different between ghit vs whit
ghit
English
Etymology
A contraction of Google hit; coined on 3 February 2004 by “Trevor” on his blog k’?l?bøl: see the quotations from him and from American linguist Mark Liberman on his Language Log blog (9 February 2004), below.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /???t/, /?d?i??h?t/
- Rhymes: -?t (one pronunciation)
- Homophone: git (one pronunciation)
Noun
ghit (plural ghits)
- (Internet) Contraction of Google hit: a hit obtained using the search engine Google. [from 2004.]
Translations
Anagrams
- gith, ight, thig, tigh
ghit From the web:
- what ghetto means
- what it means
- what does ight mean
- what does ghita mean
- what do ight mean
- what does ghiti mean
- what us git
- what does ghetto
whit
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English wi?t, wight, from Old English wiht (“wight, person, creature, being, whit, thing, something, anything”), from Proto-Germanic *wiht? (“thing, creature”) or *wihtiz (“essence, object”), from Proto-Indo-European *wekti- (“cause, sake, thing”), from *wek?- (“to say, tell”). Cognate with Old High German wiht (“creature, thing”), Dutch wicht, German Wicht. Doublet of wight.
Pronunciation
- enPR: w?t, hw?t, IPA(key): /w?t/, /??t/
- Rhymes: -?t
- Homophone: wit (in accents with the wine-whine merger)
Noun
whit (plural whits)
- The smallest part or particle imaginable; an iota.
- 1602: William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act V scene 2
- Not a whit.
- 1917, Incident by Countee Cullen
- Now I was eight and very small, / And he was no whit bigger / And so I smiled, but he poked out / His tongue, and called me, 'Nigger.'
- 1602: William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act V scene 2
Synonyms
- (smallest part imaginable): bit, iota, jot, scrap
- See also Thesaurus:modicum.
Translations
Etymology 2
Preposition
whit
- Pronunciation spelling of with.
Anagrams
- with, with-
Middle English
Alternative forms
- hwit, white, whyte, whitt, whytt, whyt, whi?t, qwyght, ?wijt, wyghte, whiyt, whijt
Etymology
Old English hw?t, from Proto-Germanic *hw?taz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?i?t/
Adjective
whit (plural and weak singular white, comparative whitter, superlative whittest)
- white, pale, light (in color)
- (referring to people) wearing white clothes
- (referring to people) having white skin
- attractive, fair, beautiful
- bright, shining, brilliant
- (referring to plants) having white flowers
- (heraldry) silver, argent (tincture)
- (alchemy) Inducing the transmutation of a substance into silver
- (medicine) Unusually light; bearing the pallor of death
Related terms
- snow whit
Descendants
- English: white (see there for further descendants)
- Scots: quhite, fyte, fite, whyte, white
- Yola: whit
References
- “wh?t, adj.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-03-30.
Noun
whit
- white (colour)
- white pigment
- The white of an egg
- The white of an eye
- white fabric
- white wine
- dairy products
- Other objects notable for being white
Descendants
- English: white
- Scots: quhite, fyte, fite, whyte, white
References
- “wh?t, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-03-30.
See also
Scots
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [??t]
Pronoun
whit
- Alternative form of what
References
- “what, pron., adv., adj., conj., interj..” in the Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries.
whit From the web:
- what white wine is good for cooking
- what whitens teeth
- what white wine is dry
- what white wine is sweet
- what white roses mean
- what white goes with agreeable gray
- what white sneakers are in style 2021
- what white nonsense is this
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