different between husting vs hasting
husting
English
Etymology
From Middle English husting, from Old English h?sting, borrowed from Old Norse húsþing (“house assembly”), from hús (“house”) + þing (“council, meeting”), equivalent to house +? thing. Cognate with Icelandic húsþing (“assembly”).
Noun
husting (plural hustings)
Usually used in the plural (hustings) but with a singular verb.
- A platform where candidates in an election give speeches.
- (historical) An assembly, especially one of the retainers of a ruler.
Usage notes
The word hustings is used more often than husting, even for a single platform. The word hustings also has a singular sense of an election campaign in general.
Related terms
- hustings
- thing
See also
- folkmoot
References
Anagrams
- Gutnish, tushing, unsight
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hasting
English
Verb
hasting
- present participle of haste
Anagrams
- anighst, anights, hatings, tingsha
hasting From the web:
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