clodhopper

Etymology
Compound of (agentive form of the verb ). Perhaps affected by analogy with. Attested in the sense of "peasant" since the seventeenth century; the extended sense of "boot" or "shoe" dates from the nineteenth century.

Noun

 * 1)  A strong shoe for heavy-duty use, a boot.
 * 2)   Any shoe construed (within a particular context) as ungainly.
 * 3)  United States Navy ankle length work shoes, distinct from dress shoes or combat boots.
 * 4)  A peasant or yokel.
 * 5)   A clumsy or foolish person.
 * 6)  Wheatear: any of various passerine birds.
 * 1)  A peasant or yokel.
 * 2)   A clumsy or foolish person.
 * 3)  Wheatear: any of various passerine birds.
 * 1)   A clumsy or foolish person.
 * 2)  Wheatear: any of various passerine birds.
 * 1)  Wheatear: any of various passerine birds.

Translations

 * French:
 * Hungarian:
 * Latin: pērō
 * Spanish: zapatón


 * German:, Scharrhans
 * Irish: cábóg
 * Spanish:, patoso , paleto
 * Turkish: