fortake

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English

Etymology

From Middle English fortaken, equivalent to for- +‎ take. Cognate with dialectal Norwegian fortaka (to assail, assault), Swedish förta (to deprive, take away, deaden).

Verb

fortake (third-person singular simple present fortakes, present participle fortaking, simple past fortook, past participle fortaken)

  1. (transitive) To take away; remove; deprive.
    • 1861, Thomas Oswald Cockayne, Spoon and sparrow:
      Be ye not willing to hoard to you gold hoards on earth, where rust and moth fortake it, and where thieves delve it and forsteal, [...]
    • 1898, Stopford Augustus Brooke, English literature: from the beginning to the Norman conquest:
      In a slaughter wide they fell, woeful days of Bale came on; Famine-death fortook fortitude from men!
  2. (transitive, UK dialectal) To mistake; make a mistake.
  3. (transitive, UK dialectal) To aim or deal a blow at; hit.

Conjugation

Conjugation of fortake
infinitive (to) fortake
present tense past tense
1st-person singular fortake fortook
2nd-person singular fortake, fortakest fortook, fortookst
3rd-person singular fortakes, fortaketh fortook
plural fortake
subjunctive fortake fortook
imperative fortake
participles fortaking fortaken

Archaic or obsolete.

Anagrams