paid
English
Alternative forms
- payed (archaic)
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Verb
paid
- simple past and past participle of pay
Derived terms
Etymology 2
From Middle English paid, payd, ipaid, ypayd, past participle of Middle English paien, payen (“to pay”), equivalent to pay + -ed.
Adjective
paid (not comparable)
- That is not free of charge; that costs money.
- (slang) Having money (i.e. rich, wealthy, etc.).
- I thought his house would be nicer than this. I thought that motherf*cker was paid.
Translations
not free of charge
|
Anagrams
Ludian
Etymology
From Proto-Finnic *paita, from Proto-Germanic *paidō.
Noun
paid
Veps
Etymology
From Proto-Finnic *paita, borrowed from Proto-Germanic *paidō.
Noun
paid
- (men's) shirt
Declension
| Inflection of paid (inflection type 5/sana) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| nominative sing. | paid | ||
| genitive sing. | paidan | ||
| partitive sing. | paidad | ||
| partitive plur. | paidoid | ||
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | paid | paidad | |
| accusative | paidan | paidad | |
| genitive | paidan | paidoiden | |
| partitive | paidad | paidoid | |
| essive-instructive | paidan | paidoin | |
| translative | paidaks | paidoikš | |
| inessive | paidas | paidoiš | |
| elative | paidaspäi | paidoišpäi | |
| illative | paidaha | paidoihe | |
| adessive | paidal | paidoil | |
| ablative | paidalpäi | paidoilpäi | |
| allative | paidale | paidoile | |
| abessive | paidata | paidoita | |
| comitative | paidanke | paidoidenke | |
| prolative | paidadme | paidoidme | |
| approximative I | paidanno | paidoidenno | |
| approximative II | paidannoks | paidoidennoks | |
| egressive | paidannopäi | paidoidennopäi | |
| terminative I | paidahasai | paidoihesai | |
| terminative II | paidalesai | paidoilesai | |
| terminative III | paidassai | — | |
| additive I | paidahapäi | paidoihepäi | |
| additive II | paidalepäi | paidoilepäi | |
Welsh
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pai̯d/
- Rhymes: -ai̯d
Verb
paid
- inflection of peidio:
- third-person singular present indicative/future literary
- second-person singular imperative