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diet – Wiktionary

Posted: December 25, 2017 at 1:41 am

English[edit]Alternative forms[edit]Etymology[edit]

From Old French diete, from Medieval Latin dieta (daily allowance, regulation, daily order), from Ancient Greek (daita).

diet (plural diets)

food a person or animal consumes

controlled regimen of food

diet (third-person singular simple present diets, present participle dieting, simple past and past participle dieted)

to regulate the food of someone

to modify one's food and beverage intake

to cause to take food; to feed

diet (not comparable)

You folks reduce it to the bible only as being authoritative, impoverishing the faith. "Christianity Lite", diet Christianity for those who can't handle the Whole Meal.

containing lower-than-normal amounts of calories

From Proto-Germanic *eud, from Proto-Indo-European *tewth.

dietn (plural dieten, diminutive dietjen)

diet?? missing information.,1st conj., pres. deju, dej, dej, past deju

diet

From Proto-Samic *tiet.

diet

Borrowed from Medieval Latin dita (daily allowance, regulation, daily order), from Ancient Greek (daita).

dietf

This noun needs an inflection-table template.

From English diet.

diet (plural diet, comparable)

dietc

diet (old orthography diet)

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diet - Wiktionary


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