Origin of fold

1
before 900; (v.) Middle English folden, falden, Old English faldan; cognate with G. falten; (v.) Middle English fald, derivative of the n.; akin to Latin plicāre to fold, plectere to plait, twine, Greek plékein; cf. -fold

OTHER WORDS FROM fold

fold·a·ble, adjective

Definition for folding (2 of 2)

fold 2
[ fohld ]
/ foʊld /

noun

verb (used with object)

to confine (sheep or other domestic animals) in a fold.

Origin of fold

2
before 900; Middle English fold, fald, Old English fald, falod; akin to Old Saxon faled pen, enclosure, Middle Low German vālt pen, enclosure, manure heap, Middle Dutch vaelt, vaelde

Example sentences from the Web for folding

British Dictionary definitions for folding (1 of 2)

fold 1
/ (fəʊld) /

verb

noun

See also fold up

Derived forms of fold

foldable, adjective

Word Origin for fold

Old English fealdan; related to Old Norse falda , Old High German faldan, Latin duplus double, Greek haploos simple

British Dictionary definitions for folding (2 of 2)

fold 2
/ (fəʊld) /

noun

  1. a small enclosure or pen for sheep or other livestock, where they can be gathered
  2. the sheep or other livestock gathered in such an enclosure
  3. a flock of sheep
  4. a herd of Highland cattle
a church or the members of it
any group or community sharing a way of life or holding the same values

verb

(tr) to gather or confine (sheep or other livestock) in a fold

Word Origin for fold

Old English falod; related to Old Saxon faled, Middle Dutch vaelt

Medical definitions for folding

fold
[ fōld ]

n.

A crease or ridge apparently formed by folding, as of a membrane; a plica.
In the embryo, a transient elevation or reduplication of tissue in the form of a lamina.

Scientific definitions for folding

fold
[ fōld ]

A bend in a layer of rock or in another planar feature such as foliation or the cleavage of a mineral. Folds occur as the result of deformation, usually associated with plate-tectonic forces.

Idioms and Phrases with folding

fold