Waviest vs Waivest - What's the difference?
waviest | waivest |
(wavy)
Rising or swelling in waves.
Full of waves.
Moving to and fro; undulating.
Having wave-like shapes on its border or surface; waved.
(botany, of a margin) Moving up and down relative to the surface; undulate.
(heraldry) , in a wavy line; applied to ordinaries, or division lines.
(goose).
* 1862 , in The Zoologist: a popular miscellany of natural history , volume 20, page 7835:
* 1888 , in the Journals of the Senate of Canada , volume 22, Appendix 1, page 237:
(archaic) (waive)
(obsolete) To outlaw (someone).
(obsolete) To abandon, give up (someone or something).
*
(legal) To relinquish (a right etc.); to give up claim to; to forego.
*
To put aside, avoid.
*
(obsolete) To move from side to side; to sway.
(obsolete) To stray, wander.
* c. 1390 , (Geoffrey Chaucer), "The Merchant's Tale", Canterbury Tales :
(obsolete, legal) A woman put out of the protection of the law; an outlawed woman.
(obsolete) A waif; a castaway.
* 1624 , (John Donne), Devotions upon Emergent Occasions :
As an adjective waviest
is (wavy).As a verb waivest is
(archaic) (waive).waviest
English
Adjective
(head)wavy
English
Etymology 1
Adjective
(er)Etymology 2
See wavey .Noun
(wavies)- According to Indian report, a great breeding-ground for the blue wavy is the country lying in the interior of the north-east point of Labrador, Cape Dudley Digges.
- The blue and white wavies breed in the barren grounds and feed chiefly on berries.
waivest
English
Verb
(head)waive
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) weyven, from (etyl) .Verb
(waiv)- If you waive the right to be silent, anything you say can be used against you in a court of law.
Derived terms
* waivableEtymology 2
(etyl) weyven, from (etyl) .Verb
(waiv)- ye been so ful of sapience / That yow ne liketh, for youre heighe prudence, / To weyven fro the word of Salomon.
Etymology 3
From (etyl) waive, probably as the past participle of (weyver), as Etymology 1, above.Noun
(en noun)- (John Donne)
Etymology 4
Variant forms.Noun
(en noun)- I know, O Lord, the ordinary discomfort that accompanies that phrase, that the house is visited, and that thy works, and thy tokens are upon the patient; but what a wretched, and disconsolate hermitage is that house, which is not visited by thee, and what a waive and stray is that man, that hath not thy marks upon him?