different between hote vs yote
hote
English
Etymology
From Middle English hoten, hoaten, haten, from Old English h?tan (“to command, be called”), from Proto-Germanic *haitan? (“command, name”), from Proto-Indo-European *keyd-, from *key- (“put in motion, be moving”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian heete (“to be named”), Dutch heten (“to be named”), German Low German heten (“to be called, be named”), German heißen (“to be called”), Swedish heta (“to be called”). Related to hight, hest.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /h??t/
- Rhymes: -??t
Verb
hote (third-person singular simple present hotes, present participle hoting, simple past hight, past participle hoten)
- (transitive, dialectal or obsolete) To command; to enjoin.
- (obsolete) To promise.
- (obsolete, intransitive) To be called, be named.
- (obsolete, transitive) To call, name.
Usage notes
- In the sense of "to command, enjoin", hight may be replaced as follows:
- The captain hight five sailors stay on the other side of the inlet and guard the cargo. = The captain said to five sailors: Stay on the other side of the inlet and guard the cargo.
- Beowulf hight his men build a great mead-hall, the kind of which man's progeny should hear tell forever. = Beowulf said to his men: Build a great mead-hall, the kind of which man's progeny should hear tell forever.
- The word survives only as part of the oral tradition in rural Scotland and Northern England. It is no longer used in common speech.
Related terms
- behote
Anagrams
- Theo, Theo., etho-, theo, theo-
Middle English
Noun
hote
- Alternative form of ote
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yote
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English yoten, yeten (“to pour”), from Old English ??otan (“to pour”), from Proto-West Germanic *geutan, from Proto-Germanic *geutan? (“to pour”), from Proto-Indo-European *??ewd- (“to pour”).
Cognate with Saterland Frisian joote (“to pour”), West Frisian jitte (“to pour”), Dutch gieten (“to pour”), German gießen (“to pour”), Danish gyde (“to pour”). Related to gush, geyser.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?j??t/
- Rhymes: -??t
Verb
yote (third-person singular simple present yotes, present participle yoting, simple past and past participle yoted)
- (Britain dialectal) To pour water on; pour in.
- (archaic or dialectal) To steep.
- My fowls, which well enough / I, as before, found feeding at their trough / Their yoted wheat. — Chapman.
Related terms
- ingot
Etymology 2
From coyote
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?j??t/, /?j??ti/
- Rhymes: -??t, -??ti
Noun
yote (plural yotes)
- Abbreviation of coyote.
Anagrams
- Toye, eyot, toey
Swahili
Adjective
yote
- Mi class inflected form of -ote.
- Ma class inflected form of -ote.
- N class inflected form of -ote (singular only).
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