different between fordote vs fordone
fordote
English
Etymology
From for- +? dote.
Verb
fordote (third-person singular simple present fordotes, present participle fordoting, simple past and past participle fordoted)
- (transitive, archaic) To make foolish or doting.
fordote From the web:
fordone
English
Etymology
From Middle English fordon, from Old English ford?n, from Proto-Germanic *frad?naz, past participle of *frad?n? (“to fordo; do away with”), equivalent to for- +? done. Cognate with Saterland Frisian ferdäin, Dutch verdaan, German vertan.
Verb
fordone
- simple past tense and past participle of fordo
Adjective
fordone (comparative more fordone, superlative most fordone)
- Exhausted; worn out; overcome.
- Destroyed; utterly ruined.
Anagrams
- done for
fordone From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- fordote vs fordone
- ruined vs fordone
- utterly vs fordone
- overcome vs fordone
- terms vs aswing
- aswing vs asking
- aswing vs sawing
- aswing vs awing
- aswing vs ashing
- swing vs aswing
- ungathered vs upgathered
- gather vs ungathered
- unfeathered vs unweathered
- feather vs unfeathered
- era vs phanerozoic
- cenozoic vs phanerozoic
- mesozoic vs phanerozoic
- paleozoic vs phanerozoic
- eon vs phanerozoic
- geologic vs phanerozoic