leod
English
Noun
- Alternative form of lede (“person, people”)
- 1794, Joseph Ritson, The English Anthology. - Volume 3, page 43:
- Therefore have I no lykinge with tho leods to wonne.
- 1875, Proceedings of the Liverpool Literary and Philosophical Society, page 323:
- If any of the leod were obstructed in their attendance on the king, a heavy penalty was incurred.
- 2002, Helena Hamerow, “The Forces of Production: Crop and Animal Husbandry”, in Early Medieval Settlements:
- In a world in which virtually everyone was a farmer, farming was not an 'occupation': the early medieval leod who, on the one hand, was in military service to the king, could also have fields to till.
Middle English
Old English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /le͜oːd/
Etymology 1
Cognate with Old Norse ljóði (“prince, leader”).
Declension
Derived terms
- ġelēod
- lēodsċeaþa
Etymology 2
From Proto-West Germanic *liud(i), from Proto-Germanic *liudiz. Closely related to lēode and lēodan.
Cognates
Cognates include Old High German liut, Old Norse lýðr, and West Frisian -lju; and, outside the Germanic languages, Lithuanian liáudis (“common people”), Proto-Slavic *ľudъ (Russian люд (ljud)).
Noun
lēod f
- a people, people group, nation
- lēodbealu ― national tragedy, calamity to a people
- lēodgryre ― general terror
- lēodriht ― law of the land
- lēodweard ― government
- lēodhata ― tyrant
- lēodbisċop ― bishop of a shire
- (in compounds) one's own people; home
- lēodbyġen ― traffic in one's own compatriots, slave trade
- lēodwynn ― joy of home
- lēodhwæt ― brave, valliant
- Alternative form of lēode
- a people, people group, nation
Declension
Derived terms
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