different between slidden vs lidden

slidden

English

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?d?n

Verb

slidden

  1. (archaic) past participle of slide

Anagrams

  • dindles, liddens

slidden From the web:



lidden

English

Etymology

From earlier leaden, ledden, leden, from Middle English leden, liden, lyden, from Old English l?oden, l?den (speech, language), related to Scots leid (language). See leid.

Alternative etymology derives lidden from Old English hl?d, hl?den (sound, noise, clamour, din) or Old Norse hljóð (sound, clap, roar, ringing, tone, tune). Compare also Old English l?oþ (song, tune, poem).

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?d?n

Noun

lidden (plural liddens)

  1. (archaic) A noise or din.
  2. (archaic, dialectal) A saying, song or story.
    • 1905, Arthur Quiller-Couch, Shakespeare's Christmas and other stories, "Frenchman's Creek",
      She kept up this lidden all through breakfast, and the meal was no sooner cleared away than she slipped on a shawl and stepped across to the churchyard to discuss the robbery.

Anagrams

  • dindle

lidden From the web:

  • what does lidden mean
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