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  1. Dictionary
    Dight
    /dīt/

    adjective

    • 1. clothed or equipped.

    verb

    • 1. make ready for a use or purpose; prepare: literary "let the meal be dighted"
  2. : dress, adorn. Word History. Etymology. Middle English, from Old English dihtan to arrange, compose, from Latin dictare to dictate, compose. First Known Use. 13th century, in the meaning defined above. Time Traveler. The first known use of dight was in the 13th century. See more words from the same century. Dictionary Entries Near dight.

  3. Dight definition: to dress; adorn.. See examples of DIGHT used in a sentence.

  4. Aug 3, 2024 · dight (third-person singular simple present dights, present participle dighting, simple past and past participle dight or dighted) ( obsolete, transitive) To deal with, handle. ( obsolete, transitive) To dispose, put (in a given state or condition).

  5. dight. Archaic to adorn or equip, as for battle.... Click for English pronunciations, examples sentences, video.

  6. Define dight. dight synonyms, dight pronunciation, dight translation, English dictionary definition of dight. tr.v. dight or dight·ed , dight·ing , dights Archaic To dress; adorn. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

  7. There are two meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun dight. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  8. Dight definition: To dress; adorn.

  9. Harvey Beeferman, 1942–2024. Usually means: Adorned, prepared, clothed, equipped, arranged. Definitions [ Related words ] [ Mentions ] [ Lyrics ] [ History ] We found 22 dictionaries that define the word dight : General (21 matching dictionaries) dight: Merriam-Webster.com. dight: Oxford Learner's Dictionaries.

  10. To prepare or make ready by equipping or arraying; dress; equip; array; deck; adorn. To put into the proper or any desired condition by removing obstructions or inequalities; dress; clean. By sifting or winnowing: as, to dight corn. [In sense 6, Scotch (pronounced dicht and sometimes spelled dicht) and North. Eng.]

  11. (Scottish English, Northern England) wipe clean or dry take a cloth and dight it up 3. (Scottish English, Northern England) winnow (corn) word origin Middle English: past participle of archaic dight ‘order, deal with’, based on Latin dictare ‘compose (in language), order’. The wide and varied use of the word in Middle English is ...

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