Lazeth vs Laveth - What's the difference?
lazeth | laveth |
(archaic) (laze)
Laziness.
An instance of lazing.
To be lazy, waste time.
To pass time relaxing.
Acidic steam created when super-hot lava contacts salt water.
(archaic) (lave)
(obsolete) To pour or throw out, as water; lade out; bail; bail out.
To draw, as water; drink in.
To give bountifully; lavish.
To run down or gutter, as a candle.
(dialectal) To hang or flap down.
(ambitransitive, archaic) To wash.
* Alexander Pope
* 1789 , William Lisle Bowles, 'Sonnet I' from Fourteen Sonnets , 1789.
* 2006 , Cormac McCarthy, The Road , London: Picador, 2007, p. 38.
(archaic or dialectal) The remainder, rest; that which is left, remnant; others.
* 1885 , Sir Richard Burton, The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night , Night 12.
* 1896 (posthumously), Robert Louis Stevenson, Songs of Travel and other verses .[https://archive.org/details/songsoftraveloth00stevrich]
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In archaic|lang=en terms the difference between lazeth and laveth
is that lazeth is (archaic) (laze) while laveth is (archaic) (lave).As verbs the difference between lazeth and laveth
is that lazeth is (archaic) (laze) while laveth is (archaic) (lave).lazeth
English
Verb
(head)laze
English
Etymology 1
Noun
(-)Verb
- The cat spent the afternoon lazing in the sun.
Synonyms
* idle * loaf * take it easyDerived terms
* laze about * laze around * lazyEtymology 2
Noun
(-)See also
* vogAnagrams
* zeallaveth
English
Verb
(head)lave
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Verb
(lav)- (Dryden)
- In her chaste current oft the goddess laves .
- the tranquil tide, / That laves the pebbled shore.
- The boy walked out and squatted and laved up the dark water.
Etymology 2
From (etyl) . More at (l).Noun
(-)- Then they set upon us and slew some of my slaves and put the lave to flight.
- Give to me the life I love,/Let the lave go by me...