different between goest vs goost
goest
English
Etymology
go +? -est
Verb
goest
- (archaic) second-person singular simple present form of go
- Keep thy foot when thou goest to the house of God, and be more ready to hear, than to give the sacrifice of fools: for they consider not that they do evil.
- 1883, Howard Pyle, The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood Chapter V
- "Ha," said Robin, "comest thou from Locksley Town? Well do I know that fair place for miles about, and well do I know each hedgerow and gentle pebbly stream, and even all the bright little fishes therein, for there I was born and bred. Now, where goest thou with thy meat, my fair friend?"
Anagrams
- go set, gotes, stoge, toges
goest From the web:
- what goes through a door
- what goes towards your deductible
- what goes through metamorphosis
- what goes together
- what goes through cellular respiration
- what goes through a dog's mind
- what goes through photosynthesis
- what goes through foramen lacerum
goost
Middle English
Noun
goost (plural goosts)
- ghost
- Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde V
- His lighte goost ful blissfully is went.
- Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde V
goost From the web:
- what ghosting says about you
- what ghost does macbeth see
- what ghosting means
- what ghost in phasmophobia crawls
- what ghostbuster died
- what ghost shrimp eat
- what ghost in phasmophobia has an axe
- what ghost drains sanity
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