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)

  1. (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

  1. simple past tense and past participle of fordo

Adjective

fordone (comparative more fordone, superlative most fordone)

  1. Exhausted; worn out; overcome.
  2. Destroyed; utterly ruined.

Anagrams

  • done for

fordone From the web:

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