different between said vs spaid

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

  1. simple past tense and past participle of say

Adjective

said (not comparable)

  1. Mentioned earlier; aforesaid.

Translations

Determiner

said

  1. 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

  1. Second-person singular past form of saama.
  2. Third-person plural past form of saama.

Middle English

Verb

said

  1. 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

  1. (Rumantsch Grischun, Puter, Vallader) thirst

said From the web:

  • what said means
  • what said you
  • what said granny
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  • what state is ia
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spaid

English

Noun

spaid (plural spaids)

  1. Obsolete form of spade (digging tool)

Anagrams

  • DIPAs, apids, sapid

Scottish Gaelic

Etymology

Borrowed from English spade.

Noun

spaid f (genitive singular spaide, plural spaidean)

  1. spade

spaid From the web:

  • spade means
  • what does spaid mean
  • what is spaid in shar pei
  • what does spaiidz look like
  • what does spade do
  • what do spayed mean
  • what is getting spayed
  • what does a spade look like
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