Iudas

English

Noun

Iudas

  1. Archaic spelling of Judas.
  2. Archaic form of Jude.

Anagrams


Latin

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Ancient Greek Ἰούδᾱς (Ioúdās), from Hebrew יְהוּדָה (y'hudá).

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Iūdās m (genitive Iūdae); first declension

  1. Judas
    • 1870, Thomas Lever, Sermons, page 73:
      And surely none can continue neare, and deare vnto our kyng Christ but suche, for others that euer prolle for priuate profite, bee hypocrites and flatterers as was Iudas.
      (please add an English translation of this quote)
    • 1884, Jacob Isidor Mombert, Five Books of Moses (Genesis, XXXVIII: 1), page 115:
      And it fortuned at that tyme that Iudas went from his brethren & gatt him to a man called Hira of Odollam, and there he sawe the doughter of a man called Sua a Canaanyte.
      (please add an English translation of this quote)
    • 1904, William Shakespeare, ‎Horace Howard Furness, Loves Labour's Lost, page 288:
      Ped: Iudas I am. Dum: A Iudas? Ped: Not Iscariot sir. Iudas I am ycliped Machabeus.
      (please add an English translation of this quote)

Declension

First declension, masculine Greek type with nominative singular in -ās.

Case Singular
Nominative Iūdās
Genitive Iūdae
Dative Iūdae
Accusative Iūdān
Ablative Iūdā
Vocative Iūdā

Middle English

Noun

Iudas

  1. Judas
  2. Jude
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