Wrote vs Writ - What's the difference?
wrote | writ |
(write)
(legal) A written order, issued by a court, ordering someone to do (or stop doing) something.
authority, power to enforce compliance
* '>citation
(obsolete) that which is written; writing
* Spenser
* Knolles
(dated, nonstandard)
* (Omar Khayyam) (in translation)
As verbs the difference between wrote and writ
is that wrote is simple past of write while writ is past participle of lang=en.As a noun writ is
a written order, issued by a court, ordering someone to do (or stop doing) something.wrote
English
Verb
(head)- We all wrote down the instructions.
Derived terms
* that's all she wroteStatistics
*Anagrams
*writ
English
(wikipedia writ)Noun
(en noun)- We can't let them take advantage of the fact that there are so many areas of the world where no one's writ runs.
- Then to his hands that writ he did betake, / Which he disclosing read, thus as the paper spake.
- Babylon, so much spoken of in Holy Writ
Derived terms
* drop the writ * Holy Writ * writ of habeas corpusReferences
* Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia (Webster)Verb
(head)- (Dryden)
- The moving finger writes, and having writ , not all your piety or wit can lure it back to cancel half a line