different between cud vs chyme

cud

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English code, cudde, coude, quede, quide, from Old English cudu, cwidu, from Proto-Germanic *kweduz (resin). Cognate with German Kitt and Sanskrit ??? (jatu, lac, gum).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: k?d, IPA(key): /k?d/
  • Rhymes: -?d

Noun

cud (countable and uncountable, plural cuds)

  1. The portion of food which is brought back into the mouth by ruminating animals from their first stomach, to be chewed a second time.
Translations

Verb

cud (third-person singular simple present cuds, present participle cudding, simple past and past participle cudded)

  1. (transitive) To bring back into the mouth and chew a second time.
    • 1942, Emily Carr, The Book of Small, "Singing," [1]
      Here were two ladies nearly fifty years old, throwing back their heads to sing love songs, nursery songs, hymns, God Save the Queen, Rule Britannia—songs that spilled over the drawing-room as easily as Small's cow songs spilled over the yard, only Small's songs were new, fresh grass snatched as the cow snatched pasture grass. The ladies’ songs were rechews—cudded fodder.
    • 1952, Doris Lessing, Martha Quest, HarperCollins, 2009, Part One, Chapter Two,
      [] although the wagon wheels perpetually flung up rivers of red sand, and she travelled in a column of whirling ruddy dust, the sweet perfumes of newly cudded grass mingled with it, mile after mile, as if the four-divided stomachs of the great oxen were filled with nothing but concentrated memories of hours of grazing along the water heavy vleis.

Etymology 2

Shorted form of could.

Pronunciation

IPA(key): /k?d/

  • Rhymes: -?d

Verb

cud

  1. (nonstandard, informal) Alternative form of could

Anagrams

  • CDU, DCU, UCD, UDC, ucd

Polish

Etymology

First attested from 16th c. From Old Polish czud, czudo < Proto-Slavic *?udo < Proto-Indo-European *(s)k?u?d-es, *(s)k?u?d-os. Cognates include Ancient Greek ????? (kûdos, glory).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /t?sut/

Noun

cud m inan

  1. miracle

Declension

Derived terms

  • cudny, cudowny, cudotwórca

Related terms

  • cudo, czu?

Further reading

  • cud in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
  • cud in Polish dictionaries at PWN

cud From the web:

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chyme

English

Etymology

From Late Latin chymus, from Ancient Greek ????? (khumós, juice).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ka?m/
  • Rhymes: -a?m

Noun

chyme (usually uncountable, plural chymes)

  1. The thick semifluid mass of partly digested food that is passed from the stomach to the duodenum.

Translations

Anagrams

  • chemy

chyme From the web:

  • what chyme means
  • what thyme looks like
  • what chyme is produced in the
  • chyme what is it made of
  • what is chyme quizlet
  • what does chyme look like
  • what is chyme class 10
  • what is chyme in biology class 10
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