different between yede vs yeke

yede

English

Verb

yede

  1. (obsolete) simple past tense of go, now replaced by went.

Verb

yede

  1. (obsolete or literary) To go (used as a pseudo-archaism by 16th-century poets and their imitators).
    • 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, II.iii:
      The whiles on foot was forced for to yeed, / With that blacke Palmer, his most trusty guide []

Anagrams

  • eyed, yeed

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yeke

English

Alternative forms

  • yek

Etymology

From Middle English ?ek, ?eac, from Old English ??ac (cuckoo, gawk), from Proto-Germanic *gaukaz (cuckoo), from Proto-Indo-European *g?Au?-, *g?eg?Au?- (cuckoo). Cognate with Scots gowk (cuckoo), German Gauch (cuckoo), Danish gøg (cuckoo), Swedish gök (cuckoo). See also gawk, gowk.

Noun

yeke (plural yekes)

  1. (Britain dialectal) A cuckoo.

Anagrams

  • yeek

yeke From the web:

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