Lidded vs Lidden - What's the difference?
lidded | lidden |
Having a cover like a lid.
Having a certain type of eyelids
(archaic, dialectal) A saying, song or story.
* 1905 , Arthur Quiller-Couch, Shakespeare's Christmas and other stories , "Frenchman's Creek",
As an adjective lidded
is having a cover like a lid.As a noun lidden is
(archaic|dialectal) a saying, song or story.lidded
English
Adjective
(head)- The lidded box was much more useful than the one without the cover which allowed all the dust in.
Derived terms
* heavy-liddedAnagrams
*lidden
English
Noun
(en noun)- She kept up this lidden all through breakfast, and the meal was no sooner cleared away than she slipped on a shawl and stepped across to the churchyard to discuss the robbery.
References
*Wordnik