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    define whelm root word
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  2. Jun 5, 2018 · "to call or summon forth or out," 1620s, from French évoquer or directly from Latin evocare "call out, rouse, summon," from assimilated form of ex "out" (see ex-) + vocare "to call," which is related to vox (genitive vocis) "voice" (from PIE root *wekw- "to speak").

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  4. The meaning of WHELM is to turn (something, such as a dish or vessel) upside down usually to cover something : cover or engulf completely with usually disastrous effect. How to use whelm in a sentence.

  5. We've all been overwhelmed with work, or seen an underwhelming movie... but it occurred to me that I've never heard anyone use the root word, whelm. whelm (verb) 1. to submerge; engulf. 2. to overcome utterly; overwhelm: whelmed by misfortune.

  6. The earliest known use of the noun whelm is in the late 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for whelm is from around 1576. It is also recorded as a verb from the Middle English period (1150—1500).

    • Etymology
    • Pronunciation
    • Verb
    • Noun

    From Middle English whelmen (“to turn over, capsize; to invert, turn upside down”), perhaps from Old English *hwealmnian, a variant of *hwealfnian, from hwealf (“arched, concave, vaulted; an arched or vaulted ceiling”), from Proto-West Germanic *hwalb, from Proto-Germanic *hwalbą (“arch, vault”), from Proto-Indo-European *kʷelp- (“to curve”). The E...

    (Received Pronunciation, General American) enPR: whĕlm, wĕlm, IPA(key): /ʍɛlm/, /wɛlm/
    Rhymes: -ɛlm

    whelm (third-person singular simple present whelms, present participle whelming, simple past and past participle whelmed) 1. (transitive, archaic) To bury, to cover; to engulf, to submerge. 1.1. Synonyms: overwhelm, (Britain dialectal, Scotland) whemmel 1.2. Antonym: unwhelm 1.1. c. 1597 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Merry Wiues of Wind...

    whelm (plural whelms) 1. (poetic, also figuratively) A surge of water. 1.1. the whelmof the tide 1.1. 2004, Clark Coolidge, chapter XIII, in Mine: The One that Enters the Stories, Great Barrington, Mass.: The Figures, →ISBN, page 75: 1.1.1. I wonder about things and the people between us. The currents, the feedback, and the whelms. The sharp cracks...

  7. WHELM meaning: 1. (of water) to flow, or to flow over and cover something or someone : 2. to have an effect on…. Learn more.

  8. The earliest known use of the verb whelm is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for whelm is from before 1300, in Cursor Mundi: a Northumbrian poem of the 14th century.

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