different between reyse vs reysed
reyse
English
Etymology 1
Verb
reyse (third-person singular simple present reyses, present participle reysing, simple past and past participle reysed)
- Obsolete form of raise.
Etymology 2
From Middle English reysen (“to travel, journey, go on a military expedition”), probably from Middle Dutch reisen, resen (compare Old English r?sian (“to explore”)), ultimately from Proto-West Germanic *rais?n (“to set out, depart, journey”). Cognate with Danish rejse (“to travel”), Dutch reizen (“to travel”), German reisen (“to travel”), Norwegian reise (“to travel”), Swedish resa (“to travel”). See also reys.
Pronunciation
- enPR: r?z, IPA(key): /?e?z/
- Homophones: raise, rays, raze
- Rhymes: -e?z
Verb
reyse (third-person singular simple present reyses, present participle reysing, simple past and past participle reysed)
- (obsolete) To go on a military expedition.
- (obsolete) To journey or travel.
Usage notes
In the second sense, fell out of common usage in the 16th century. Was displaced by journey and travel.
References
- The Middle English Dictionary
Anagrams
- Eyers, Eyres, Reyes, Seery, eyers, eyres, yeers
Middle English
Verb
reyse
- Alternative form of reysen (“to raise”)
reyse From the web:
reysed
English
Verb
reysed
- simple past tense and past participle of reyse
Anagrams
- Reedys, desyre, re-dyes, redyes
reysed From the web:
- what is reused content in youtube
- what does reuse mean
- reuse in tagalog
- reuse water
- what is reused oil
- reuse packaging
- what is reused wood
- reuse definition
you may also like
- reyse vs reysed
- reysed vs reyses
- throstles vs thrustles
- payers vs pakers
- pakers vs takers
- makers vs pakers
- pakers vs nakers
- pakers vs fakers
- pakers vs wakers
- papers vs pakers
- pakers vs pagers
- parers vs pakers
- pakers vs dakers
- pakers vs lakers
- pakers vs rakers
- flyers vs plyers
- players vs plyers
- pliers vs plyers
- papers vs payers
- payees vs payers