stead

noun
/stɛd/

Etymology

From Middle English sted, stede (noun) and steden (verb), from Old English stede, from Proto-Germanic *stadiz (“place”), from Proto-Indo-European *stéh₂tis (“standing, location”). Doublet of stad. cognates and related terms Cognate with Scots steid (“location, place”), North Frisian Stair, Stat, steed, stää (“city, town; place, stead”), Saterland Frisian Steede (“place, stead”), Stääd (“city, town”), West Frisian stêd (“city, town”), Bavarian Stådt (“city, town”), Dutch stad, stede (“city, town”), German Stadt (“city, town”), Statt (“abode, place, stead”), Stätte (“place, spot, venue”), German Low German Stee (“location, place”), Luxembourgish Stad (“city, town”), Vilamovian śtaod (“city, town”), Yiddish שטאָט (shtot, “city, town”), Danish, Norwegian Bokmål stad (“city, town”), sted (“place”), Faroese stað (“place”), staður (“location, place; town”), Icelandic staður (“location, place”), Norn sta (“domicile, farm”), Norwegian Nynorsk stad (“place; city, town”), Swedish stad, stadh, stedt (“city, town”), Gothic 𐍃𐍄𐌰𐌸𐍃 (staþs, “location, place”). See the doublet stasis.

  1. inherited from *stéh₂tis
  2. inherited from *stadiz
  3. inherited from stede
  4. inherited from sted

Definitions

  1. The position or function (of someone or something), as taken on by a successor.

    • She was so wretched and so vehement, complained so much of injustice in being expected to go away instead of Anne; Anne, who was nothing to Louisa, while she was her sister, and had the best right to stay in Henrietta's stead!
    • His nurse had told him all about changelings, and how the little people would always try to steal a beautiful human child out of its cradle and put in its stead one of their own ailing, puking brats […]
    • Had Daniel Ortega not got himself illegally on to this year’s ballot to seek a third term, his wife might have run in his stead.
  2. A place as it relates to a role, service, or ability

    A place as it relates to a role, service, or ability; capacity.

    • One may not expect to entirely stop the oncoming energy but the outgoing stands in a different stead, for in this a certain amount of ruling is possible by the native.
    • He had intended to create diamonds with his experiments, but the accidental discovery of such amazingly explosive chemical reactions served him in a different stead.
  3. A relational or circumstantial position

    A relational or circumstantial position; standing.

    • Though small and delicate-looking, she gave an impression of intense earnestness and latent toughness, qualities that stood her in good stead when she dared to challenge the most intrusive communist society in eastern Europe.
  4. + 11 more definitions
    1. A place as it relates to situation, circumstance, or status

      A place as it relates to situation, circumstance, or status; condition.

      • Anthropology in India started in a different stead than what was the situation of its emergence in other countries.
      • I shiver to the cold solitude Overwhelming desire to have a different stead I don't know why I don't know why I'm just afraid to fly […]
      • It is not only the sheer size of its endowment or the range and extent of its network ties that place it in a different stead to other unofficial actors.
    2. A place, or spot, in general

      A place, or spot, in general; location.

      • For he ne wonneth in one certaine stead, / But restlesse walketh all the world around[…].
      • The three Princes ceased not travelling together for seven days, at the end of which time one said to other, "Let us separate and let each make search in a different stead, so haply shall we hit upon our need."
      • "[…] I went to another stead in the yard to be further from her cries."
    3. A place where a person normally rests

      A place where a person normally rests; a seat.

      • There now the hart, fearlesse of greyhound, feeds, / And loving pelican in safety breeds; / There shrieking satyres fill the people's emptie steads.
    4. An inhabited place

      An inhabited place; a settlement, city, town etc.

    5. An estate, a property with its grounds

      An estate, a property with its grounds; a farm; a homestead.

      • But of course I could not do this by myself, so I took a Hottentot—a very clever man when he was not drunk—who lived on the stead, into my confidence.
      • Nordic types may turn to Frigga as queen mother of Asgard, or even to good friend Thor, known to gladly bless a new stead and to party with the best.
      • Only when he reached the stead road, and Wildebeast, did he concentrate on the image of carrion, of food for the sandwolf pack.
    6. The frame on which a bed is laid

      The frame on which a bed is laid; a bedstead.

      • The genial bed / Sallow the feet, the borders, and the stead.
    7. To help, support, benefit or assist

      To help, support, benefit or assist; to be helpful.

      • May you stead me? will you pleasure me? shall I know your answer?
      • I could never better stead thee than now.[…]
    8. To fill the stead or place of something.

    9. One's partner in a romantic relationship.

      • C'mon lah!! Wake up.. Y R U stupid girls so CHEAP!! Imagine a baby making out with an adult! Want to have stead,.. Go find 1 16yr old rich kid lah!! At for let those men take advantage!! Remember Men CANNOT be Trusted!! Boys maybe can.
      • I prefer to know a guy better as a friend first before even considering him as a potential stead.
      • One of the best dates I had was with his person who did attempt to impress me with expensive gifts or flowers. My date did asked though but I said no because for somebody who's not my stead and I dun feel there was a need to.
    10. A surname.

    11. A locality in Burley parish, Metropolitan Borough of Bradford, West Yorkshire, England…

      A locality in Burley parish, Metropolitan Borough of Bradford, West Yorkshire, England (OS grid ref SE1446).

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at stead. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01stead02ability03suitableness04suitable05sufficient06enough07fully08intensifier09agent10behalf

A definitional loop anchored at stead. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

10 hops · closes at stead

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA