slade
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English slade (“low-lying ground, a valley; a flat grassy area, glade; hollows of clouds; a creek, stream; a channel”), from Old English slæd (“valley, glade”), from Proto-West Germanic *slad, from Proto-Germanic *sladą (“glen, valley”), of uncertain origin. Perhaps from Proto-Germanic *sladaną (“to glide, slip”) or Proto-Germanic *sladdaz (“to be slack, droop”). Compare Old Norse slóð (“track, trail”).
Noun
slade (plural slades)
- (now rare or dialectal) A valley, a flat grassy area, a glade.
- 1470–1485 (date produced), Thomas Malory, “(please specify the chapter)”, in [Le Morte Darthur], book V, [London: […] by William Caxton], published 31 July 1485, OCLC 71490786; republished as H[einrich] Oskar Sommer, editor, Le Morte Darthur […], London: David Nutt, […], 1889, OCLC 890162034:
- Yet he slow in the slade of men of armys mo than syxty with his hondys.
- (please add an English translation of this quote)
- 1612, Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion song 13 p. 222:
- The thick and well-growne fogge doth matt my smoother slades,
- And on the lower Leas, as on the higher Hades
- The daintie Clover growes (of grasse the onely silke)
- That makes each Udder strout abundantly with milke.
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- (dialectal) A hillside.
Etymology 2
Unknown.
Noun
slade (plural slades)
- A spade for digging peat.
- (obsolete) The sole of a plough.
- 1945 January 29, “Pattern Prays”, in Time Magazine:
- The Bishop, wearing a gleaming cape of green and gold, raised his hand over the plough and the kneeling farmers: "God speed the plough: the beam and the mouldboard, the slade and the sidecap, the share and the coulters […] in fair weather and foul, in success and disappointment, in rain and wind, or in frost and sunshine. God speed the plough."
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