Crossword-Solution: ABRAID 6 letters, 2 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 9

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Abraid v. t. & i. To awake; to arouse; to stir or start up; also, to
shout out.

Anagrams

Word Anagrams
ABRAID anagram BADAIR, BARDIA

We have 2 clues for the answer “ABRAID”

Clue Answers
Waken 38 answers
awake 65 answers
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ERTEA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
15 +1

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Sentences with ABRAID (5)

XXXI As when, from sleep and idle dreams abraid, A man awaked calls home his wits again; So in beholding his attire he played, But yet to view himself could not sustain, His looks he downward cast and naught he said, Grieved, shamed, sad, he would have died fain, And oft he wished the earth or ocean wide Would swallow him, and so his errors hide.
Jerusalem Delivered Torquato Tasso 1995
And since I shall have none amendement Against my loss, I will have easement: By Godde’s soul, it shall none, other be.” This John answer’d; Alein, *avise thee*: *have a care* The miller is a perilous man,” he said, “And if that he out of his sleep abraid*, *awaked He mighte do us both a villainy*.” *mischief Alein answer’d; “I count him not a fly.
The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer 2000
And she for wonder took of it no keep;* *notice She hearde not what thing he to her said: She far’d as she had start out of a sleep, Till she out of her mazedness abraid.* *awoke “Griseld’,” quoth he, “by God that for us died, Thou art my wife, none other I have, Nor ever had, as God my soule save.
The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer 2000
This man out of his sleep for fear abraid;* *started But when that he was wak’d out of his sleep, He turned him, and *took of this no keep;* *paid this no attention* He thought his dream was but a vanity.
The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer 2000
And therewith I anon abraid* *awoke Out of my sleepe, half afraid; Rememb’ring well what I had seen, And how high and far I had been In my ghost; and had great wonder Of what the mighty god of thunder Had let me know; and gan to write Like as ye have me heard endite.
The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer 2000