different between forsake vs exiled
forsake
English
Etymology
From Middle English forsaken (“to abandon, desert, repudiate, withdraw allegiance from; to deny, reject, shun; to betray; to divorce (a spouse); to disown; to be false to (one's nature, vows, etc.; to give up, renounce, surrender; to discard; to omit; to decline, refuse, reject; to avoid, escape; to cease, desist; to evade, neglect; to contradict, refute; to depart, leave; to become detached, separate”) [and other forms], from Old English forsacan (“to oppose; to give up, renounce; to decline, refuse”), from Proto-West Germanic *frasakan (“to forsake, renounce”), from Proto-Germanic *fra- (prefix meaning ‘away, off’) + *sakan? (“to charge; to dispute”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *seh?g- (“to seek out”)). The English word can be analysed as for- +? sake, and is cognate with Saterland Frisian ferseeke (“to deny, refuse”), West Frisian fersaakje, Dutch verzaken (“to renounce, forsake”), Middle High German versachen (“to deny”), Danish forsage (“to give up”), Swedish försaka (“to be without, give up”), Norwegian forsake (“to give up, renounce”), Gothic ???????????????????? (sakan, “to quarrel; to rebuke”), .
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /f???se?k/, /f?-/
- (General American) IPA(key): /f???se?k/
- Rhymes: -e?k
- Hyphenation: for?sake
Verb
forsake (third-person singular simple present forsakes, present participle forsaking, simple past forsook, past participle forsaken)
- (transitive) To abandon, to give up, to leave (permanently), to renounce (someone or something).
- (transitive, obsolete) To decline or refuse (something offered).
- (transitive, obsolete) To avoid or shun (someone or something).
- (transitive, obsolete) To cause disappointment to; to be insufficient for (someone or something).
Conjugation
- Archaic second-person singular simple present form: forsakest
- Archaic third-person singular simple present indicative form: forsaketh
Derived terms
Translations
References
Further reading
- forsake in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
- forsake in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
Anagrams
- freakos
Norwegian Bokmål
Alternative forms
- forsage
Etymology
Borrowed from Low German vorsaken, from Old Saxon farsakan, from Proto-West Germanic *frasakan (“to forsake, renounce”).
Verb
forsake (imperative forsak, present tense forsaker, simple past and past participle forsaka or forsaket, present participle forsakende)
- to give up, relinquish, forsake
- to denounce (the devil)
Derived terms
- forsakelse
References
- “forsake” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
forsake From the web:
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exiled
English
Verb
exiled
- simple past tense and past participle of exile
Anagrams
- elixed
exiled From the web:
- what exile mean
- what exile
- what does exile mean
- what does exiled
- what dies exile mean
- what do exile mean
- what is exiled cfph 2019
- what does exiled mean in minecraft
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