different between gadling vs gaoling
gadling
English
Etymology
From Middle English gadling (“companion in arms; man, fellow; a person of low birth; rascal, scoundrel; bastard; base, lowborn”), gadeling (“vagabond”), from Old English geaduling, gædeling (“kinsman, fellow, companion in arms, comrade”), from Proto-West Germanic *gaduling, from Proto-Germanic *gadulingaz, *gadilingaz (“relative, kinsman”), equivalent to gad +? -ling. Related to Old English g?da (“comrade, companion”).
Noun
gadling (plural gadlings)
- (obsolete) A companion in arms, fellow, comrade.
- 14th century, unknown author, "The Killing of Abel", Towneley Cycle, manuscript of mid 15th century
- Gedlyngis, I am a fulle grete wat.
- 14th century, unknown author, "The Killing of Abel", Towneley Cycle, manuscript of mid 15th century
- A roving vagabond; one who roams
- A man of humble condition; a fellow; a low fellow; lowborn; originally comrade or companion, in a good sense, but later used in reproach
- A spike on a gauntlet; a gad.
References
- Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
gadling From the web:
- what does galling mean
- what does gadling
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gaoling
English
Verb
gaoling
- present participle of gaol
Noun
gaoling (plural gaolings)
- An instance of a person being gaoled.
Anagrams
- ganglio-, goaling
gaoling From the web:
- what does galling mean
- what does gaoling
- what is the meaning of galling
- what does galling mean in english
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