sweb

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English swebben (to sleep, swoon), from Old English swebban (to put to sleep, lull, kill), from Proto-Germanic *swabjaną, *swēbijaną (to lull, put to sleep), from Proto-Indo-European *swep-, *sup- (to sleep). Cognate with Icelandic svefja (to sleep), Latin sōpiō (put to sleep, lull, verb). Related to sweven.

Verb

sweb (third-person singular simple present swebs, present participle swebbing, simple past and past participle swebbed)

  1. (intransitive, Britain dialectal, Northern England) To swoon; faint.
    Hoo swebbed, all droked in sweat, frae the heat o' the desert sun.

Noun

sweb (plural swebs)

  1. (Britain dialectal, Northern England) A swoon.

Derived terms

Anagrams

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