different between yaul vs yauld

yaul

English

Noun

yaul (plural yauls)

  1. Alternative form of yawl

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yauld

English

Alternative forms

  • yald

Etymology

From Middle English yeld, from Old English ?ilde (valuable, of worth), from Proto-Germanic *gildiz (valuable, valid, wholesome, precious), from Proto-Indo-European *g?eld?- (to pay for, repay). Cognate with Scots yauld (active, strong, mighty), Old Norse gildr (of full worth, size, measure, or quality; full; complete; absolute; great) (whence Icelandic gildur (valid, thick, prominent, important), Swedish gild (stout, of full size), Danish gild (brawny, of full size, fine). Related to yield.

Adjective

yauld (comparative yaulder or more yauld, superlative yauldest or most yauld)

  1. (now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) Vigorous; strong; healthy.
  2. (now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) Active; sprightly; alert.
  3. (now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) Supple; active; athletic; nimble.

Anagrams

  • Dulay, Dyula

yauld From the web:

  • what does yauld
  • what does yauld means
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