Wed WED, v.t. [L., to give bail; a league; probably both are of one
family.] 1. To marry; to take for a husband or for wife. --Since
the day I saw thee first, and wedded thee. 2. To join in marriage.
And Adam, wedded to another Eve, shall live with her-- 3. To unite
closely in affection; to attach firmly. WE are apt to be wedded to our
own customs and opinions. Men are wedded to their lusts. 4. To
unite for ever. Thou art wedded to calamity. 5. To espouse; to
take part with. They wedded his cause. WED, v.i. To marry;
to contract matrimony. When shall I wed? WED, n. A pledge.
wed verb (wedded; alsowed; wedding)
Etymology: Middle English wedden, from Old English
weddian; akin to Middle High German wetten to pledge, Old
English wedd pledge, Old High German wetti, Gothic wadi,
Latin vad-, vas bail, security Date: before 12th century
transitive verb1. to take for wife or husband by a formal ceremony ;marry2. to join in marriage 3. to unite as if by marriage: as
a. to place in close or intimate association <films that made
me conscious of the power of wedding image to music — Gerald
Early> b. to link by commitment or custom <never wed
herself to the cause> <was wed to the old ways>
intransitive verb to enter into matrimony
• weddernoun
wed v.tr. & intr. (wedding; past and past part. wedded or wed) 1 usu. formal or literary a tr. & intr. marry. b tr. join in marriage. 2 tr. unite (wed efficiency to economy). 3 tr. (as
wedded adj.) of or in marriage (wedded bliss). 4 tr. (as wedded adj.) (foll. by to) obstinately attached or devoted (to a pursuit etc.). Etymology: OE weddian to pledge f. Gmc
wed
(weds, wedded)Note: The form 'wed' is used in the present tense and is the past tense. The past
participle can be either 'wed' or 'wedded'.
If one person weds another or if two people wed or are wed, they get
married. (JOURNALISM or OLD-FASHIONED)
In 1952 she wed film director Roger Vadim...The couple wed late at night in front of just nine guests...= marry
V-RECIP: no cont, V n, pl-n Vsee alsonewlywed, wedded
wed
wed v.tr. & intr. (wedding; past and past part. wedded or wed) 1
usu. formal or literary a tr. & intr. marry. b tr. join in marriage. 2
tr. unite (wed efficiency to economy). 3 tr. (as wedded adj.) of or in
marriage (wedded bliss). 4 tr. (as wedded adj.) (foll. by to) obstinately
attached or devoted (to a pursuit etc.). [OE weddian to pledge f. Gmc]
Wed \Wed\, v. t. [imp. Wedded; p. p. Wedded or Wed; p. pr.
& vb. n. Wedding.] [OE. wedden, AS. weddian to covenant,
promise, to wed, marry; akin to OFries. weddia to promise, D.
wedden to wager, to bet, G. wetten, Icel. ve[eth]ja, Dan.
vedde, Sw. v["a]dja to appeal, Goth. gawadj[=o]n to betroth.
See Wed, n.]
1. To take for husband or for wife by a formal ceremony; to
marry; to espouse.
With this ring I thee wed. --Bk. of Com.
Prayer.
I saw thee first, and wedded thee. --Milton.
2. To join in marriage; to give in wedlock.
And Adam, wedded to another Eve, Shall live with
her. --Milton.
3. Fig.: To unite as if by the affections or the bond of
marriage; to attach firmly or indissolubly.
Thou art wedded to calamity. --Shak.
Men are wedded to their lusts. --Tillotson.
[Flowers] are wedded thus, like beauty to old age.
--Cowper.
4. To take to one's self and support; to espouse. [Obs.]
They positively and concernedly wedded his cause.
--Clarendon.
Wed \Wed\ (w[e^]d), n. [AS. wedd; akin to OFries. wed, OD.
wedde, OHG, wetti, G. wette a wager, Icel. ve[eth] a pledge,
Sw. vad a wager, an appeal, Goth. wadi a pledge, Lith.
vad[*u]ti to redeem (a pledge), LL. vadium, L. vas, vadis,
bail, security, vadimonium security, and Gr. ?, ? a prize.
Cf. Athlete, Gage a pledge, Wage.]
A pledge; a pawn. [Obs.] --Gower. Piers Plowman.
Let him be ware, his neck lieth to wed [i. e., for a
security]. --Chaucer.
wed
I. v. a.1. Marry, espouse.
2. Join in marriage, give in wedlock.
3. Attach firmly, unite closely in affection.
4. Unite forever, connect indissolubly.
II. v. n.
Marry, contract matrimony.
wed
wed v.
1 marry, espouse, get married, become husband and wife, say or take (one's) (marriage)
vows, join or unite in holy wedlock or matrimony; lead down the aisle, lead to the altar,
Archaic wive; Colloq tie the knot, get hitched, get spliced: They were wed on the fourth of July,
1921. That was when Harry wed Annabel.
2 combine, unite, ally, marry, blend, merge, join, mingle, intermingle, commingle,
coalesce, mix, intermix, amalgamate, compound, alloy, fuse, homogenize: As a chef, he is
extremely fortunate to be able to wed business to pleasure.
88 Moby Thesaurus words for "wed":
affiliate, ally, apply, arrange a match, associate, band together,
be in cahoots, be made one, be spliced, become one, bind, bracket,
bunch, bunch up, cabal, catch, cement a union, centralize, club,
club together, combine, come together, confederate, conjoin,
connect, consociate, conspire, contract matrimony, correlate,
couple, draw a parallel, equate, espouse, federalize, federate,
gang, gang up, get hitched, give away, go in partners,
go in partnership, hitch, hook up with, identify, intermarry,
interrelate, interwed, join, join forces, join fortunes with,
join together, join up with, join with, league, link, make a match,
make one, marry, match, mate, miscegenate, nuptial, organize, pair,
pair off, parallel, parallelize, partner, relate, relativize,
remarry, rewed, splice, stand together, stand up with,
take to wife, team up with, team with, throw in with, tie,
tie in with, tie up with, unionize, unite, unite in marriage,
unite with, wive, yoke
On most web browsers you can double click any word on this page to see what definitions I have for that word.
This dictionary server is not an authoratative source of information for anything. Like almost everything at sorabji.com, I set this up for my own purposes. In this case the purpose is to
browse words and ideas at random. An automatically generated page that produces 1000 Random Words
is my gateway to this resource. I also attempt a word of the day project,
in which I attempt to write something about myself starting with interesting words that I find through the Wordswarm Random Words Pages. I have made
available the complete 1828 Webster's Dictionary, which many feel is the greatest English dictionary ever published.
Other random links of mine include the Sorabji.com Random Link, which sends you to one of
over 7,000 pages on my web sites; the Face Server produces random images of
human faces; clicking the Random WAYD link shows you a random posting to my "What Are You Doing?" board; the Random USPS
Mailbox link sends you to a page with information about a random mailbox; and the random pictures page page of sorabji.com shows one of over 11,000 random images any time you load the page. On an unrelated note, I have begun making several thousand pages of legal documents searchable.