hade

Etymology 1
From, , , , from , from , from , from. Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬 "honour, dignity" (whence 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬), 🇨🇬. Same as.

Noun

 * 1)  State; order, estate, rank, degree, or quality.

Etymology 2
. Perhaps from a dialectal form of.

Verb

 * 1)  To slope or incline from the vertical.

Noun

 * 1)  A slope;  the slope of a vein, fault or dike from the vertical; the complement of the dip.
 * 2) * 1612, Michael Drayton, ', quoted in 1914', William Holden Hutton, Highways and Byways in Shakespeare's Country'', page 34:
 * The thick and well-growne fogge doth matt my smoother shades,
 * And on the lower Leas, as on the higher Hades
 * The daintie Clover growes (of grass the onely silke)
 * That makes each Udder strout abundantly with milke.

Etymology 3
Probably a dialectal or variant form of.

Noun

 * 1)  A headland; a strip of land at the side of a field upon which a plough may be turned.
 * 2) * 1615, in a Map in Corpus Christi College, Oxon, quoted in Wright's English Dialect Dictionary:
 * [...] certeine arable landes some of them havinge hades of meadow and grasse grounde lieinge in the Southe fielde of Einsham.
 * 1) * 1635, Terrier, quoted in Wright's English Dialect Dictionary:
 * 6 rodes with hades at both ends. 2 Landes 4 ro. with hades.
 * 1) * 1534 [original], Anthony Fitzherbert, Husbandry, republished as Ancient Tracts concerning the Management of landed Property, republished, in The Monthly Review, or Journal (1767), page 270:
 * And oxen wyl plowe in tough cley [...] And whereas is now suerall pastures, there the horse plowe is better, for the horses may be teddered, or tyed upon leys, balkes, or hades, whereas oxen may not be kept: and it is used to tedder them, but in fewe places.

Etymology
From.

Verb

 * 1) to hate

Etymology 1
From.

Etymology 2
From.