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Origin and history of lade

lade(v.)

Old English hladan (past tense hlod, past participle gehladen) "to load, heap up, burden" (the general Germanic sense), also "to draw or take up water" (a meaning peculiar to English), from Proto-Germanic *hlathan- (source also of Old Norse hlaða "to pile up, load, especially a ship," Old Saxon hladan, Middle Dutch and Dutch laden, Old Frisian hlada "to load," Old High German hladen, German laden), from PIE *klā- "to spread out flat" (source also of Lithuanian kloti "to spread," Old Church Slavonic klado "to set, place").

In modern use restricted to the loading of ships; past participle laden was active in the language longer, but in 20c. was displaced by loaded (but a distinct word in the literal sense would be useful) except in particular phrases. Compare Lading.

Entries linking to lade

"loaded, weighted down," 1590s, adjective from the original past participle of lade.

early 15c., "act of loading a boat," verbal noun from lade (v.). From 1520s as "that which constitutes a load."

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Trends of lade

adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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