hende

See also: hendé

English

Etymology

From Old English ġehende.

Adjective

hende (comparative more hende, superlative most hende)

  1. (obsolete) Near, close at hand, handy.
  2. (obsolete) Courteous, gracious.
    • Late 14th century: Oure Hoost þo spak, “A, sire, ye sholde be hende / And curteys, as a man of youre estaat” — Geoffrey Chaucer, ‘The Friar's Prologue’, Canterbury Tales (OUP 1988, p. 122)
    • 14th century: And if he were so hende and so wis / Þat she ne myȝt al abate his pris, / Yit wolde she blame his worþynesse / Or by hir wordis make it lesse. — Geoffrey Chaucer, The Romaunt of the Rose (OUP 1988, p. 689-90)

Danish

Pronoun

hende (nominative hun, possessive hendes)

  1. (personal) her (objective case of hun (she))

See also


Middle English

Etymology 1

From Old English ende.

Noun

hende

  1. Alternative form of ende (end)

Etymology 2

From Old English æned.

Noun

hende

  1. Alternative form of ende (duck)

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Old Norse henda

Verb

hende (present tense hender, past tense hendte, past participle hendt)

  1. to happen, occur

Derived terms

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Old Norse henda

Verb

hende (present tense hender, past tense hende, past participle hendt, passive infinitive hendast, present participle hendande, imperative hend)

  1. to happen, occur

Alternative forms

References



Papiamentu

Etymology

From Portuguese gente and Spanish gente and Kabuverdianu gentis.

Noun

hende

  1. man (human being)
  2. person
  3. someone
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