kithe

English

Alternative forms

  • cythe, kyithe, kyith, keyth, kaith, kayth, caith, cuith

Etymology

From Middle English kiþen, küthen, kithen, from Old English cȳþan, from Proto-West Germanic *kunþijan, from Proto-Germanic *kunþijaną (to make known).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kæɪð/
  • Rhymes: -æɪð

Verb

kithe (third-person singular simple present kithes, present participle kithing, simple past and past participle kithed)

  1. (archaic in Scotland, obsolete elsewhere) To make known; to reveal.
    • 1606, Alexander Craig, The Amorous[1], London: printed by William White, New Year's Gift to Idea, page 96; republished as The Poetical Works of Alexander Craig of Rose-Craig, 1604–1631; Now First Collected[2], volume II, Glasgow: printed by Robert Anderson for the Hunterian Club, 1873:
      these lines are sent by me, to keep the law and kithe my love to thee.
      Spelling has been modernised.
    • 1609, Alexander Craig, The Poetical Recreations[3], Edinburgh: printed by Thomas Finlason, To His Majesty, in Name of his Noble Master, page 10; republished as The Poetical Works of Alexander Craig of Rose-Craig, 1604–1631; Now First Collected[4], volume III, Glasgow: printed by Robert Anderson for the Hunterian Club, 1873:
      I'll kithe a constant Palinurus to thee, []

Anagrams

Scots

Etymology

From Middle English kiþen, küthen, kithen, from Old English cȳþan, from Proto-West Germanic *kunþijan, from Proto-Germanic *kunþijaną (to make known).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kʌɪð/

Verb

kithe

  1. To make known; to reveal.

Noun

kithe

  1. Appearance, aspect
  2. A living being in its earliest manifestations, e.g. a young child.

References