different between suade vs stade
suade
English
Etymology
From Latin suadere.
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -e?d
Verb
suade (third-person singular simple present suades, present participle suading, simple past and past participle suaded)
- (obsolete) To persuade.
Anagrams
- Uedas
Italian
Verb
suade
- third-person singular present indicative of suadere
Latin
Adjective
su?de
- vocative masculine singular of su?dus
Verb
su?d?
- second-person singular present active imperative of su?de?
suade From the web:
- what suede means
- what suede leather
- what suede
- what suede is made of
- what suede does vans use
- what suede cloth
- what's suadero tacos
- what's suede shoes
stade
English
Etymology 1
From Latin stadium, from Ancient Greek ??????? (stádion), a 600-foot racetrack, a distance of 600 Greek feet. Cognate with French stade.
Noun
stade (plural stades)
- (historical units of measure, dated) Synonym of stadion: a former Greek unit of distance (variously 150–210 m at different places and times).
- (dated) A track for footraces and its surrounding stadium.
- A stage of progress
- (obsolete) in a journey.
- (medicine, obsolete) of a disease.
- (geology) in glaciation during which a secondary advance of the glaciers occurs.
Etymology 2
From Spanish estado, from Latin status (“standing”). Doublet of estate, state, and status.
Noun
stade (plural stades)
- (units of measure, obsolete) Synonym of fathom.
Etymology 3
From Dutch stad. Doublet of stead.
Noun
stade (plural stades)
- (rare, obsolete) A chief town in an area or country.
Etymology 4
From German Stade, a town in Hanover.
Noun
stade (plural stades)
- (obsolete) Fabric or textiles from or similar to those of Stade.
Etymology 5
From Old English staed. Cognate with German Gestade (“shore”).
Noun
stade (plural stades)
- (nautical, obsolete) A station for ships, as an anchorage or wharf.
Related terms
- staith
References
- "stade, n.1", "n.2", "n.3", & "n.4", in the Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- "stade" in William Henry Smith's 1867 The Sailor's Word-Book.
Anagrams
- AEDST, Deats, Stead, TASed, asdet, dates, desat, sadet, sated, stead, tased, tsade
Dutch
Pronunciation
Noun
stade
- (archaic) Dative singular form of stad
French
Etymology
From Latin stadium, from Ancient Greek ??????? (stádion), neuter form of ??????? (stádios, “stable, firm”), from Proto-Indo-European *steh?- (“to be standing”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stad/
- Homophone: stades
Noun
stade m (plural stades)
- (historical) stadium (Ancient Greek unit of measurement)
- stadium (Greek race course)
- stadium (sports arena)
- (medicine) stage
- stage (phase)
Derived terms
Further reading
- “stade” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Anagrams
- dates, datés
Gothic
Romanization
stade
- Romanization of ????????????????????
Norwegian Nynorsk
Verb
stade
- (non-standard since 2012) past participle of standa
stade From the web:
you may also like
- suade vs stade
- suade vs suage
- suade vs suede
- sade vs suade
- suade vs slade
- suave vs suade
- qued vs quede
- suede vs quede
- queue vs quede
- bad vs quede
- wickedness vs quede
- quaked vs quaved
- quaved vs quayed
- quaver vs quaved
- tremble vs quave
- quiver vs quave
- quags vs quabs
- quobs vs quabs
- quibs vs quabs
- quabs vs quas