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wade
1[weyd]
verb (used without object)
to walk in water, when partially immersed.
He wasn't swimming, he was wading.
to play in water.
The children were wading in the pool most of the afternoon.
to walk through water, snow, sand, or any other substance that impedes free motion or offers resistance to movement.
to wade through the mud.
to make one's way slowly or laboriously (often followed bythrough ).
to wade through a dull book.
Obsolete., to go or proceed.
verb (used with object)
to pass through or cross by wading; ford.
to wade a stream.
noun
an act or instance of wading.
We went for a wade in the shallows.
verb phrase
wade in / into
to begin energetically.
to attack strongly.
to wade into a thoughtless child; to wade into a mob of rioters.
Wade
2[weyd]
noun
Benjamin Franklin, 1800–78, U.S. lawyer and antislavery politician.
a male given name.
wade
1/ weɪd /
verb
to walk with the feet immersed in (water, a stream, etc)
the girls waded the river at the ford
to proceed with difficulty
to wade through a book
(intr; foll by in or into) to attack energetically
noun
the act or an instance of wading
Wade
2/ weɪd /
noun
( Sarah ) Virginia. born 1945, English tennis player; won three Grand Slam singles titles: US Open (1968), Australian Open (1972), and Wimbledon (1977)
Other Word Forms
- unwaded adjective
- unwading adjective
- wadable adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of wade1
Word History and Origins
Origin of wade1
Example Sentences
Wade overturned in 2022, which would have made him happy, and the right still hates the same people he hated, so there was probably some satisfaction in that.
“I mean, we were fighting so hard ... for Roe vs. Wade, and we got it through,” she said of the landmark Supreme Court decision on women’s reproductive rights in 1973.
Luke Littler has become the fifth player to complete darts' Triple Crown by beating James Wade 18-13 in the World Matchplay final in Blackpool.
Wade has made the final six times previously, with his sole win coming 18 years ago.
Wade Crowfoot, the state’s natural resources secretary, said the approach outlined under the plan will “improve the health of our rivers by both restoring river flows and revitalizing habitat.”
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