different between overwit vs overhit
overwit
English
Etymology
over- +? wit
Verb
overwit (third-person singular simple present overwits, present participle overwitting, simple past and past participle overwitted)
- (transitive, obsolete) To outwit.
- c. 1728, Jonathan Swift, The Answer to Paulus, an Epigram
- He knows no guilt, who knows no sin.
?Yet well they merit to be pitied,
By clients always overwitted.
- He knows no guilt, who knows no sin.
- c. 1728, Jonathan Swift, The Answer to Paulus, an Epigram
overwit From the web:
- what overweight
- what overweight stock means
- what overweight for my height
- what overweight for a 16 year old
- what overweight looks like
- what overweight can cause
- what overweight for a 2 year old
- what's overweight for a 12 year old
overhit
English
Etymology
over- +? hit
Verb
overhit (third-person singular simple present overhits, present participle overhitting, simple past and past participle overhit)
- To hit too far or too hard.
- The golfer overhit his shot onto the green, and it rolled into the bunker.
overhit From the web:
- what happened to overhit
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- overwit vs overhit
- hit vs overhit
- overpot vs overput
- overpot vs overpost
- overshone vs overshine
- overbook vs overboot
- pantofle vs pantoffle
- ancient vs pantoffle
- rubbers vs elastomers
- ribbers vs rubbers
- drubbers vs rubbers
- dubbers vs rubbers
- rubbers vs robbers
- rubbers vs grubbers
- kiss vs galosh
- galosh vs hornet
- golosh vs galosh
- galosh vs galoshed
- galosh vs mobile
- galoche vs galosh