No, "readied" is not a dictionary word. The correct form would be "readied," which means to prepare or make something ready.
Readied. Example: The teacher had readied all the students for their tests.
The past tense of "ready" is "readied."
No, the word ready is an adjective (ready, readier, readiest) and a verb (ready, readies, readying, readied) ; for example:Adjective: I keep a little ready money right here.Verb: While I ready the table, you can keep the sauce stirred.
'Ready' is mainly adjectival (as in 'are you ready', 'ready money', 'ready for action', etc. etc.) and never appears in the form of a verb, so it has no past tense.
The homophone for the word "whirred" would be the word "word."
i tried to ready him for the bad news ( readied is the past tense for ready so we use ready here ) :)
Readied. Example: The teacher had readied all the students for their tests.
The past tense of "ready" is "readied."
Prepared.
Lumber
Ready or readied, equipped
planed
Readied is the past participle of ready.
The past tense of the verb to ready is spelled "readied".
The counterattack was successful.Three were killed overnight and we expect a counterattack to start this morning.
* Ready * Teddy
There is no Hebrew word for vigilant. You could use the word daruch (דרוך) which means tensed, readied, drawn (like a bowstring) or cocked (like a weapon): to be primed or tensed: liyhot daruch (להיות דרוך) he is tensed: hu daruch (הוא דרוך)