different between involve vs spell

involve

English

Alternative forms

  • envolve

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin involv?.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?n?v?lv/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?n?v?lv/
  • Hyphenation: in?volve

Verb

involve (third-person singular simple present involves, present participle involving, simple past and past participle involved)

  1. (archaic) To roll or fold up; to wind round; to entwine.
  2. (archaic) To envelop completely; to surround; to cover; to hide.
    • Black vapors, issuing from the vent, involve the sky.
  3. To complicate or make intricate, as in grammatical structure.
    • the fallacies that are often concealed in florid, witty, or involved discourses.
  4. (archaic) To connect with something as a natural or logical consequence or effect; to include necessarily; to imply.
    • 1674, John Milton, Paradise Lost Book II
      He knows / His end with mine involved.
    • a. 1694, John Tillotson, Sermon
      The contrary necessarily involves a contradiction.
  5. To take in; to gather in; to mingle confusedly; to blend or merge.
    • 1728-1743, Alexander Pope, The Dunciad
      The gathering number, as it moves along,
      Involves a vast involuntary throng.
    • 1674, John Milton, Paradise Lost Book II
      Earth with hell / To mingle and involve.
  6. To envelop, enfold, entangle.
    He's involved in the crime.
  7. To engage (someone) to participate in a task.
    How can we involve the audience more during the show?
    By getting involved in her local community, Mary met lots of people and also helped make it a nicer place to live.
  8. (mathematics) To raise to any assigned power; to multiply, as a quantity, into itself a given number of times.

Synonyms

  • imply
  • include
  • implicate
  • complicate
  • entangle
  • embarrass
  • overwhelm

Translations

See also

  • involver
  • voluble
  • involute

References

  • involve in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

Latin

Verb

involve

  1. second-person singular present active imperative of involv?

involve From the web:

  • what involves duplication of chromosomes
  • what involves a protein channel
  • what involves a chemical change
  • what involves special devices that steal
  • what involves structural imaging
  • what involves a vesicle
  • what involves a tune up
  • what involves external beam radiation


spell

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: sp?l, IPA(key): /sp?l/
  • Rhymes: -?l

Etymology 1

From Middle English spell, spel, from Old English spell (news, story), from Proto-Germanic *spell? (speech, account, tale), from Proto-Indo-European *spel- (to tell). Cognate with dialectal German Spill, Icelandic spjall (discussion, talk), spjalla (to discuss, to talk), guðspjall (gospel) and Albanian fjalë (word).

Noun

spell (plural spells)

  1. Words or a formula supposed to have magical powers. [from 16th c.]
    Synonyms: cantrip, incantation
  2. A magical effect or influence induced by an incantation or formula. [from 16th c.]
    Synonym: cantrip
  3. (obsolete) Speech, discourse. [8th–15th c.]
Derived terms
  • byspel
  • spellbind
  • spellbound
  • spellwork
Translations

Verb

spell (third-person singular simple present spells, present participle spelling, simple past and past participle spelled)

  1. To put under the influence of a spell; to affect by a spell; to bewitch; to fascinate; to charm.
    • 1647, George Buck, The History and Life and Reigne of Richard the Third, London, Book 4, p. 116,[1]
      [] although the Kings Jealousie was thus particular to her, his Affection was as general to others [] Above all, for a time he was much speld with Elianor Talbot []
    • 1697, John Dryden (translator), Georgics, Book 3 in The Works of Virgil, London: Jacob Tonson, p. 109, lines 444-446,[2]
      This, gather’d in the Planetary Hour,
      With noxious Weeds, and spell’d with Words of pow’r
      Dire Stepdames in the Magick Bowl infuse;
    • 1817, John Keats, “To a Friend who sent me some Roses” in Poems, London: C. & J. Ollier, p. 83,[3]
      But when, O Wells! thy roses came to me
      My sense with their deliciousness was spell’d:

Translations

Etymology 2

From Middle English spellen, from Anglo-Norman espeler, espeleir, Old French espeller, espeler (compare Modern French épeler), from Frankish *spel?n, merged with native Old English spellian (to tell, speak), both eventually from Proto-Germanic *spell?n? (to speak). Related with etymology 1. The sense “indicate a future event” probably in part a backformation from forespell (literally to tell in advance).

Verb

spell (third-person singular simple present spells, present participle spelling, simple past and past participle spelled or (mostly UK) spelt)

  1. (transitive, obsolete) To read (something) as though letter by letter; to peruse slowly or with effort. [from 14th c.]
    • 1851, Herman Melville, Moby Dick:
      "He'll do," said Bildad, eyeing me, and then went on spelling away at his book in a mumbling tone quite audible.
  2. (transitive, sometimes with “out”) To write or say the letters that form a word or part of a word. [from 16th c.]
  3. (intransitive) To be able to write or say the letters that form words.
  4. (transitive) Of letters: to compose (a word). [from 19th c.]
  5. (transitive, figuratively, with “out”) To clarify; to explain in detail. [from 20th c.]
    • 2003, U.S. Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbel, Hearing before the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, ?ISBN:
      When we get elected, for instance, we get one of these, and we are pretty much told what is in it, and it is our responsibility to read it and understand it, and if we do not, the Ethics Committee, we can call them any time of day and ask them to spell it out for us []
  6. (transitive) To indicate that (some event) will occur. [from 19th c.]
  7. To constitute; to measure.
    • the Saxon heptarchy, when seven kings put together did spell but one in effect
  8. (obsolete) To speak, to declaim. [9th-16th c.]
    • 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, I.ii:
      O who can tell / The hidden power of herbes, and might of Magicke spell?
  9. (obsolete) To tell; to relate; to teach.
    • 1770, Thomas Warton, “Ode on the Approach of Summer” in A Collection of Poems in Four Volumes, London: G. Pearch, Volume 1, p. 278,[5]
      As thro’ the caverns dim I wind,
      Might I that legend find,
      By fairies spelt in mystic rhymes,
Derived terms
  • fingerspell
  • forespell
  • speller
  • spelling
  • spello
  • spell out
  • spell trouble
Synonyms
  • (to indicate that some event will occur): forebode; mean; signify
  • (to work in place of someone else): relieve
  • (to compose a word): (informal) comprise
Translations

Etymology 3

From Middle English spelen, from Old English spelian (to represent, take or stand in the place of another, act as a representative of another), akin to Middle English spale (a rest or break), Old English spala (representative, substitute).

Verb

spell (third-person singular simple present spells, present participle spelling, simple past and past participle spelled or spelt)

  1. (transitive) To work in place of (someone).
    to spell the helmsman
  2. (transitive) To rest (someone or something), to give someone or something a rest or break.
    They spelled the horses and rested in the shade of some trees near a brook.
  3. (intransitive, colloquial) To rest from work for a time.
Derived terms
  • spell off
Translations

Noun

spell (plural spells)

  1. A shift (of work); (rare) a set of workers responsible for a specific turn of labour. [from 16th c.]
  2. (informal) A definite period (of work or other activity). [from 18th c.]
  3. (colloquial) An indefinite period of time (usually with a qualifier); by extension, a relatively short distance. [from 18th c.]
  4. A period of rest; time off. [from 19th c.]
  5. (colloquial, US) A period of illness, or sudden interval of bad spirits, disease etc. [from 19th c.]
  6. (cricket) An uninterrupted series of alternate overs bowled by a single bowler. [from 20th c.]
Derived terms
  • cold spell
  • dry spell
  • set a spell
Descendants
  • ? Welsh: sbel
Translations

Quotations

  • For quotations using this term, see Citations:spell.

Etymology 4

Origin uncertain; perhaps a form of speld.

Noun

spell (plural spells)

  1. (dialectal) A splinter, usually of wood; a spelk.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Holland to this entry?)
  2. The wooden bat in the game of trap ball, or knurr and spell.

Anagrams

  • Pells, pells

Faroese

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sp?tl/

Noun

spell n (genitive singular spels, plural spell)

  1. pity, shame
    • stór spell
      big shame
    • tað var spell
      it was a pity
    • spell var í honum
      it was too bad for him

Declension


Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology 1

From the verb spelle

Noun

spell n (definite singular spellet, indefinite plural spell, definite plural spella or spellene)

  1. Alternative form of spill

See also

  • spel (Nynorsk)

Etymology 2

Verb

spell

  1. imperative of spelle

Old English

Alternative forms

  • spel

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *spell.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /spell/, [spe?]

Noun

spell n

  1. story
    • late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Orosius’ History Against the Pagans
  2. news
    • late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Orosius’ History Against the Pagans
  3. prose or a work of prose
    • late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Boethius' The Consolation of Philosophy

Declension

Antonyms

  • l?oþ (poem)
  • l?oþcræft (poetry)

Derived terms

  • b?spell
  • godspell
  • spellian

Descendants

  • Middle English: spell, spel
    • English: spell

References

  • “spell” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

spell From the web:

  • what spell repairs broken bones
  • what spell killed bellatrix
  • what spell killed voldemort
  • what spells did snape create
  • what spell killed sirius black
  • what spell did snape make
  • what spell did hermione use on neville
  • what spell did bellatrix use on sirius
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