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Definition of wade verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

wade

verb
 
/weɪd/
 
/weɪd/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they wade
 
/weɪd/
 
/weɪd/
he / she / it wades
 
/weɪdz/
 
/weɪdz/
past simple waded
 
/ˈweɪdɪd/
 
/ˈweɪdɪd/
past participle waded
 
/ˈweɪdɪd/
 
/ˈweɪdɪd/
-ing form wading
 
/ˈweɪdɪŋ/
 
/ˈweɪdɪŋ/
Phrasal Verbs
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  1. [intransitive, transitive] to walk with an effort through something, especially water or mud
    • (+ adv./prep.) He waded into the water to push the boat out.
    • Sometimes they had to wade waist-deep through mud.
    • The men waded ashore.
    • We waded across the stream.
    • wade something They waded the river at a shallow point.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • slowly
    • ashore
    • across
    preposition
    • across
    • in
    • into
    phrases
    • wade knee-deep, waist-deep, etc. in something
    See full entry
  2. (North American English)
    (British English paddle)
    [intransitive] to walk or stand with no shoes or socks in shallow water in the sea, a lake, etc.Topics Hobbiesc1
  3. Word OriginOld English wadan ‘move onward’, also ‘penetrate’, from a Germanic word meaning ‘go (through)’, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin vadere ‘go’.
See wade in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
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