WOUND Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com First recorded before 900; (noun) Middle English; Old English wund; cognate with Old High German wunta ( German Wunde ), Old Norse und, Gothic wunds; (verb) Middle English wounden, Old English wundian, derivative of the noun
Wound - Etymology, Origin Meaning - Etymonline Old English wund "injury to a person or animal involving piercing or cutting of the tissue of the body;" in pathology also "ulcer, scar," from Proto-Germanic *wuntho (source also of Old Saxon wunda, Old Norse und, Old Frisian wunde, Old High German wunta, German wunde "wound"), perhaps (Watkins) from PIE root *wen- (2) "to beat, wound "
Wunde - Wiktionary, the free dictionary From Middle High German wunde, from Old High German wunta, from Proto-Germanic *wundō (“a wound”), from *wundaz (“wounded”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂wen-
wound - WordReference. com Dictionary of English vb to inflict a wound or wounds upon (someone or something) Etymology: Old English wund; related to Old Frisian wunde, Old High German wunta (German Wunde), Old Norse und, Gothic wunds ˈwoundable adj ˈwounder n ˈwounding adj ˈwoundingly adv ˈwoundless adj wound waʊnd vb the past tense and past participle of wind 2