Rivest vs Revest - What's the difference?
rivest | revest |
(archaic) (rive)
To tear apart by force; to split; to cleave.
* (William Shakespeare) (c.1564–1616)
To pierce or cleave with a weapon.
* :
(label) To break apart; to split.
* 1590 , (Edmund Spenser), (The Faerie Queen) , II.vi:
* (1665-1728)
In woodworking, to use a technique of splitting or sawing wood radially from a log (e.g. clapboards).
(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:
To return (property) to a former owner; to reinstate
To invest again with possession or office.
As verbs the difference between rivest and revest
is that rivest is archaic second-person singular of rive while revest is to dress (a priest or other religious figure) in ritual garments, especially to celebrate Mass or another service.rivest
English
Verb
(head)rive
English
Verb
- I have seen tempests, when the scolding winds / Have rived the knotty oaks
- And therwith she toke the swerd from her loue that lay ded and fylle to the ground in a swowne / And whan she aroos she made grete dole out of mesure / the whiche sorowe greued Balyn passyngly sore / and he wente vnto her for to haue taken the swerd oute of her h?d butsodenly she sette the pomell to the ground / and rofe her self thorow the body
- The varlet at his plaint was grieu'd so sore, / That his deepe wounded hart in two did riue .
- Freestone rives , splits, and breaks in any direction.
Synonyms
* (to rend asunder) cleave, rend, splitSee also
* rip * ribSynonyms
* (a place torn) rent, rift ----revest
English
Verb
(en verb)- Her nathelesse / Th'enchaunter finding fit for his intents, / Did thus reuest , and deckt with due habiliments.
- to revest a magistrate with authority