different between wive vs kive

wive

English

Etymology

From Middle English wiven, iwiven, from Old English w?fian, w?fi?an, ?ew?fian (to take a wife; marry).

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -a?v

Verb

wive (third-person singular simple present wives, present participle wiving, simple past and past participle wived)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To marry (a woman).
    • c. 1600, William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Act 1, Scene III
      If he have the condition of a saint and the complexion of a devil, I had rather he should shrive me than wive me.
  2. (transitive) To provide (someone) with a wife.

Synonyms

  • wife (slang, African-American Vernacular)

Anagrams

  • view

Middle English

Etymology 1

A version of wif with the voiced consonant analogically brought in from the plural forms.

Noun

wive

  1. Alternative form of wif

Etymology 2

From Old English w?fa, nominative plural of w?f.

Noun

wive

  1. plural of wif

wive From the web:

  • what wives need from their husbands
  • what wives want
  • what wives wish husbands knew
  • what wives want from their husband
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  • what wives need from their husbands pdf
  • what wives need to hear from husbands
  • what wives did henry kill


kive

English

Noun

kive (plural kives)

  1. Alternative form of keeve

Anagrams

  • Kiev, kiev, vike

Estonian

Noun

kive

  1. partitive plural of kivi

kive From the web:

  • what lives below
  • what lives in the desert
  • what lives in a conch shell
  • what lives in antarctica
  • what lives in the rainforest
  • what lives in the mariana trench
  • what lives in the ocean
  • what lives at the bottom of the ocean
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