different between yead vs yed
yead
English
Noun
yead (plural yeads)
- (dialect) head
Anagrams
- Adey, Daye, E-day, Eady, ayde, daye
yead From the web:
- what year is it
- what year was 9/11
- what years are gen z
- what year did the titanic sink
- what year was jesus born
- what year did selena die
- what year did michael jackson die
- what year was the civil war
yed
English
Alternative forms
- yedd
Etymology 1
From Middle English ?edden, ?eddien, from Old English ?ieddian (“to speak formally, discuss, speak with alliteration, recite, sing”), from ?iedd (“song, poem, saying, proverb, riddle, speech, story, tale, narrative, account, reckoning, reason”).
Verb
yed (third-person singular simple present yeds, present participle yedding, simple past and past participle yedded)
- (intransitive, archaic) To speak; sing.
- (intransitive, Britain dialectal) To magnify greatly in narration; exaggerate a tale; fib.
- (intransitive, Britain dialectal) To contend; wrangle.
Derived terms
- yedding
Etymology 2
From Middle English ?ed, from Old English ?iedd (“song, poem, saying, proverb, riddle, speech, story, tale, narrative, account, reckoning, reason”).
Noun
yed (plural yeds)
- (archaic) A saying.
- (Britain dialectal) A falsehood; leasing.
Etymology 3
From Middle English eorþien (“to bury, dig”), from eorþe (“earth”). Influenced or conflated with Middle English eardien (“to dwell, inhabit”), from Old English eardian (“to live, dwell, be inhabitant, occupy”). More at earth.
Alternative forms
- yerd, eard
Verb
yed (third-person singular simple present yeds, present participle yedding, simple past and past participle yedded)
- (Britain dialectal) To burrow underground, as a rabbit or mole; also said of miners.
- (Britain dialectal) To be associated with a place or locality. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
Derived terms
- yedder
- yedding
Noun
yed (plural yeds)
- (Britain dialectal) A burrow; a hole made by an animal in the ground.
Etymology 4
Blend of your +? editor
Noun
yed (plural yeds)
- (dated, fandom slang) A self-reference to the editor of a periodical; a substitution for the editor's name or signature.
Anagrams
- Dey, Dye, d'ye, dey, dye
Volapük
Conjunction
yed
- (Volapük Rigik) yet, nevertheless, but, however
yed From the web:
- what yed mean
- what yeda means
- teddy means
- what yedidia means
- what ed means
- yedidiah meaning
- yedi what language
- yed what does that mean