yed
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English ȝedden, ȝeddien, from Old English ġieddian (“to speak formally, discuss, speak with alliteration, recite, sing”), from ġiedd (“song, poem, saying, proverb, riddle, speech, story, tale, narrative, account, reckoning, reason”).
yed (third-person singular simple present yeds, present participle yedding, simple past and past participle yedded)
From Middle English ȝed, from Old English ġiedd (“song, poem, saying, proverb, riddle, speech, story, tale, narrative, account, reckoning, reason”).
yed (plural yeds)
From Middle English eorþien (“to bury, dig”), from eorþe (“earth”). Influenced or conflated with Middle English eardien (“to dwell, inhabit”), from Old English eardian (“to live, dwell, be inhabitant, occupy”). More at earth.
yed (third-person singular simple present yeds, present participle yedding, simple past and past participle yedded)
yed (plural yeds)
yed (plural yeds)
yed
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