Gelt
Pronunciation
- UK IPA: /ɡɛlt/
Origin 1
From Irish geilt.
Full definition of gelt
Noun
gelt
(plural gelts)- (rare) A lunatic.
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, IV.7:She ... like a ghastly Gelt whose wits are reaved,
Ran forth in hast with hideous outcry ...
Origin 2
Variation of gilt.
Origin 3
From Middle English, from gelden ("to geld, castrate"). More at geld.
Verb
- Form of Simple past and past participle
Origin 4
From Middle High German gelt (Modern German Geld), from Old High German gelt ("payment, money"), from Proto-Germanic *geldą ("reward, gift, money"), from Proto-Indo-European *gheldh- ("to pay"). Reinforced by Yiddish געלט (gelt). Cognate with native geld, Dutch geld ("money"), Danish gjæld ("debt"), Swedish gäld ("debt").
Noun
gelt
(usually uncountable; plural gelts)- (slang) Money.
- 1948, William Burroughs, letter, 5 Jun 1948:Have bought some farm land in Rio Grande Valley which should bring in a sizeable bundle of gelts come cotton picking time.
- tribute; tax
- FullerAll these the king granted unto them ... free from all gelts and payments, in a most full and ample manner.
Origin 5
From Yiddish געלט (gelt). See above for more.