different between wame vs wade

wame

English

Etymology

Northern form of womb, from Old English wamb.

Noun

wame (plural wames)

  1. (Scotland, Northern England) The belly.
    • 1932, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Sunset Song, Polygon 2006 (A Scots Quair), p. 26:
      everybody knows what they are, the Gourdon fishers, they'd wring silver out of a corpse's wame and call stinking haddocks perfume fishes and sell them at a shilling a pair.
  2. (Scotland, Northern England) The womb.

Anagrams

  • meaw

Middle English

Noun

wame

  1. Alternative form of wombe

Scots

Alternative forms

  • wam

Etymology

From Middle English wambe, wame, wamb, forms of womb (belly, womb), from Old English wamb (belly).

Noun

wame (plural wames)

  1. belly
  2. womb
  3. (figuratively) heart, mind
    • 1817, Walter Scott, Rob Roy (in English and Scots):
      "why, Andrew, you know all the secrets of this family.". "If I ken them, I can keep them," said Andrew; "they winna work in my wame like harm in a barrel, I'se warrant ye."

wame From the web:



wade

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /we?d/
  • Rhymes: -e?d
  • Homophones: wayed, weighed, wheyed

Etymology 1

From Middle English waden, from Old English wadan, from Proto-Germanic *wadan?, from Proto-Indo-European *weh?d?- (to go). Cognates include German waten (wade) and Latin v?d? (go, walk; rush) (whence English evade, invade, pervade).

Verb

wade (third-person singular simple present wades, present participle wading, simple past and past participle waded)

  1. (intransitive) to walk through water or something that impedes progress.
    • 1918, Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Land That Time Forgot Chapter VIII
      After breakfast the men set out to hunt, while the women went to a large pool of warm water covered with a green scum and filled with billions of tadpoles. They waded in to where the water was about a foot deep and lay down in the mud. They remained there from one to two hours and then returned to the cliff.
  2. (intransitive) to progress with difficulty
    • And wades through fumes, and gropes his way.
  3. (transitive) to walk through (water or similar impediment); to pass through by wading
  4. (intransitive) To enter recklessly.
Translations

Noun

wade (plural wades)

  1. An act of wading.
  2. (colloquial) A ford; a place to cross a river.
Translations

Related terms

  • wade in
  • wade through

Etymology 2

Noun

wade (uncountable)

  1. Obsolete form of woad.

References

  • wade in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

Anagrams

  • Dawe, Dewa, awed

Dutch

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??a?.d?/
  • Hyphenation: wa?De
  • Rhymes: -a?d?

Etymology 1

From Middle Dutch wade, from Old Dutch *watho, from Proto-Germanic *waþwô.

Cognate with German Wade (calf (of leg)), Swedish vad (calf (of leg)) and Afrikaans waai (popliteal).

Noun

wade f (plural waden, diminutive waadje n)

  1. popliteus
Descendants
  • Afrikaans: waai

Etymology 2

Noun

wade f (plural waden, diminutive waadje n)

  1. shroud
Derived terms
  • lijkwade
Related terms
  • gewaad

Etymology 3

From Middle Dutch wade, reformed from waet through influence of the collective gewade (modern gewaad). Further from Old Dutch *w?t, from Proto-Germanic *w?d-.

Cognate with Middle High German w?t, Old Saxon w?d, Old English w?d, Old Norse váð.

Noun

wade f (plural waden, diminutive waadje n)

  1. type of trawl
Synonyms
  • schrobnet
Hypernyms
  • sleepnet

Etymology 4

Verb

wade

  1. (archaic) singular present subjunctive of waden

Middle English

Verb

wade

  1. Alternative form of waden

wade From the web:

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