different between dwine vs gwine
dwine
English
Etymology
From Middle English dwynen, from Old English dw?nan, from Proto-Germanic *dw?nan?. Compare Low German dwienen, verdwienen, Dutch dwijnen, verdwijnen, West Frisian ferdwine, Icelandic dvĂna. See also dwindle.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dwa?n/
- Rhymes: -a?n
Verb
dwine (third-person singular simple present dwines, present participle dwining, simple past and past participle dwined)
- (archaic outside Scotland and dialects) To wither, decline, pine away.
Related terms
- dwindle
Anagrams
- Edwin, Wendi, indew, widen, winde, wined
Scots
Alternative forms
- dwyne
Etymology
From Old English dw?nan, from Proto-Germanic *dw?nan?.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dw?in/
Verb
dwine (third-person singular present dwines, present participle dwinin, past dwinet, past participle dwinet)
- to waste away, wither, decline
Noun
dwine (plural dwines)
- a decline, a waning
dwine From the web:
gwine
English
Etymology
Phonetic rendition of going, from Gullah gwine.
Pronunciation
Verb
gwine
- (dated, African-American Vernacular) present participle of go
Anagrams
- Ewing, Ngwei, Winge, winge
Gullah
Verb
gwine
- present participle of go
- going to
gwine From the web:
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