Word of the Day
for Tuesday,
March 5, 2013
Indite \in-DAHYT\, verb:
1. to compose or write, as a poem.
2. to treat in a literary composition.
3. Obsolete. to dictate.
4. Obsolete. to prescribe.
2. to treat in a literary composition.
3. Obsolete. to dictate.
4. Obsolete. to prescribe.
"Will it be any
harm," he said to his friends, "in a piece you want to be written so
low, if we should teach them how they should think and act in common cases, as
well as indite?"
-- Samuel Richardson, A Quiet Corner in a Library, 1915
-- Samuel Richardson, A Quiet Corner in a Library, 1915
And then she called
her father Sir Barnard and her brother Sir Tirry, and heartily she prayed her
father that her brother might write a letter like as she did indite;
and so her father granted her.
-- Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte D'arthur, 1470
-- Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte D'arthur, 1470
Appearing in English in the mid-1300s, this wordy word comes
from the Latin root dictare
meaning "to declare, dictate, or compose in words." Combined with the
prefix in-,
indite
literally means "to put down in writing."
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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