sted
English
Alternative forms
- stead, stedd
Etymology
From Middle English sted, from Old English stede (“place, spot, locality”)
Noun
sted (plural steds)
- (largely obsolete) Alternative spelling of stead
- 1500, Le Bone Florence of Rome
- They dud wyth hym as wyth þe dedd; They beryed hym in a ryall stedd.
- 1590, Edmund Spenser:
- And false Duessa in her sted had borne
- 1500, Le Bone Florence of Rome
References
- Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia Supplement, Vol. XII, Page 1269, sted, steddy
Danish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stɛd/, [sd̥ɛð]
Noun
Inflection
Etymology 2
See stede (“admit into the presence (of an authority)”)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stɛːd/, [sd̥ɛːˀð], [sd̥ɛðˀ]
Middle English
Alternative forms
- stedd, stede
Etymology
From Old English stede (“a place, spot, locality”)
Noun
sted (plural steds)
- a place, spot, locality
- Paradis is a priue stedd, þar mani mirthes er e-medd. — Cursor Mundi, c1400
- The kyng in þat Roche had non sted / Where that he Myhte hyden In his hed. — The History of the Holy Grail, c1450
- a position or place occupied by someone
- helpeth vp þat adoun was y-broȝthe; to hys kynd sted — English Conquest of Ireland, 1525
- a house, property
- All men o rome sal cum ... Tak vr folk and sted wit-all ... — Cursor Mundi, c1400
- ... broght hym fro hys strenkyþfull stedd To grete Rome agayne. — Le Bone Florence of Rome, 1500
- a state, condition
- more sche hath decerved to be ded / thanne evere dyde my modyr jn ony sted. — Merlin, 1450
- It..shul stand me in gret ste [read: sted] her if it mygth be do closly and suerly. — Paston Letters, 1465
Derived terms
Derived terms
- stedfasten — to make resolute, steady; to establish a date, appoint, set
- stedfast — firm in purpose, unwavering, resolute
- stedfastnes, stedfastnesse — immutableness, permanence, support, reinforcement
- stedfastship — firmness of purpose, resolve
- stedfulen — to make rich, prosperous
- stedful — firmly put
- stedship — security
References
- Middle English Dictionary
Norwegian Bokmål
Derived terms
Related terms
Romansch
Etymology
From Latin aestās, aestātem.
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