havest

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by WingerBot (talk | contribs) as of 13:25, 1 October 2019.
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English

A user suggests that this English entry be cleaned up, giving the reason: “By the example this is Middle English (enm) and an inflected form of haven and not New English (en)”.
Please see the discussion on Requests for cleanup(+) for more information and remove this template after the problem has been dealt with.

Etymology

From Middle English havest, hast, second-person present singular form of haven, from Old English hæfst, hafast, second-person present singular form of habban, hafian, from Proto-Germanic *habaisi, second-person present singular form of *habjaną; equivalent to have +‎ -est.

Verb

havest

  1. Obsolete form of hast.

Anagrams


Middle English

Etymology

From Old English hæfst, hafast, second-person present singular form of habban, hafian, from Proto-Germanic *habaisi, second-person present singular form of *habjaną; equivalent to haven +‎ -est.

Alternative forms

Verb

havest

  1. Template:enm-second-person singular of
    • 13th C., anonymous, “Worldesblis ne last no throwe”, Rawlinson Ms G18
      wanne thu list, mon, undur molde / thu shalt hauen astu hauest wrokt.
      (When you lie, man, under the mould, / you'll have as you've wrought.)