{{short description|Snail}} {{Other uses}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{more citations needed|date=October 2021}} A '''dodman''' (plural "'''dodmen'''") or a '''hoddyman dod''' is a local English vernacular word for a land snail. The word is used in some of the counties of England. This word is found in the Norfolk dialect, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. Fairfax, in his ''Bulk and Selvedge'' (1674), speaks of "a snayl or dodman".

'''Hodimadod''' is a similar word for snail that is more commonly used in the Buckinghamshire dialect.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://met.open.ac.uk/genuki/big/eng/BKM/Vocabulary/vocabulary-H.html |title=H - Buckinghamshire Vocabulary |last=Cocks |first=Alfred Heneage |date=1897–1909 |publisher=Genuki|accessdate=2010-09-03 |url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100707131830/http://met.open.ac.uk/genuki/big/eng/BKM/Vocabulary/vocabulary-H.html |archive-date=2010-07-07}}</ref>

Alternatively (and apparently now more commonly used in the Norfolk dialect) are the closely related words '''Dodderman '''or '''Doddiman'''. In everyday folklore, these words are popularly said to be derived from the surname of a travelling cloth seller called Dudman, who supposedly had a bent back and carried a large roll of cloth on his back. The words to dodder, doddery, doddering, meaning to progress in an unsteady manner, are popularly said to have the same derivation.

A traditional Norfolk rhyme goes as follows: {{blockquote|"Doddiman, doddiman, put out your horn, <p>Here comes a thief to steal your corn."<ref>{{cite book |title=Dictionary of Phrase and Fable |first=E. Cobham |last=Brewer |date=1894}}</ref></p>}}

Alfred Watkins, the 'inventor' of ley lines, thought that in the words "dodman" and the builder's "hod" there was a survival of an ancient British term for a surveyor. Watkins felt that the name came about because the snail's two horns resembled a surveyor's two surveying rods. Watkins also supported this idea with an etymology from 'doddering along' and 'dodge' (akin, in his mind, to the series of actions a surveyor would carry out in moving his rod back and forth until it accurately lined up with another one as a backsight or foresight) and the Welsh verb 'dodi' meaning to lay or place. He thus decided that The Long Man of Wilmington was an image of an ancient surveyor.<ref>{{cite web |title=leyhunter1 [placeholder title]<!--The title of the work is unknown. Please determine and replace if possible. (October 2021)--> |url=http://www.gothicimage.co.uk/books/leyhunter1.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070809012401/http://www.gothicimage.co.uk/books/leyhunter1.html |website=gothicimage.co.uk |url-status=dead |archive-date=9 August 2007<!--Actual archival date unknown. Please determine and replace if possible.-->}}</ref>

== References == {{reflist}} {{Wiktionary}}

Category:Mollusc common names Category:Pseudoarchaeology Category:Surveying

{{England-hist-stub}}