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The Collaborative International Dictionary
yede

Yode \Yode\, obs. imp. of Go. [OE. yode, yede, [yogh]ede, [yogh]eode, eode, AS. e['o]de, used as the imp. of g[=a]n to go; akin to Goth. iddja I, he, went, L. ire to go, Gr. 'ie`nai, Skr. i, y[=a]. [root]4. Cf. Issue.] Went; walked; proceeded. [Written also yede.] See Yede.

Quer [whether] they rade [rode] or yode.
--Cursor Mundi.

Then into Cornhill anon I yode.
--Lydgate.

Wiktionary
yede

vb. 1 (context obsolete English) (en-simple past of: go) 2 (context obsolete or literary humour English) To go. (Used as a pseudo-archaism by 16th-century poets and their imitators.)

Usage examples of "yede".

And so when sir Dinas went out a-hunting she slipped down by a towel, and took with her two brachets, and so she yede to the knight that she loved, and he her again.

So when they had rested them a while they yede to battle again, tracing, racing, foining as two boars.

And so within a while the Red Knight of the Red Launds yede unto the castle, and put him in her grace.