| Links | |
|---|---|
| etymological origin of | eng: lead |
| lexical category | verb |
| pronunciation | /ˈlæːdɑn/ |
| semantically related | ang: æl |
| semantically related | ang: ætberan |
| semantically related | ang: þicgan |
| semantically related | ang: ġebannan |
| semantically related | ang: ġieldan |
| semantically related | ang: crincgan |
| semantically related | ang: cweþan |
| semantically related | ang: dōn |
| semantically related | ang: don |
| semantically related | ang: gebannan |
| semantically related | ang: gemagian |
| semantically related | ang: gewitan |
| semantically related | ang: liesan |
| semantically related | ang: magan |
| semantically related | ang: onġietan |
| semantically related | ang: ongietan |
| semantically related | ang: ræden |
| semantically related | ang: ricsian |
| semantically related | ang: scrifan |
| semantically related | ang: secgan |
| semantically related | ang: steore |
| semantically related | ang: wealdan |
| semantically related | ang: weardian |
| semantically related | ang: wegan |
| translation | eng: conduct |
| translation | eng: convey |
| translation | eng: take |
Lexvo © 2008-2025 Gerard de Melo. Contact Legal Information / Imprint