Wt/sco/tree

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Wt > sco > tree

Scots[edit | edit source]

A tree structur

Noon[edit | edit source]

tree (plural trees)

  1. A lairge plant, nae exactly defined, but teepically ower fower meters in hicht, wi a single trunk which growes in girst with age and brainches (that an aa grow in circumference wi age).

Verb[edit | edit source]

tae Wt/sco/tree (third-person singular simple present -, present participle -, simple past -, past participle -)

  1. Tae support wi timmer or props.

Inglis[edit | edit source]

Etymology[edit | edit source]

Frae Middle Inglis tree, tre, treo, treou, trew, trow, frae Old English trēo, trēow (tree, wid, timmer, beam, log, stake, stick, grove, cross, rood), frae Proto-Germanic *trewą (tree, wid), frae pre-Germanic *dréu̯om, thematic e-grade derivative o Proto-Indo-European *dóru (tree).

Pronunciation[edit | edit source]

Noon[edit | edit source]

tree (plural Wt/sco/trees or (obsolete) treen)

  1. tree

Hypernyms[edit | edit source]

Hyponyms[edit | edit source]

Synonyms[edit | edit source]

See an aa[edit | edit source]

Verb[edit | edit source]

tree (third-person singular semple praisent Wt/sco/trees, praisent pairteeciple Wt/sco/treeing, simple past and past participle Wt/sco/treed)

  1. (transitive) Tae chase (an ainimal or person) up a tree.

Stateestics[edit | edit source]

Anagrams[edit | edit source]


Dutch[edit | edit source]

Alternative forms[edit | edit source]

Pronunciation[edit | edit source]

Noun[edit | edit source]

tree m (plural treeën or Wt/sco/trees, diminutive treetje n)

  1. stap (o a stair)

Anagrams[edit | edit source]


North Frisian[edit | edit source]

Etymology[edit | edit source]

Frae Old Frisian thrē.

Numeral[edit | edit source]

tree

  1. (Heligoland) three