(“<span class="searchmatch">woad</span>”), from Proto-West Germanic *waiʀd, from Proto-Germanic *waizdaz (“<span class="searchmatch">woad</span>”), from Proto-Indo-European *woydʰ-. Cognate with Old Frisian wēd (“<span class="searchmatch">woad</span>”)...
<span class="searchmatch">woader</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">woaders</span>) A person who cultivates or dyes with <span class="searchmatch">woad</span> redowa, woreda...
See also: woadwaxens <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>-waxens plural of <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>-waxen...
<span class="searchmatch">woading</span> present participle and gerund of <span class="searchmatch">woad</span> windago...
dyer's <span class="searchmatch">woad</span> (countable and uncountable, plural dyer's <span class="searchmatch">woads</span>) A plant of species Isatis tinctoria, which is the source of the blue dye <span class="searchmatch">woad</span> used in the...
information on: Genista tinctoria Wikispecies <span class="searchmatch">woad</span> waxen From Old English wuduweaxe. <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>-waxen (plural <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>-waxens) The leguminous plant Genista tinctoria...
dyer's <span class="searchmatch">woads</span> plural of dyer's <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>...
From <span class="searchmatch">woad</span> + -ed. <span class="searchmatch">woaded</span> (comparative more <span class="searchmatch">woaded</span>, superlative most <span class="searchmatch">woaded</span>) Coloured or stained with <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>; woaden 1847, Alfred Tennyson, “Part 2”, in The...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>-waxen woadwaxen (countable and uncountable, plural woadwaxens) Alternative form of <span class="searchmatch">woad</span>-waxen....