
-  1826, P.H. Clias, "Gymnastics", Blackwood's Magazine, Volume XX, No. CXV, August:
- All guess-work exploits shrivel up a good yard, or sometimes two, when brought to the measure, and the champion of the county dwindles into a clumsy clod-hopper.
 
 
-  1826, P.H. Clias, "Gymnastics", Blackwood's Magazine, Volume XX, No. CXV, August:
-  Wheatear; any of various passerine birds.
-  1834, Robert Mudie, The Feathered Tribes of the British Islands, Volume 1:
- ...and as the birds then begin to resort to the downs and open commons, the "fallow-chat," "wheat-ear," and "clodhopper," are not unappropriate names.
 
 
-  1834, Robert Mudie, The Feathered Tribes of the British Islands, Volume 1:
Usage notes
This term mostly occurs in the plural, e.g. “a pair of clodhoppers.”
Translations
strong, heavy shoe
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clumsy person
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