different between shide vs saide
shide
English
Etymology
From Middle English shide, schide, schyde (“plank, board, beam, splinter, chip”), from Old English s??d (“thin slip of wood, shingle, billet”), from Proto-Germanic *sk?d? (“log, tile”), from Proto-Indo-European *skeyt-, *skey- (“to cut; divide; separate; split”). Cognate with North Frisian skeid (“billet of wood”), German Scheit (“log, piece of wood”), Swedish skid (“wooden shoe, sole, skate”), Icelandic skíð (“a billet of wood”). Doublet of ski.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?a?d/
- Rhymes: -a?d
- Homophone: shied
Noun
shide (plural shides)
- (obsolete) A piece of wood (a thin board or plan, or a strip of wood split off); a measure of firewood, variously defined as e.g. four feet long and between 16 and 38 inches in circumference.
- 1566, Accounts of St. Dunstan's, Canterbury:
- For a tall shyde and nayle for the same house, jd,
- 1601, An Acte concerninge the Assise of Fewell (Chapter XIV, 43* Eliz. c. 14,15.), in The Statutes of the Realm ... From Original Records (1819), page 982:
- And [although] by the true intente of the said Statue everie Bende of Faggot should be Three Foote, […] the said evill disposed people doe [make] the saide Bendes or Faggots stickes much shorter, […] And that everie Tall Shide marked Two, beinge rounde bodied, shall conteine in compasse Three and twentie Inches of Assise aboute, […]
- 1791, Parl. Commission on Royal Forests, in Reports (1863) VI., page 339:
- A quantity of pollard trees to make 1200 shides of cleft wood, computed to contain half a foot of wood or timber in each.
- 1566, Accounts of St. Dunstan's, Canterbury:
Further reading
- shide in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
Anagrams
- Heids, Ihdes, Sidhe, deshi, hides, shied, sidhe
Middle English
Noun
shide
- Alternative form of schide
shide From the web:
- what side is your appendix on
- what side is your heart on
- what side is your liver on
- what side is appendix on
- what side is your gallbladder on
- what side of the body is the liver on
- what side is your kidney on
- what side is your pancreas on
saide
English
Verb
saide
- (obsolete) simple past tense and past participle of saye
Anagrams
- A-side, Daise, Desai, Sadie, aides, aside, daies, ideas
Middle English
Verb
saide
- Alternative form of seide
saide From the web:
- what side is your appendix on
- what side is your heart on
- what side is your liver on
- what side is your gallbladder on
- what side is your kidney on
- what side of the body is the liver on
- what side is your pancreas on
- what side should you sleep on
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