<span class="searchmatch">dadding</span> present participle and gerund of <span class="searchmatch">dad</span>...
dadge <span class="searchmatch">dad</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">dads</span>) A lump or piece. A blow; act of striking something. <span class="searchmatch">dad</span> (third-person singular simple present <span class="searchmatch">dads</span>, present participle <span class="searchmatch">dadding</span>, simple...
*dʰéh₁tis. <span class="searchmatch">dáð</span> f deed valour energy Icelandic: <span class="searchmatch">dáð</span> Faroese: <span class="searchmatch">dáð</span> Norwegian Nynorsk: <span class="searchmatch">dåd</span> f or m Jamtish: <span class="searchmatch">dáð</span> Elfdalian: <span class="searchmatch">dåð</span> Old Swedish: dāþ Swedish: <span class="searchmatch">dåd</span> n Old...
Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">dad</span>" Proprialisation of <span class="searchmatch">dad</span>. IPA(key): /dæd/ Homophone: <span class="searchmatch">dad</span> Rhymes: -æd <span class="searchmatch">Dad</span> (informal) One’s father. Synonyms: Daddy, Father <span class="searchmatch">Dad</span> told me to...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">dāds</span> and <span class="searchmatch">dåds</span> IPA(key): /dædz/ Rhymes: -ædz <span class="searchmatch">dads</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">dad</span> AD&Ds, DASD, SADD, adds...
<span class="searchmatch">dades</span> third-person singular simple present indicative of dade addes, deads, saded <span class="searchmatch">dades</span> plural of dada <span class="searchmatch">dades</span> f pl (obsolete) feminine plural of dat dades...
See also: Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">dad</span>" From Old Danish dāth, from Old Norse <span class="searchmatch">dáð</span>, from Proto-Germanic *dēdiz, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰéh₁tis, from...
See also: Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">dad</span>" First attested in 1283. From the repeated -d (diminutive suffix). Originally, it was a diminutive suffix (cf. kisded)...
dad- undo, un-, dis- <span class="searchmatch">dad</span>- + pacio (“to pack”) → dadbacio (“to unpack”) <span class="searchmatch">dad</span>- + gwneud (“to do”) → <span class="searchmatch">dad</span>-wneud (“to undo”) <span class="searchmatch">dad</span>- + llwytho (“to load”)...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">dåder</span> From Dutch <span class="searchmatch">dader</span>. Equivalent to daad (“deed”) + -er. IPA(key): /ˈdɑːdər/ <span class="searchmatch">dader</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">daders</span>) perpetrator 16th century, back-formation...