dight

pronunciation

How to pronounce dight in British English: UK [daɪt]word uk audio image

How to pronounce dight in American English: US [daɪt] word us audio image

Word Origin

dight (v.)
"to adorn" (archaic or poetic), Old English dihtan "dictate, appoint, ordain; guide; compose," an early borrowing from Latin dictare "to dictate" (see dictate (v.)). The Latin word borrowed even earlier into continental Germanic became Old High German dihton "to write compose," German dichten "to write poetry." In Middle English, dight exploded to a vast array of meanings (including "to rule," "to handle," "to abuse," "to have sex with," "to kill," "to clothe," "to make ready," "to repair") till it was one of the most-used verbs in the language, but all senses have faded now into obscurity, dialect, or poetic use.

Example

1. He is dight and dark .
2. In my opinion this is a very dight book indeed .
3. It was a dight on a past award-winner , stevenson .
4. The differences between us are really quite dight .
5. ' Not at the moment , ' she said after a dight hesitation .

more: >How to Use "dight" with Example Sentences