Eath
Origin
From Middle English ethe ("not difficult, easy"), from Old English Ä“aþe, Ä«eþe ("easy, smooth, not difficult"), from Proto-Germanic *auþijaz ("easy, pleasing"), from *auþiz ("deserted, empty"), from Proto-Indo-European *aut- ("empty, lonely"). Cognate with Scots eith ("easy"), Old Saxon Åþi ("deserted, empty"), Old High German Ådi ("empty, abandoned, easy, effortless"), Middle High German öde ("blank, vacant, easy") (German öde), Old Norse auðr ("deserted, empty"), Icelandic auð ("easy"), Gothic ðŒ°ðŒ¿ðŒ¸ðŒ´ðŒ¹ðƒ (auþeis, "desolate, deserted"). Non-Germanic cognates include Albanian vetëm ("alone") from vet ("his/her/their own, self"). More at easy.
Full definition of eath
Adjective
eath
- (Now chiefly dialectal) Easy; not hard or difficult.
- 1600, Edward Fairfax, The Jerusalem Delivered of Tasso, XIX, lxi:There, as he look'd, he saw the canvas rent,
- Through which the voice found eath and open way.
- 1609, Heywood, Troia Britanica:At these advantages he knowes 'tis eath to cope with her quite severed from her maids.
- 1847, H. Miller, First Impressions:There has been much written on the learning of Shakespeare but not much to the purpose: one of our old Scotch proverbs is worth all the dissertations on the subject I have yet seen. "God's bairns", it says, "are eath to lear", ...
Derived terms
Adverb
adverb
- (Now chiefly dialectal) Easily.
- 1823, J. Kennedy, Poems:Their food and their raiment he eith can supply.