gwydh
Cornish
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle Cornish gueyth, from Old Cornish guiden sg, from Proto-Brythonic *gwɨð, from Proto-Celtic *widus. Cognate with Breton gwez, Irish and Scottish Gaelic fiodh, Manx fuygh, and Welsh gwŷdd.
Noun
gwydh f (collective, singulative gwedhen)
Derived terms
- alamandwydh (“almond trees”)
- baywydh (“bay trees”)
- gwelswydh Johnson (“grass trees”)
- gwerthyswydh (“spindle trees”)
- gwydh a nev (“trees of heaven”)
- gwydh banana (“banana trees”)
- gwydh bulhorn del lowr (“laurel leaved snail trees”)
- gwydh gwernis (“pride of India”)
- gwydh katsura (“katsura trees”)
- gwydh kleghergh (“snowbell trees”)
- gwydh kloutwyn (“handkerchief trees”)
- gwydh knowaskellen an Kaukasos (“Caucasian wing-nuts”)
- gwydh krabbys (“crab apples”)
- gwydh lymmaval (“lemon trees”)
- gwydh magnol (“magnolia trees”)
- gwydh Magnol padellik (“saucer magnolias”)
- gwydh manek lowarn (“foxglove trees”)
- gwydh Nadelik (“Christmas trees”)
- gwydh owraval (“orange trees”)
- gwydh owraval hweg (“sweet orange trees”)
- gwydh pennaskel (“Indian bean-trees”)
- gwydh rudh (“dawn redwoods”)
- gwydh sevi (“strawberry trees”)
- gwydh tulyfant (“tulip trees”)
- gwydh Yudas (“Judas trees”)
- gwydhbol (“chess”)
- gwydhek (“woodland”)
- gwydhlan, lowarth gwydh (“arboretum”)
- gwydhvos (“honeysuckle”)
- gwydhyel (“wooded”)
- kemyskwydh sim, pinwydh Chile (“monkey puzzle trees”)
- kereswydh (“cherry trees”)
- lugarnwydh Chile (“Chilean lantern trees”)
- morwydh (“mulberry trees”)
- redenwydh medhel (“tree ferns”)
- skeuswydh (“privets”)