"Trod" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
The word "trod" can have several meanings depending on the context, but the most common ones are:
To walk or go on foot, especially in a place where others have previously walked or gone. For example: "The crowd that trod down the sidewalk made it difficult for us to get through."
To walk heavily or clumsily, especially in a way that causes damage or makes a noise. For example: "The large dog trod on my garden flowers."
A tread or a track, especially a path made by the feet of a person or animal.
To use or exploit someone or something heavily and often without kindness or consideration. For example: "The company trod on the rights of the local community by cutting down ancient trees."
A trochophore is a larval stage of marine mollusks, such as mollusks, such as oysters, clams, mussels, snails, slugs, and squids, that swims in a corkscrew-like motion using a band of cilia, F-attached muscles, which are similar to a single wing, which propels the larva through the entire body. <br><br>This larval stage is found in the orders Gymnolaemata, Polycladida, Nudibranchia, and In other words, the trochophore represents a major larval phase in the life cycle of most mollusks and is able to feed and settle on a surface where it will attach to it using a ligament nerve cells known as statocysts, which may also indicate light sensitivity and involve sense organs.