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Revest vs Rovest - What's the difference?

revest | rovest |

As verbs the difference between revest and rovest

is that revest is to dress (a priest or other religious figure) in ritual garments, especially to celebrate Mass or another service while rovest is archaic second-person singular of rove.

revest

English

Verb

(en verb)
  • (obsolete) To dress (a priest or other religious figure) in ritual garments, especially to celebrate Mass or another service.
  • To reclothe; to dress again.
  • * 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , II.i:
  • Her nathelesse / Th'enchaunter finding fit for his intents, / Did thus reuest , and deckt with due habiliments.
  • To return (property) to a former owner; to reinstate
  • To invest again with possession or office.
  • to revest a magistrate with authority

    Anagrams

    *

    rovest

    English

    Verb

    (head)
  • (archaic) (rove)

  • rove

    English

    Etymology 1

    Of uncertain origin; perhaps a dialectal form of (rave).

    Verb

    (rov)
  • (obsolete) To shoot with arrows (at).
  • * 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene I.3:
  • And thou that with thy cruell dart / At that good knight so cunningly didst roue [...].
  • To roam, or wander about at random, especially over a wide area.
  • * 1912 : (Edgar Rice Burroughs), (Tarzan of the Apes), Chapter 1
  • Now that he was in his prime, there was no simian in all the mighty forest through which he roved that dared contest his right to rule, nor did the other and larger animals molest him.
  • To roam or wander through.
  • * Milton
  • Roving the field, I chanced / A goodly tree far distant to behold.
  • To card wool or other fibres.
  • (Jamieson)
  • To twist slightly; to bring together, as slivers of wool or cotton, and twist slightly before spinning.
  • To draw through an eye or aperture.
  • To plough into ridges by turning the earth of two furrows together.
  • To practice robbery on the seas; to voyage about on the seas as a pirate.
  • (Hakluyt)
    Derived terms
    * rover * roved * roving

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A copper washer upon which the end of a nail is clinched in boatbuilding.
  • A roll or sliver of wool or cotton drawn out and lightly twisted, preparatory to further processing; a roving.
  • The act of wandering; a ramble.
  • * Young
  • In thy nocturnal rove one moment halt.

    Etymology 2

    Inflected forms.

    Verb

    (head)
  • (rive)
  • Anagrams

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