leaved
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /liːvd/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -iːvd
Etymology 1
From Middle English leuued, levyd, equivalent to leaf + -ed.[1]
Adjective
leaved (not comparable)
Synonyms
Derived terms
- alder-leaved
- ash-leaved maple
- birch-leaved bellflower
- broad-leaved
- crinkle-leaved poison
- cross-leaved
- cut-leaved
- fig-leaved
- fig-leaved goosefoot
- flax-leaved daphne
- fork-leaved sundew
- four-leaved clover
- hawkweed-leaved saxifrage
- heart-leaved globe daisy
- heart-leaved poison
- holly-leaved banksia
- holly-leaved barberry
- holly-leaved cherry
- ivy-leaved
- kite-leaved poison
- long-leaved
- maple-leaved
- narrow-leaved mallee
- narrow-leaved poison
- net-leaved poison
- nettle-leaved goosefoot
- nettle-leaved horsemint
- oak-leaved
- parsley-leaved hawthorn
- rue-leaved
- silver-leaved bloodwood
- silver-leaved ironbark
- silver-leaved nightshade
- small leaved lilly pilly
- strawberry-leaved
- tea-leaved
- thick-leaved
- thick-leaved poison
- twin-leaved
- unleaved
- wavy-leaved eremophila
- well-leaved
- willow-leaved justicia
See also
Etymology 2
Verb
leaved
- simple past and past participle of leave (in the sense "to produce leaves or foliage")
- Obsolete form of left.
- 2024 May 9, SMii7Y, 7:55 from the start, in We Played The Weird Steam Game Again[1], spoken by SMii7Y:
- He left a landmine and he leaved… "He leaved"? Left.
References
- ^ “leaved, adj.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.