different between rovest vs ovest

rovest

English

Etymology

rove +? -est

Verb

rovest

  1. (archaic) second-person singular simple present form of rove

Anagrams

  • Stover, orvets, storve, stover, strove, troves, voters

rovest From the web:



ovest

English

Etymology

From Middle English ovet, from Old English ofett (fruit, legume), from Proto-West Germanic *obaet (fruit, produce, increase), from a compound whose first element represents Proto-Indo-European *ob?i-, *eb?i-, *b?i- (on, toward, from, by), and whose second element is Proto-Germanic *at-, *?ta- (edibles, food), from Proto-Germanic *etan? (to eat), from Proto-Indo-European *h?ed- (to eat). Cognate with West Frisian oefte (something tasty to eat, goodies), Dutch ooft (fruit), German Low German Ooft, Aaft (fruit), German Obst (fruit).

Pronunciation

Noun

ovest (uncountable)

  1. (Britain dialectal) The mast and acorns of the oak; the turn-out.

Derived terms

  • ovesting

Anagrams

  • Stevo, Votes, stove, vetos, votes

Italian

Etymology

Originated as an incorrect reading of a borrowing from French ouest, from Old English west, from Proto-Germanic *westr?, from earlier *westraz, possibly from Proto-Indo-European *wek(?)speros (evening). Doublet of vespro.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??.vest/
  • Hyphenation: ò?vest

Noun

ovest m (invariable)

  1. west
    Synonyms: occidente, ponente

See also

  • est
  • nord
  • sud
  • punto cardinale

Anagrams

  • vesto

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