feid
Norwegian Bokmål
Verb
feid
- imperative of feide (verb infinitive)
- past participle of feie
Adjective
feid
- condition of being swept
Usage notes
A great number of verbs can be used as adjectives when inflected to the past participle, but far from all of them are used in this sense. The word feid is mostly used in the sense of something sweeping in the past (as a verb), as in:Jeg har feid gulvet fem ganger i dag = I have swept the floor five times today, where har is the auxiliary verb.
Old French
Noun
feid f (oblique plural feiz or feitz, nominative singular feid, nominative plural feiz or feitz)
- (early Anglo-Norman) Alternative spelling of foi
Scots
Alternative forms
- fead, feed, fede, feide, fiede
Etymology
From Early Scots fede (cognate with Middle English fede), from Old English fǣhþ, fǣhþu, fǣhþo (“hostility, enmity, violence, revenge, vendetta”), from Proto-Germanic *faihiþō (“hatred, enmity”), from Proto-Indo-European *pAik-, *pAig- (“ill-meaning, wicked”). Cognate with Scots feud and German Fehde.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈfiːd/, /ˈfid/
Noun
feid (plural feids)
- (archaic) A feud, enmity, carrying-on of hostility.