Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Id

Id

,
Noun.
(Zool.)
A small fresh-water cyprinoid fish (
Leuciscus idus
or
Idus idus
) of Europe. A domesticated variety, colored like the goldfish, is called
orfe
in Germany.

Definition 2024


id

id

See also: Appendix:Variations of "id"

Translingual

Symbol

id

  1. (mathematics) identity function

Numeral

id

  1. (informal) A Roman numeral representing four hundred and ninety-nine (499).

Alternative forms

  • (roman numeral): ID, CDXCIX, cdxcix

See also


English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɪd/
  • enPR: /ēd/
  • Rhymes: -ɪd
  • Homophone: it'd

Noun

id (plural ids)

  1. The unconscious impulsive component of the personality in the Freudian psychoanalytic model.
    • 2012 June 3, Nathan Rabin, “TV: Review: THE SIMPSONS (CLASSIC): “Mr. Plow” (season 4, episode 9; originally aired 11/19/1992)”, in (Please provide the title of the work):
      Almost as an afterthought, we’re given an origin story for Barney’s alcoholism: he was once a sober, studious, Ivy League-bound high school scholar before Homer forced a beer on him that transformed him into a drooling, slurring, out of control rampaging id.

Translations

Synonyms

Coordinate terms

External links

Etymology 2

From Swedish id.

Noun

id (plural ids)

  1. Alternative spelling of ide

Etymology 3

Abbreviation of identifier.

Noun

id (plural ids)

  1. (computing) identifier

Etymology 4

Abbreviation of idem., from Latin idem (same)

Noun

id

  1. Used in citations to state that the citation is to the work immediately previously cited.

See also

Anagrams


Czech

Etymology

Borrowing from English id, from New Latin as a translation of German Es from the pronoun es (it).

Noun

id n

  1. id (psychoanalysis)

Synonyms

See also


Danish

Etymology 1

From Old Norse . More at ident.

Noun

id c

  1. pursuit, business, calling

Etymology 2

Borrowing from Latin id as a translation of German Es from the pronoun es (it).

Noun

id n (singular definite id'et, not used in plural form)

  1. id (one of the three components of the personality in the Freudian psychoanalytic model)

Etymology 3

Noun

id n

  1. ID (identification or identity documentation, such as in ID card)

Irish

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɪd̪ˠ/

Contraction

id (triggers lenition)

  1. (Munster) Contraction of i do (in your).
    Ná téigh amach id bhoinn.
    Don’t go out in your bare feet.
Related terms

Latin

Etymology

From the pronominal Proto-Indo-European *i-; see also Old Church Slavonic ону (onu, he), Lithuanian ans (he), Latin idem (the same), and Sanskrit third person pronoun एना (enā, that).

Pronoun

id n

  1. nominative neuter of is; it used as subject
  2. accusative neuter of is; it used as object

Descendants

  • Czech: id
  • Danish: id
  • English: id

See also

References

  • Félix Gaffiot (1934), “id”, in Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français, Paris: Hachette.
  • Meissner, Carl; Auden, Henry William (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
    • to be of such and such an age: ea aetate, id aetatis esse
    • I wish you all success in the matter: bene id tibi vertat!
    • my intention is..: id sequor, ut
    • he attained his object: id quod voluit consecutus est
    • he attained his object: ad id quod voluit pervenit
    • with this very object: ad id ipsum
    • the point at issue: id, de quo agitur or id quod cadit in controversiam
    • a theme, subject proposed for discussion: id quod (mihi) propositum est
    • a theme, subject proposed for discussion: id quod quaerimus (quaeritur)
    • a theme, subject proposed for discussion: institutum or id quod institui
    • but to return from the digression we have been making: sed ad id, unde digressi sumus, revertamur
    • but to return from the digression we have been making: verum ut ad id, unde digressa est oratio, revertamur
    • the question now is..: nunc id quaeritur, agitur
    • the rate of interest has gone up from 4 per cent to 8 per cent: fenus ex triente Id. Quint. factum erat bessibus (Att. 4. 15. 7)
    • I do not take that too strictly: non id ad vivum reseco (Lael. 5. 8)
    • the main point: id quod maximum, gravissimum est
    • no wonder: nec mirum, minime mirum (id quidem), quid mirum?
    • there is nothing strange in that: neque id mirum est or videri debet
    • quite rightly: recte, iure id quidem
    • and rightly too: neque id immerito (iniuria)

Malay

Noun

id

  1. feast day

Maltese

Etymology

From Arabic يَد (yad), from Proto-Semitic *yad-; compare Egyptian Arabic اِيد (īd).

Noun

id f (plural idejn)

  1. (anatomy) hand

Portuguese

Noun

id m (plural ids)

  1. Abbreviation of identificador.
  2. Abbreviation of identificação.

Adverb

id (not comparable)

  1. Abbreviation of idem.

Spanish

Verb

id

  1. Informal second-person plural (vosotros or vosotras) affirmative imperative form of ir.

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -iːd

Noun

id c

  1. (obsolete) effort, work, occupation
    de voro nog skilda / till stånd och id, / men samma milda / söndagsfrid / låg över alla pannor dock.
    they belonged to different stands and occupations, but their foreheads shared the same mild Sunday peace.
    det unga, kraftiga amerikanska folkets rastlösa lif och id
    the young, strong American people's restless life and work
  2. (rare) the tree Taxus baccata, more commonly known as idegran
  3. ide; a fish, Leuciscus idus

See also