tyde

English

Noun

tyde (plural tydes)

  1. Obsolete form of tide.

Anagrams

Danish

Etymology

From Old Norse þýða, from Proto-Germanic *þiudijaną (to interpret), cognate with Swedish tyda, German deuten, Low German düden, Dutch duiden. Possibly the same verb as *þiudijaną (make friend with), continued by Danish ty (to resort).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈtˢyːðə]

Verb

tyde (imperative tyd, infinitive at tyde, present tense tyder, past tense tydede, perfect tense har tydet)

  1. interpret
  2. decipher, read

Conjugation

Conjugation of tyde
active passive
present tyder tydes
past tydede tydedes
infinitive tyde tydes
imperative tyd
participle
present tydende
past tydet
(auxiliary verb have)
gerund tyden

Synonyms

  • (decipher): afkode, dechifrere

Derived terms

References

Middle English

Etymology 1

    Inherited from Old English tīd, from Proto-West Germanic *tīdi, from Proto-Germanic *tīdiz, from Proto-Indo-European *déh₂itis, from *deh₂y- + *-tis.

    Alternative forms

    Noun

    tyde

    1. A time (period), season.
    Descendants
    • English: tide
    • Scots: tide
    • Yola: enteete
    • Scottish Gaelic: tìde
    References

    Etymology 2

    Adjective

    tyde

    1. alternative form of tydy

    Norwegian Bokmål

    Etymology

    From Old Norse þýða.

    Verb

    tyde (imperative tyd, present tense tyder, passive tydes, simple past tyda or tydet or tydde, past participle tyda or tydet or tydd, present participle tydende)

    1. to decipher, interpret, make out
    2. (tyde ) to imply, indicate, suggest

    References

    Norwegian Nynorsk

    Verb

    tyde (present tense tyder, past tense tydde, past participle tydt/tydd, passive infinitive tydast, present participle tydande, imperative tyd)

    1. alternative form of tyda