Bode vs Bede - What's the difference?
bode | bede |
To indicate by signs, as future events; to be the omen of; to portend; to presage; to foreshow.
To foreshow something; to augur.
* Dryden
An omen; a foreshadowing.
* Chaucer
(obsolete, or, dialect) A bid; an offer.
A messenger; a herald.
A stop; a halting; delay.
(bide)
* Tennyson
prayer, request, supplication
* 1875 March, in Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science , Volume 15 Number 87:
* 1885 , Richard F. Burton, The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night :
* 2008 , Time to Ditch St. George :
* 2011 , Where Did Beaded Flowers Come From? :
order, command
rosary
pray, offer, proffer
* 1500 , The Towneley Plays :
request, demand, order, command, forbid
proclaim, declare
* (rfdate) Le Mort Arthur :
present, counsel, advise, rede, exhort
* 1450 , Merlin :
As a proper noun bode
is .As an adjective bede is
motherless.bode
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) boden, from (etyl) ). : Since 1740 also a shortening of forebodeVerb
(bod)- Whatever now / The omen proved, it boded well to you.
Derived terms
* bodementNoun
(en noun)- The owl eke, that of death the bode bringeth.
- (Sir Walter Scott)
- (Robertson)
Etymology 2
*Verb
(head)- There that night they bode .
References
* [http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=bode&searchmode=none]Anagrams
* English irregular simple past forms ----bede
English
Alternative forms
* beadEtymology 1
From (etyl) , from (etyl). Cognate with (etyl) gebed and bede, (etyl) Gebet.Noun
(en-noun)- Thus originated the alms-(or bede -) houses so frequently met with in the retired villages of England.
- By Allah thy bede is good indeed and right is thy rede!
- because miracles had frequently been done at his burial-place, even at the bede -house where he was buried.
- Because of the length of the original rosary, it became customary to pay someone, usually a resident of an almshouse, to recite the prayers. These people were referred to as bede women or men, and it was they who made the first bead flowers.
Etymology 2
From (etyl) . See also (l).Verb
- Sir, a bargan bede I you.
- A turnement were best to bede .
- They of londone boden hem to ben lyht of herte.
