See also: rēdie and rédie

English edit

Etymology edit

re- +‎ die

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

redie (third-person singular simple present redies, present participle redying, simple past and past participle redied)

  1. (nonstandard, intransitive) To die again.
    • 1972, John Barth, Chimera Pa, →ISBN, page 105:
      [] until Athene had scalped, rebodied, and revived her — whereupon her first request was to redie at once if she was Gorgon still. An odd thing was that, once brought back, she could recall all her dead head's doings []
    • 2009, Peter Metevelis, Japanese Mythology and the Primeval World, →ISBN, page 146:
      [] with such company as Gilgamesh, who though mortal was part human and part divine; the Japanese deity Ninigi, who though originally divine became mortal; Sumerian Dumuzi, who though divine was required repeatedly to redie; []

Anagrams edit

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from French rédie.

Noun edit

redie f (plural redii)

  1. redia

Declension edit