/saˈiðo̝/
OriginFrom saír (“to exit”).
- on heat, horny, in estrus
“Eses da televisión estan tolos e brúan como bois saídos!” — This people in the TV are crazy and shout as bulls on heat!
- masculineexit
“no camino que e saydo da vila.” — in the road that is the exit of the town
- masculinevegetable garden or orchard next to a house
“1290, M. Lucas Álvarez P. Lucas Domínguez (eds.), El monasterio de San Clodio do Ribeiro en la Edad Media: estudio y documentos. Sada / A Coruña: Edicións do Castro, page 415” — we give you, for you to have, that house where you now dwell in Eires, with its garden and with the whole plot of that house, as it is enclosed with a wall at the time of this charter
“a qual dita casa vos aforo como dito he con seu saydo e con todas suas entradas e saydas e perteensas e dereitos” — I rent this house to you, with its garden and with all of its entrances and exits and belongings and rights
“1436, Manuel Lucas Alvarez & María José Justo Martín (eds.), Fontes documentais da Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Pergameos da serie Bens do Arquivo Histórico Universitario (Anos 1237-1537). ” — in the smokery, in his house, and in his corral and his garden, which is built in between the aforementioned house and the aforementioned smokery, in the outskirts of that town, in the street that goe
- form-of, participle, pastpast participle of saír
- form-of, participle, pastpast participle of sair
Formssaída(feminine) · saídos(masculine, plural) · saídas(feminine, plural) · saídos(plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0