Yete vs Yede - What's the difference?
yete | yede |
(obsolete) (go)
(obsolete or literary humouro) To go. (Used as a pseudo-archaism by 16th-century poets and their imitators.)
* 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , II.iii:
As verbs the difference between yete and yede
is that yete is ("to melt, found") while yede is (obsolete) (go).yede
English
Verb
(head)- The whiles on foot was forced for to yeed , / With that blacke Palmer, his most trusty guide [...].