Etymology
From Middle English elde , from Old English ieldu , eldo , ieldo ( “ age, period of time; period; time of life, years; mature or old age, eld; an age of the world, era, epoch ” ) , from Proto-West Germanic * aldī , from Proto-Germanic * alþį̄ ( “ eld, age ” ) , from * aldaz ( “ grown up, mature, old ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European * h₂eltós , from * h₂el- ( “ to raise, feed ” ) .
Cognate with Scots eild ( “ age ” ) , North Frisian jelde ( “ age ” ) , German Älte ( “ age ” ) , Danish ælde ( “ eld, age ” ) , Icelandic elli ( “ eld, age ” ) . Related also to Gothic 𐌰𐌻𐌳𐍃 ( alds , “ generation, age ” ) , Old English alan ( “ to grow up, nourish ” ) . More at old .
Noun
eld (uncountable )
( rare or dialectal ) One's age , age in years, period of life.
1868 , John Eadie, A Biblical Cyclopædia :The experience of many years gave old men peculiar qualification for various offices; and elders, or men of a ripe or advanced eld or age, were variously employed under the Mosaic law.
1913 , Paulist Fathers, Catholic World :Promptly appeared a paragon, aged twenty-five or thereabouts, and exhibiting all the steadiness and serenity of advanced eld .
( archaic or poetic ) Old age , senility ; an old person.
Synonyms: elderliness ; see also Thesaurus:old age , Thesaurus:old person
1590 , Edmund Spenser , “Book II, Canto III”, in The Faerie Queene. [ … ] , London: [ … ] [ John Wolfe ] for William Ponsonbie , →OCLC , page 223 :Dotard, (ſaide he) let be thy deepe aduiſe; Seemes that through many yeares thy wits thee faile, And that weake eld hath left thee nothing wiſe, Els neuer ſhould thy iudgement be ſo frayle, To meaſure manhood by the ſword or mayle.
1847 , R[ alph] W[ aldo] Emerson , “Threnody”, in Poems , Boston, Mass.: James Munroe and Company, →OCLC , page 245 :Taught he not thee—the man of eld , / Whose eyes within his eyes beheld / Heaven's numerous hierarchy span / The mystic gulf from God to man?
1904 , Dante Gabriel Rossetti , The Sun's Shame , verse 2, lines 1–3 :As some true chief of men, bowed down with stress Of life's disastrous eld , on blossoming youth May gaze, and murmur with self-pity and ruth [ …]
1912 , Herbert Van Allen Ferguson, Rhymes of Eld :The withered limbs of eld , the thin, gray hair [ …]
1912 , Arthur S[ anders] , transl. Way, Medea , Heinemann, translation of Medea by Euripides , published 1946 , page 329 :the alien wife / No crown of honour was as eld drew on.
( archaic or poetic ) Time ; an age , an indefinitely long period of time.
Synonyms: see Thesaurus:eon
( archaic or poetic ) Former ages, antiquity , olden times.
Synonyms: days of yore ; see also Thesaurus:the past
1891 , Mary Noailles Murfree, In the "Stranger People's" Country , Nebraska, published 2005 , page 38 :Once adown the dewy way a youthful cavalier spurred with a maiden mounted behind him, swiftly passing out of sight, recalling to the imagination some romance of eld , when the damosel fled with her lover.
Verb
eld (third-person singular simple present elds , present participle elding , simple past and past participle elded )
( intransitive , archaic , poetic or dialectal ) To age , become or grow old .
( intransitive , archaic or poetic ) To delay ; linger .
( transitive , archaic or poetic ) To make old , age .
References
1906, The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, "eld".
Noun
eld m (definite singular elden , uncountable )
fire
Mange kulturar har mytar om korleis dei vart herre over elden . Many cultures have myths about how they mastered fire .
fire (firing bullets or other projectiles )
Fienden opna eld . The enemy opened fire .
Usage notes
Eld is mainly used about the abstract concept of fire. The accidental occurrence of fire, such as a fire in a building, is brann .
References
“eld” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .
Noun
ēld m
fire
Declension
More information singular, plural ...
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Declension of
ēld (masculine a-stem)
eld
Noun
eld c
( uncountable ) fire (continued chemical exothermic reaction where a gaseous material reacts, and which creates enough heat to evaporate more combustible material)
1999 , Ken Ring , Jojje Wadenius (lyrics and music), “Eld och djupa vatten [ Fire and deep waters] ”, in Vägen tillbaka [ The way back ] :Men, ska jag säga: Akta dig för eld och djupa vatten. Men, ska jag säga: Spring aldrig, aldrig bort från mig. But, I will [shall] say: Beware of fire and deep waters. But, I will say: Never ever run away from me.
a fire (something set up to burn, like a campfire or bonfire )
( uncountable , alchemy ) fire (one of the classical, or basic, elements)
( uncountable ) fire (in-flight projectiles or the like from a weapon)
Ge eld ! Fire! [Give fire !]
Declension
More information nominative, genitive ...
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