Proto-Germanic: *wṓɵa-, *wōdá-z, *wṓɵō
Meaning: crazy, excited
Gothic: wōɵ-s (a) `possessed by demons'
Old Norse: ōδ-r m. `Erregtheit; Dichtkunst, Dichtung'; ōδ-r `wütend, rasend'
Norwegian: ōd `Anfall von Raserei'; od adj.
Swedish: dial ō, ōd(er) adj.
Old Danish: od adj.
Old English: wōɵ, -e f. `pain, suffering, misery; suffering that comesas punishment, retributibe punishmnt, vengeance, retribution; persecution, hostility, active enmity'; wōd `mad; mad with anger, enraged'
English: wood adj.
Middle Dutch: woet f., m.
Dutch: woede f.
Old High German: wuot, gen. wuoti (um 800); fir-wuot (um 1000) `unsinnig, ohne Vernunft'
Middle High German: wuot st. f. `heftige Bestimmung; heftige Gemütserregung, Wut, Raserei'
German: Wut f.
germet-meaning,germet-prnum,germet-got,germet-onord,germet-norw,germet-swed,germet-odan,germet-oengl,germet-engl,germet-mdutch,germet-dutch,germet-ohg,germet-mhg,germet-hg,