different between adeem vs addeem

adeem

English

Etymology

From Latin adim? (take away), from ad (to, towards, at) + em? (buy; acquire, take).

Verb

adeem (third-person singular simple present adeems, present participle adeeming, simple past and past participle adeemed)

  1. (law, transitive) To revoke (a legacy, grant, etc.) or to satisfy it by some other gift.

Related terms

  • ademption

Anagrams

  • Meade, Medea, edema, meade

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addeem

English

Etymology

From Middle English *ademen, from Old English ?d?man (to judge, adjudge, doom, deem, try, adjudicate); equivalent to a- +? deem.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -i?m

Verb

addeem (third-person singular simple present addeems, present participle addeeming, simple past and past participle addeemed)

  1. (transitive, now rare, archaic) To adjudge; to try, test. [from 8th c.]
    • 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, V.3:
      So unto him they did addeeme the prise / Of all that Tryumph.
    • 1892, Willard Smith Gibbons, Charles Hood Mills, William Henry Silvernail, Digest of the New York State reporter:
      Legacy is not addeemed by gift before execution of will.
  2. (transitive) To deem; think; judge; esteem; account; determine; be of an opinion.

Anagrams

  • demade, meaded

addeem From the web:

  • what does addeem mean
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