Sithed vs Withed - What's the difference?
sithed | withed |
(sithe)
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* 1669 , , Paradise Lost , Samuel Simmons, Book X:
(withe)
A flexible, slender twig or shoot, especially when used as a band or for binding; a withy.
* 1997': Perhaps indifferent to their social Rejection, he sets to work separating his Tree into Poles, Sticks, and '''Withes , and placing them wherever in the Structures of Dam or Lodge he feels they need to go. — Thomas Pynchon, ''Mason & Dixon
(nautical) An iron attachment on one end of a mast or boom, with a ring, through which another mast or boom is rigged out and secured.
(architecture) A partition between flues in a chimney.
To bind with s.
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To beat with s.
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As verbs the difference between sithed and withed
is that sithed is past tense of sithe while withed is past tense of withe.sithed
English
Verb
(head)sithe
English
Etymology 1
Noun
(en noun)- "and, whatever thing the sithe of time mows down, devour unspared" - Paradise Lost, Book X