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Eed

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: eed, -eed, and -ээд

English

Proper noun

Eed

  1. Obsolete form of Eid (Muslim festival, especially Eid al-Fitr).
    • 1868 February 7, "Englishman", "Attempted Assassination of Sir Salar Jung...", Hyderabad Times, Vol. III, p. 41:
      Sir Salar Jung was proceeding to the palace of the Nizam on his bocha, a sort of state palanquin, in order to be present at the customary Eed durbar... when two shots in rapid succession were fired.
    • 1900, James George Frazer, The Golden Bough, volume 2, page 451:
      At Nauroz and Eed festivals in Dardistan the women swing on ropes suspended from trees.

References

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German Low German

Etymology

From Middle Low German êt, from Old Saxon ēth, from Proto-Germanic *aiþaz. More at oath.

Noun

Eed m (plural Eden)

  1. oath

Luxembourgish

Etymology

From Middle High German eit, from Old High German eid. Cognate with German Eid, English oath, Dutch eed, Danish ed, Icelandic eiður.

Pronunciation

Noun

Eed m (plural Eeder)

  1. oath
    • Luxembourgish translation of Matthew 5:33:
      A weider hutt dir héieren, datt deene Generatioune virun iech gesot ginn ass: Du solls kee falschen Eed doen; du solls dem Här géintiwwer deng Eeder halen!
      And again you have heard that to the generations before you it was said: You shall make no false oath; you shall make your oaths towards the Lord!

Plautdietsch

Etymology

See eed (barren)

Noun

Eed ?

  1. bareness
  2. desert
  3. desolation

Saterland Frisian

Etymology

From Old Frisian ēth, from Proto-West Germanic *aiþ. More at oath.

Noun

Eed m

  1. oath

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