different between dade vs gade
dade
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /de?d/
- Rhymes: -e?d
Verb
dade (third-person singular simple present dades, present participle dading, simple past and past participle daded)
- (obsolete, intransitive) To walk unsteadily, like a child; to move slowly.
- No sooner taught to dade, but from their mother trip.
- (obsolete, transitive) To hold up by leading strings or by the hand, as a toddler.
- 1597, Michael Drayton, England's Heroical Epistles
- Little children when they learn to go / By painful mothers daded to and fro.
- 1597, Michael Drayton, England's Heroical Epistles
Anagrams
- Edda, adde, dead
Afrikaans
Noun
dade
- plural of daad
Galician
Verb
dade
- second-person plural imperative of dar
Pali
Alternative forms
Verb
dade
- third-person singular optative active of dad?ti (“to give”)
Romani
Noun
dade m
- Dolenjski form of dad (“father”)
Zazaki
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [d??d?]
- Hyphenation: da?de
Noun
dade f
- (colloquial) maternal grandmother
- Synonym: dapire
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gade
English
Etymology
Compare cod (“kind of fish”).
Noun
gade (plural gades)
- Any of various fish of the cod family found in British waters; especially those of the genera Gadus and Motella.
- (Britain, dialect, obsolete, Moray Firth) A pike.
Synonyms
- (pike): gead
Anagrams
- aged, agèd, egad
Danish
Etymology
From Old Danish gatæ, from Old Norse gata, whence English gate. Cognate with German Gasse (“lane”), Gothic ???????????????????? (gatw?).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [???æ?ð?]
- Rhymes: -a?d?
Noun
gade c (singular definite gaden, plural indefinite gader)
- street (a paved part of road, usually in a village or a town)
Inflection
Derived terms
Dutch
Alternative forms
- ga (mostly in compounds)
Etymology
From Middle Dutch gade, from gegade, from Old Dutch *gigado. Substantivised form of the past participle of gaden, which is now obsolete.
Related to eega, gading, gader, tegader, gaderen, vergaderen, gegadigde, allegaartje, weerga and possibly also goed. Cognate with German Gatte.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??a?d?/
Noun
gade m or f (plural gaden, diminutive gadetje n)
- spouse (husband or wife)
Related terms
- gading
French
Etymology
From Latin gadus (“fish, probably from among the Gadiformes”), from Ancient Greek ????? (gádos).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?ad/
Noun
gade m (plural gades)
- cod (any fish of the Gadidae)
Haitian Creole
Etymology
From French regarder (“look, watch”)
Verb
gade
- (transitive) to look (at)
- (transitive) to watch
See also
- wè
Serbo-Croatian
Noun
gade (Cyrillic spelling ????)
- vocative singular of gad
Walloon
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *gaits (compare English goat).
Noun
gade f (r)
- goat (species)
- goat (female animal)
- female of roebuck
- rest for carpenters, etc.
Derived terms
- gadot
- gadlî
- gadler
- s' agadler
- ragadler
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