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Definition 2024


yed

yed

See also: ye'd

English

Alternative forms

  • yedd

Verb

yed (third-person singular simple present yeds, present participle yedding, simple past and past participle yedded)

  1. (intransitive, archaic) To speak; sing.
  2. (intransitive, Britain dialectal) To magnify greatly in narration; exaggerate a tale; fib.
  3. (intransitive, Britain dialectal) To contend; wrangle.
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Middle English ȝed, from Old English ġiedd (song, poem, saying, proverb, riddle, speech, story, tale, narrative, account, reckoning, reason).

Noun

yed (plural yeds)

  1. (archaic) A saying.
  2. (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

Verb

yed (third-person singular simple present yeds, present participle yedding, simple past and past participle yedded)

  1. (Britain dialectal) To burrow underground, as a rabbit or mole; also said of miners.
  2. (Britain dialectal) To be associated with a place or locality. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
Derived terms

Noun

yed (plural yeds)

  1. (Britain dialectal) A burrow; a hole made by an animal in the ground.

Etymology 4

Blend of your + editor

Noun

yed (plural yeds)

  1. (dated, fandom slang) A self-reference to the editor of a periodical; a substitution for the editor's name or signature.
    • 1950 December, Hoffman, Lee, “Chaos”, in Quandry, number 5, page 3:
      Fandom is a wonderful thing. We used to live in Florida ten years ago. Across the street lived a lad two years older than yed who had the most wonderful collection of comic books...all of a stf nature. At the ripe old age of eight yed was swept to Georgia and the lad with the comics was never heard from. Since entering fandom we thought much of him and wondered if he were not a slan. This morning we learned that he is a member of NFFF and TFSC. Naturally we got a letter off to him.
    • 1952 February, Robinson, Fred J., “Arose By Any Other Name”, in Straight Up, volume 1, number 1, page 1:
      All of which sprang (crawled?) from the fertile skull of yed, no doubt it is something in my Radius.
    • 1976 November, Hoffman, Lee, “Editorial”, in Science-Fiction Five-Yearly, number 6, page 4:
      In preparation for this momentous occasion yed has been browsing past issues of this sterling journal, and it has come to our attention that previous articles by yhos have been devoted largely to bemoaning the multitude of technical problems encountered in production -- the difficulties of duplication, the miseries of mimeography.

Anagrams


Volapük

Conjunction

yed

  1. (Volapük Rigik) yet, nevertheless, but, however