Wade
See also: wade
English
Etymology
From Old English wæd (“a ford”).
Proper noun
Wade
- A topographic surname.
- A male given name, transferred from the surname.
- 1936, Margaret Mitchell, Gone with the Wind, Chapter VII:
- In due time, Charles' son was born and, because it was fashionable to name boys after their fathers' commanding officers, he was called Wade Hampton Hamilton.
- 1936, Margaret Mitchell, Gone with the Wind, Chapter VII:
- A system of romanization for the Chinese language based on 19th-century Pekingese pronunciation, worked out by Thomas Wade.
Usage notes
Technically, Wade should only refer to the system of Chinese romanization developed by Thomas Wade prior to the contributions and adjustments made by Herbert Giles. In practice, it was often used as a shorthand for the more proper term Wade-Giles.
Synonyms
- (romanization): Wade-Giles
Derived terms
German
Etymology
From Middle High German wade, from Old High German wado, from Proto-Germanic *waþwô (“curve; muscle; calf of the leg”), from Proto-Indo-European *wat- (“curved”).
Pronunciation
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -aːdə
Declension
Further reading
- Wade in Duden online
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