different between placed vs displant
placed
English
Etymology
place +? -ed
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ple?st/
- Rhymes: -e?st
Verb
placed
- simple past tense and past participle of place
Spanish
Verb
placed
- (Spain) Informal second-person plural (vosotros or vosotras) affirmative imperative form of placer.
placed From the web:
- what placed a tax on workers and employers
- what places are open on 4th of july
- what places hire at 14
- what places are doing fireworks tonight
- what places are open right now
- what places deliver near me
- what places hire at 15
- what places are closed today
displant
English
Etymology
dis- +? plant
Verb
displant (third-person singular simple present displants, present participle displanting, simple past and past participle displanted)
- (transitive, archaic) To remove anything from where it has been planted or placed; to drive a person from their home.
- c. 1594, William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, Act III, Scene 3,[1]
- […] Hang up philosophy!
- Unless philosophy can make a Juliet,
- Displant a town, reverse a prince’s doom,
- It helps not, it prevails not: talk no more.
- 1625, Francis Bacon, “Of Plantations” in Essays, London: H. Herringman et al., 1691, p. 123,[2]
- I like a Plantation in a pure Soyl, that is, where People are not Displanted, to the end, to Plant others; for else it is rather an Extirpation, than a Plantation.
- 1740, William Oldys, The Life of Sir Walter Ralegh, London, p. 79,[3]
- But the Ships, in which this second Colony was transported, had not been many Days returned into England, before we find Ralegh’s Thoughts diverted, for a while, from planting in a foreign Country, and engaged upon Schemes of displanting rather those powerful Enemies who were preparing to root themselves in his own.
- 1844, Court of Common Pleas, May v. Taylor, 3 June, 1843 in The Jurist, London: V. & R. Stevens & G.S. Norton, Volume 7, Part 2, p. 515,[4]
- […] with respect to the particular question of five acres of ground being displanted of hops, the jury knew that the peculiar blight, called the wire-worm, was contagious, and that since it had got into some of the plants, the best thing that could be done for the rest of the garden, was to grub up the bine which was injured.
- c. 1594, William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, Act III, Scene 3,[1]
Synonyms
- displace
Translations
References
- Chambers's Etymological Dictionary, 1896, p. 131
displant From the web:
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