different between gade vs ade
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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ade
English
Etymology
Back-formation from lemonade, orangeade, etc.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?e?d/
- Homophones: aid, aide
Noun
ade (plural ades)
- A drink made from a fruit, especially a fizzy one.
- 1905, American Bottler, volume 25, page 74:
- If the judgment of the above-mentioned office be correct, in truth, no drink may here be offered to the public as lemonade unless it is made out of fresh fruit! And so with raspberryade and all the other "ades."
- 1905, American Bottler, volume 25, page 74:
Translations
Anagrams
- 'ead, AED, DAE, DEA, EDA, Eda
Ewe
Numeral
ade
- six
Garo
Etymology
Clipping of ma·de
Noun
ade
- younger maternal aunt
Synonyms
- ma·degipa (formal)
- ma·detang (formal)
- ma·de
German
Etymology
From Middle High German ad?, from Old French adieu. Doublet of tschö.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a?de?/
- Rhymes: -e?
Interjection
ade
- (archaic, poetic or regional) farewell, adieu
Guanche
Noun
ade
- water
References
- Juan Álvarez Delgado, Miscelánea guanche : I. Benahoare : ensayos de lingüística canaria, 1942
Lindu
Noun
ade
- (anatomy) chin
Northern Kurdish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /???d?/
Noun
ade f
- weed
- island
Wiwa
Noun
ade
- father
- ranže ade terga
- my father is in the field
- ranže ade terga
References
- The Languages of the Andes (2004, Willem F. H. Adelaar, Pieter C. Muysken)
Wolio
Etymology
From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *qazay.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a?e/
Noun
ade
- chin
References
- Anceaux, Johannes C. 1987. Wolio Dictionary (Wolio-English-Indonesian) / Kamus Bahasa Wolio (Wolio-Inggeris-Indonesia). Dordrecht: Foris.
ade From the web:
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