weest

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English westen, from Old English wēstan (to lay waste, ravage), from Proto-Germanic *wōstijaną (to waste, devastate), from Proto-Indo-European *wāst- (empty, void). Cognate with Scots wast, weist (to waste), German wüsten (to waste, squander). More at waste.

Verb

weest (third-person singular simple present weests, present participle weesting, simple past and past participle weested)

  1. (transitive, Britain dialectal, Northern England) To waste.

Etymology 2

From wee + -est.

Adjective

weest

  1. superlative form of wee: most wee

Anagrams


Dutch

Pronunciation

  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -eːst

Verb

weest

  1. (archaic) plural imperative of zijn
  2. (with postpositioned u, not archaic) imperative of zijn
    Weest u niet bang!
    Don’t be afraid!
  3. second-person (gij) singular past indicative of wijzen
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