leod

English

Noun

leod (plural leod or leods)

  1. 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.

Anagrams

Middle English

Noun

leod

  1. Alternative form of led (lead)

Noun

leod

  1. Alternative form of lede (people)

Old English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /le͜oːd/

Etymology 1

Cognate with Old Norse ljóði (prince, leader).

Noun

lēod m

  1. man, chief, leader
  2. (poetic) a prince
  3. a fine for slaying a man, wergild
Declension
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Proto-West Germanic *liud(i), from Proto-Germanic *liudiz. Closely related to lēode and lēodan.

Noun

lēod f

  1. a people, people group, nation
    lēodbealunational tragedy, calamity to a people
    lēodgryregeneral terror
    lēodrihtlaw of the land
    lēodweardgovernment
    lēodhatatyrant
    lēodbisċopbishop of a shire
  2. (in compounds) one's own people; home
    lēodbyġentraffic in one's own compatriots, slave trade
    lēodwynnjoy of home
    lēodhwætbrave, valliant
  3. Alternative form of lēode
  4. a people, people group, nation
Declension
Derived terms
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