tye
English
Etymology 1
A variant of tie.
Noun
tye (plural tyes)
- Obsolete form of tie.
- 1748, David Hume, Enquiry concerning Human Understanding., Section 3. § 6:
- the events or actions, which the writer relates, must be connected together, by some bond or tye
- (nautical) A chain or rope, one end of which passes through the mast, and is made fast to the center of a yard; the other end is attached to a tackle, by means of which the yard is hoisted or lowered.
Etymology 2
Inherited from Middle English teye (“chest, coffer”), from a combination of Old English tēah and Old French teie (both "chest").
Noun
tye (plural tyes)
Etymology 3
From Old English tīh (“plot of land”), from Proto-West Germanic *tīh. Cognate with Old Frisian ty (“thingstead”), Middle Low German tî, tigge, whence northern German Thie (“old thingstead, village square”).
Verb
tye (third-person singular simple present tyes, present participle tyeing, simple past and past participle tyed)
- Obsolete form of tie.
- 1726 October 28, [Jonathan Swift], “The Author Gives Some Account of Himself and Family, His First Inducements to Travel. […]”, in Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World. […] [Gulliver’s Travels], volume I, London: […] Benj[amin] Motte, […], →OCLC, part I (A Voyage to Lilliput), page 20:
- Nine hundred of the ſtrongeſt Men were employed to draw up theſe Cords by many Pulleys faſtned on the Poles, and thus, in leſs than three Hours, I was raiſed and flung into the Engine, and there tyed faſt.
Middle English
Sranan Tongo
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