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edder. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
edder, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
edder in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
edder you have here. The definition of the word
edder will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
edder, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English *edre, *eder, from Old English eder, edor (“hedge, fence”), from Proto-Germanic *edaraz, *eduraz (“hedge, border”). Cognate with Old High German etar.
Pronunciation
Noun
edder (plural edders)
- (usually in the plural) A long flexible stick, rod or other piece of wood worked into the top of hedge stakes, to bind them together.
1771, Arthur Young, A Course of Experimental Agriculture: Containing an Exact Register of All the Business Transacted During Five Years on Near Three Hundred Acres of Various Soils ... The Whole Stated in Near Two Thousand Original Experiments ..., page 318:[…] including the making [of] a stake and edder hedge. I had a large quantity of excellent manure out of this ditch, consisting of rotten wood, leaves, &c. &c. &c. But in this experiment I found that our stake and edder hedges are little more to be depended on than the fet ones.
1796, William Marshall, Rural Economy, I, page 196:The stake-and-edder hedge prevails in this district.
1802, John Lawrence, The New Farmer's Calendar; Or, Monthly Remembrancer, page 254:The scouring of the ditch is thrown up, a very thin stake and edder hedge is formed, and the rest of the wood made into bavins, and sold principally to bakers, at about a guinea per hundred delivered.
Verb
edder (third-person singular simple present edders, present participle eddering, simple past and past participle eddered)
- (obsolete, transitive) To bind the top of, interweaving edder.
to edder a hedge
1813, Thomas Batchelor, General View of the Agriculture of the County of Bedford, page 274:[…] hedge, with live stakes and layers cut half in two, near the ground, and intertwisted among the stakes sufficiently to maintain their position without eddering the top. The sides of the hedge are cut alternately; […]
1950, Alison Uttley, Buckinghamshire, page 5:Hazel and ash saplings make good switches, and there are many of these by the roadside, spraying like the forks of a fan. Later they will be used for "eddering" the other side of the lane.
References
- Joseph Wright, editor (1900), “EDDER”, in The English Dialect Dictionary: , volume II (D–G), London: Henry Frowde, , publisher to the English Dialect Society, ; New York, N.Y.: G[eorge] P[almer] Putnam’s Sons, →OCLC.
Etymology 2
Variant of adder.
Noun
edder (plural edders)
- An adder or snake.
1816, J. H. Hansall, The Stranger in Chester:winges like a bird she hase,
Fete as an edder, a mayden's face,
Her kinde I'll take
References
Anagrams
Danish
Etymology
From Old Danish etær, from Old Norse eitr, from Proto-Germanic *aitrą, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂oyd-, *h₂eyd-.
Cognates
Icelandic eitur, Faroese eitur, English atter, (UK, dialectal), Elfdalian ietter, and Dutch etter
Pronunciation
Noun
edder c (singular definite edderen, not used in plural form)
- (chiefly poetic), poison "especially snake poison".
- (archaic), inflammation in one's bones.
Inflection
Synonyms
Derived terms
References