haid
See also: Haid, häid, and Häid
English
Noun
haid (plural haids)
- Pronunciation spelling of head.
Anagrams
- Hadi, dahi
Estonian
Noun
haid
- partitive singular of hai
Indonesian
Etymology
From Malay haid, from Arabic حَيْض (ḥayḍ, “menstruation”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈhaɪt]
- Hyphenation: ha‧id
Noun
haid (first-person possessive haidku, second-person possessive haidmu, third-person possessive haidnya)
- menstruation, the periodic discharging of the menses, the flow of blood and cells from the lining of the uterus in unfertilized females of humans and other primates.
- Synonyms: datang bulan, menstruasi
Further reading
- “haid” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Language Development and Fostering Agency — Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic Indonesia, 2016.
Malay
Etymology
From Arabic حَيْض (ḥayḍ, “menstruation”).
Noun
haid (Jawi spelling حيض, plural haid-haid, informal 1st possessive haidku, 2nd possessive haidmu, 3rd possessive haidnya)
- menstruation
Descendants
- → Indonesian: haid
Romanian
Interjection
haid
- Alternative form of haide
Welsh
Etymology
From Middle Welsh heyd, from Proto-Celtic *sati- (“swarm, throng”), from Proto-Indo-European *sh₂tis (“satiation, satisfaction”), from *seh₂- (“to satiate, be satisfied”) (compare Cornish hes, Breton hed).[1]
Noun
haid f (plural heidiau, not mutable)
- swarm (of bees, children)
- flock of geese
- horde
- Synonyms: torf, lliaws, llu
- crowd, drove (of people), shoal of people
- Synonyms: twr, torf, llu
Derived terms
- heidio (“to flock, to swarm”)
Compounds
- blaenhaid
- cyntaid
References
- Ranko Matasović, “Addenda et corrigenda to Ranko Matasović’s Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Celtic (Brill, Leiden 2009)”, s.v. “*sati-, *satyo-” (Zagreb: 2011), 33.