Hamlet vs Sayd - What's the difference?
hamlet | sayd |
A small village or a group of houses.
(British) A village that does not have its own church.
Any of the fish of the genus in the family Serranidae.
(label)
:Remembrest thou what thou sayd''' yesternyght? Wylt thou abyde by the wordes agayne?'' — — ''The Bowge of Corte'' [http://www.luminarium.org/editions/bowge.htm] (' 1499 )
:What thou hast sayd to me. Ham. I must to England, you knowe that — Shakespeare, Hamlet (c. 1600)
(obsolete) said , mentioned earlier
As a noun hamlet
is a small village or a group of houses.As a verb sayd is
(label).As an adjective sayd is
(obsolete) said , mentioned earlier.hamlet
English
Noun
(en noun)Anagrams
* ----sayd
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(-)- The most excellent historie of the'' Merchant of Venice, ''with the extreme crueltie of'' Shylocke'', the Jewe, towards the sayd merchant, in cutting a just pound of his flesh, and obtaining of Portia by the choyse of three caskets... — A history of the cries of London, Ancient and modern (1884)