- gemǽdan
- wv/t1b to make mad or foolish; past part gemǽd, gemǽded
Old to modern English dictionary. 2013.
Old to modern English dictionary. 2013.
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mad — [13] The underlying etymological meaning of mad is ‘changed’. It goes back ultimately to Indo European *moitó , a past participial form based on *moi , *mei , ‘change’ (source also of Latin mūtāre ‘change’, from which English gets mutate).… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
mad — {{11}}mad (adj.) late 13c., from O.E. gemædde (pl.) out of one s mind (usually implying also violent excitement), also foolish, extremely stupid, earlier gemæded rendered insane, pp. of a lost verb *gemædan to make insane or foolish, from P.Gmc.… … Etymology dictionary
mad — [13] The underlying etymological meaning of mad is ‘changed’. It goes back ultimately to Indo European *moitó , a past participial form based on *moi , *mei , ‘change’ (source also of Latin mūtāre ‘change’, from which English gets mutate).… … Word origins