tid

Etymology

 * possibly a, from 🇨🇬, . More at.

Adjective

 * 1)  tender; soft; nice

Etymology
From, from , cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) time

Etymology
From, from , from , from. Cognates include Föhr-Amrum North Frisian, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  time

Etymology
From, from , from , from.

Noun

 * 1) time
 * 2) an age or era

Etymology 1
From, from , from , from.

Noun
(dative form )


 * 1) time
 * 2) an age or era

Etymology 2
From, from.

Adjective

 * 1)  frequent

Etymology
From, from , from.

Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, and 🇨🇬; see also modern cognates at.

Noun

 * 1) time in general
 * 2) time as a defined period or span, particularly:
 * 3) a tide, a fourth of the day or night
 * 4) an hour, a twelfth of the day or night
 * 5) a season, a fourth of the year
 * 6)  an age, an era
 * 7) the hour, the moment determined by a sundial or other device marking the division between the tides or hours
 * 8)  the religious service held at a canonical hour, four of which were equivalent to the daylight tides
 * 9) the season, the favorable or proper period for an action, especially with regard to farming or  the holy seasons of the liturgical year
 * 10) the time, the hour, the favorable, proper, or allotted moment for an action or event, the occasion when something can or ought to be done
 * 11) a commemoration; an anniversary; a festival, especially a saint's day
 * 12)  tense, the time indicated by the form of a verb
 * 1) the time, the hour, the favorable, proper, or allotted moment for an action or event, the occasion when something can or ought to be done
 * 2) a commemoration; an anniversary; a festival, especially a saint's day
 * 3)  tense, the time indicated by the form of a verb
 * 1)  tense, the time indicated by the form of a verb

Usage notes
Frequently suffixed to a period of day or season to show consideration of it as a span of time, as modern English -  or archaic 🇨🇬.

Although tīd was used for natural cycles of time, it was apparently not used for the cycles of the ocean and other large bodies of water until Middle English (c.1340). The Old English terms for the tide were instead and.

Derived terms

 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide
 * Eastertide

Etymology
From, , from , from , from.

Noun

 * 1)  time
 * 2) time, period, era

Noun

 * 1) instruction act of teaching, or that which is taught