wode

Etymology 1
From, from , from (compare 🇨🇬 > Dutch , Old High German  > German , Old Norse , 🇨🇬), from , from  (compare 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬).

Adjective

 * 1)  Mad, crazy, insane, possessed, rabid, furious, frantic.
 * 2) * a. 1588,, quoted in James Petite Andews, The History of Great Britain, published 1806
 * My hair stode up, I waxed wode, my synewes all did shake / And, as the fury had me vext, my teeth began to quake.

Etymology 2
See.

Etymology 1
From, from , from , from.

Noun

 * 1) madness, insanity, an overmastering emotion, rage, fury

Verb

 * 1) To be or go mad; be or go out of one's mind; behave wildly; be frenzied; go out of control.
 * 2) to be or become furious, enraged.
 * 1) to be or become furious, enraged.

Adverb

 * 1) frantically
 * 2) ferociously, fiercely
 * 3) intensely, furiously
 * 4) furiously enraged, irate, angry
 * He was wod wroth and wold do Thomas ... to deth. &mdash; Mirk's Festial: A Collection of Homilies by
 *  When þe wale kyng wist, he wex wode wroth. &mdash;
 *  When þe wale kyng wist, he wex wode wroth. &mdash;

Adjective

 * 1) mad, insane, possessed, furious, frantic, mentally deranged, of unsound mind, out of one's mind.
 * 2) rabid
 * 3) wild, not tamed

Derived terms

 * waxen wode
 * woden-drēm
 * woden-drēm
 * woden-drēm
 * woden-drēm

Etymology 2
From, from , from ; see wood.

Noun

 * 1)  wood material.

Verb

 * 1) To hunt.
 * 2) To take to the woods; hide oneself in the woods.