"Supersede" comes from the Latin word "supersedeo," which is the root of the English spelling. The shift from "cede" to "sede" occurred in the 15th century due to influence from other Latin words and English spelling conventions.
The "-sede" part of the word comes from "sedere" (Latin: to sit) and "-cede" as in concede is from "cedere" (Latin: to grant, give away)
The word is spelled seeds, just as you spelled it. Variants are: seed (singular) seeds (plural) seeding seedling (a plant) Another word that sounds alike is cede, or cedes, which means "to yield to" or "to grant".
cede
the word cede means to give up that is what the word cede means.
the word cede means to give up that is what the word cede means.
The homophone of cede is seed, as they have similar pronunciation but different meanings.
We'll not cede this land.
No. Instead, the Latin equivalent of 'Dare and never give up' is Audere et numquam cede. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'audere' means 'to dare'. The conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The adverb 'numquam' means 'never'. The verb 'cede' means 'give up'.
There may be people named Cede, but it is not a common name.
I cede this land to you and the other people that are with you on your wagon train.
The synonym for "cede" is "surrender" or "relinquish."