swind
English
    
    Etymology
    
From a variant of swint (“to squint”).
Pronunciation
    
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈswɪnd/
- Rhymes: -ɪnd
Verb
    
swind (third-person singular simple present swinds, present participle swinding, simple past and past participle swinded)
- (UK, dialectal, Lancashire) To squint
Anagrams
    
Middle English
    
    Etymology
    
From Old English swindan (“to waste away, languish”), from Proto-Germanic *swindaną. Cognate with Danish svinde (“to dwindle, vanish”), Dutch zwinden (“to disappear, vanish”), German schwinden (“to decrease, shrink, vanish”), Low German swinnen (“to decrease, shrink, vanish”), Norwegian svinne (“to disappear, vanish”), Swedish svinna (“to disappear, vanish”). See also swindle.
Verb
    
swind (third-person singular simple present swinds, present participle swinding, first-/third-person singular past indicative swand or swinded, past participle swund or swunden or swinded)
- To languish, waste away, also disappear, vanish.
- c. 1175, Old English Homilies
- Ure swinc and ure tilþe is ofte iwoned to swinden.
- Our swink and our tilth is oft wont to disappear.
 
 
- Ure swinc and ure tilþe is ofte iwoned to swinden.
- c. 1390, "Heil be þow Marie Moodur"
- Heil, lenere and louvere of largenesse / Swete and swettest þat neuer may swynde.
- Hail, lender and lover of largeness / The sweet and sweetest that never may die.
 
 
- Heil, lenere and louvere of largenesse / Swete and swettest þat neuer may swynde.
- c. 1400, Saint Erkenwald
- Bot sodenly his swete chere swyndid and faylide
- But suddenly his sweet cheer wasted away and failed.
 
 
- Bot sodenly his swete chere swyndid and faylide
 
- c. 1175, Old English Homilies
    This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.