different between said vs sapid
said
English
Alternative forms
- saide, sayde, seyde (obsolete)
- sayed (nonstandard)
- sed (eye dialect)
Etymology
From Middle English seide (preterite) and seid, iseid (past participle), from Old English s?de, sæ?de (preterite) and ?esæ?d (past participle), equivalent to say +? -ed.
Pronunciation
- enPR: s?d, IPA(key): /s?d/
- Rhymes: -?d
Verb
said
- simple past tense and past participle of say
Adjective
said (not comparable)
- Mentioned earlier; aforesaid.
Translations
Determiner
said
- Mentioned earlier; aforesaid.
Translations
See also
- Said for proper noun sense
Anagrams
- AIDS, Aids, Dais, IADS, IADs, aids, dais, daïs, sadi, sida
Estonian
Verb
said
- Second-person singular past form of saama.
- Third-person plural past form of saama.
Middle English
Verb
said
- Alternative form of seide
Romansch
Alternative forms
- (Sursilvan) seit
- (Sutsilvan) set
- (Surmiran) seid
Etymology
From Latin sitis, from Proto-Indo-European *d?g??ítis (“perishing, decrease”).
Noun
said f
- (Rumantsch Grischun, Puter, Vallader) thirst
said From the web:
- what said means
- what said you
- what said granny
- what said the 25th amendment
- what state is ia
- what said the time in usa now
- what said meaning in hindi
sapid
English
Etymology
From Latin sapidus, from sapi? (“to taste”).
Adjective
sapid (comparative more sapid, superlative most sapid)
- tasty, flavoursome or savoury
Derived terms
- sapidity
- sapidness
Translations
Anagrams
- DIPAs, Spaid, apids, spaid
Tagalog
Noun
sapid
- substance of thick consistency left adhering to the mouth of receptacles after pouring or like action
Related terms
- sabit
- sampid
sapid From the web:
- vapid meaning
- sapid what does it mean
- sapido what does it mean
- what does sapid mean in english
- what does vapid mean
- what does sapidus mean
- sapodilla fruit
- what is sapida in english
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