Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word requite. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word requite, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say requite in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word requite you have here. The definition of the word requite will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofrequite, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
From re-(prefix meaning ‘again; back, backward’)[2] + quiten(“to pay, pay for; to repay; to acquit (someone of a charge), exonerate; to prove (oneself) innocent; to answer, reply; to atone for (a sin); to compensate, make amends; to depart, leave; to equal, match; to fulfil (an obligation); to give back, return; to give up, relinquish; to release, set free; to render (a service); to reward; to give retribution, take revenge”)[3] (from Old Frenchquitter(“to free, liberate”) (modern Frenchquitter),[4] from quitte(“free, liberated”) + -er(suffix forming verbs)). Quitte is derived from Latinquiētus(“at rest; quiet”), the perfectpassiveparticiple of quiēscō(“to repose, rest; to sleep; to be quiet or still”), from quiēs(“rest, repose; sleep; calm, peace, quiet”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European*kʷyeh₁-(“to rest; peace, rest”)) + -scō(suffix forming verbs with the sense ‘to begin to do ’).
But remember / (For that's my buſineſſe to you) that you three / From Millaine did ſupplant good Proſpero, / Expos'd vnto the Sea (vvhich hath requit it) / Him, and his innocent childe: for vvhich foule deed, / The Povvres, delaying (not forgetting) haue / Incens'd the Seas, and Shores; yea, all the Creatures / Againſt your peace: […]
He that requiteth a good turne, muſt imploy ſomevvhat of his ovvne, as he doth vvho repayeth the monie he ovveth: but he layeth out nothing vvho ſatisfieth himſelfe, no more then he giueth, vvho giueth to himſelfe. […] He therefore that requiteth a good turne pleaſureth him againe, from vvhom hee hath receiued any thing.
1639, Thomas Fuller, “Jerusalem Wonne by the Turk, with Wofull Remarkables thereat”, in The Historie of the Holy Warre, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Thomas Buck, one of the printers to the Universitie of Cambridge , →OCLC, book II, page 107:
[T]hey requitedChriſts paſſion, and died for him vvho ſuffered for them.
"It was the act of an Englishman—a fellow Englishman," said the little man simply. "I hope that one day I shall have the opportunity of requiting it … I probably shall," he added rather sadly. "It is one of the pleasant if quite onerous duties of a man of my position to requite the services he receives—usually on a disproportionately extravagant scale."
To repay (someone) a debt owed; specifically, to recompense or reward (someone) for a favour, a service rendered, etc.
Sir I am ſo poore to requite you, you muſt looke for nothing but thankes of me, […]
1656, Tho[mas] Stanley, “[Aristotle.] Chapter I. His Country, Parents, and Time of His Birth.”, in The History of Philosophy, the Second Volume, volume II, London: Humphrey Moseley, and Thomas Dring:, →OCLC, 6th part (Containing the Peripatetick Philosophers), page 1:
This place, to vvhich Ariſtotle ovv'd his birth, he aftervvards requited vvith extraordinary gratitude.
Used with a place instead of a person as an object.
1725, [Daniel Defoe], “Part II”, in A New Voyage Round the World, by a Course Never Sailed before., London: A Bettesworth,; and W. Mears,, →OCLC, page 68:
[…] I vvas as vvell able to requite him for a large Preſent as he vvas to make it, and had reſolv'd it before I knevv he had ſent any Thing to the Ship; ſo that this exchanging of Preſents vvas but a kind of generous Barter or Commerce: […]
1790, William Cowper, “On the Receipt of My Mother’s Picture out of Norfolk. The Gift of My Cousin Ann Bodham.”, in Poems, London: or J Johnson, by T Bensley,, published 1806, →OCLC, page 582:
[W]hat here vve call our life is ſuch, / So little to be loved, and thou ſo much, / That I ſhould ill requite thee to conſtrain / Thy unbound ſpirit into bonds again.
[R]egard this Earth / Made multitudinous with thy slaves, whom thou / Requitest for knee-worship, prayer, and praise, / And toil, and hecatombs of broken hearts, / With fear and self-contempt and barren hope.
He was standing at the window, […] when in bounces little red-faced, bustling Dr. Toole—the joke and the chuckle with which he had just requited the fat old barmaid still ringing in the passage—[…]
1534, John Heywood, A Play of Loue,, : W Rastell, →OCLC; reprinted as John S. Farmer, editor, A Play of Love (The Tudor Facsimile Texts), London, Edinburgh: T. C. & E. C. Jack,, 1909, →OCLC, signature B.i., verso:
My loue is requyted ſo louyngly / That in euery thyng that may delyght my mynde, / My wyt can not wyſhe it ſo well as I fynde
To love thee boundless, was my bold resolve, / Because my courage fail'd to equal thee. / I then began with thousand tender arts / And pure fraternal love, thy heart to storm. / But cold, proud soul, requitedst thou this love.
And when Joſephs brethren ſaw that their father was dead, they ſaid, Joseph will peraduenture hate vs, and will certainely requite vs all the euill which we did vnto him.
My Gratious Lord, not ſo much for the iniury hée offred me héere in your preſence, as to delight you with ſome mirth, hath Fauſtus worthily requited this iniurious knight, which being all I deſire, I am content to releaſe him of his hornes: […]
1613, Samuel Purchas, “[Relations of the Regions and Religions in Africa.] Of Presbyter Iohn: And of the Priest-Iohns in Asia: Whether that Descended of These.”, in Purchas His Pilgrimage. Or Relations of the World and the Religions Observed in All Ages and Places Discouered, from the Creation vnto this Present., London: William Stansby for Henrie Fetherstone,, →OCLC, book VII (Of Æthiopia, and the African Ilands; and of Their Religions), page 558:
[B]y kindling a fire in each Image, they made ſuch a ſmoke that the Indians vvounded & ſlevv many Tartars, vvho could not ſee to requite them [i.e., themselves] through the ſmoke: […]
[T]he doubly felon / […] / Requite himself for his most just expulsion / By blackening publicly his sovereign's consort, / And be resolved by his upright compeers.
He bowed slightly to K.'s uncle, who appeared very flattered to make this new acquaintance, yet, being by nature incapable of expressing obligation, requited the Clerk of the Court's words with a burst of embarrassed but raucous laughter.
1646, Thomas Browne, “Concerning the Loadstone, therein of Sundry Common Opinions, and Received Relations, Naturall, Historicall, Medicall, Magicall”, in Pseudodoxia Epidemica:, London: T H for Edward Dod,, →OCLC, 2nd book, page 77:
[For if] tranſmutation be made from one mans body into another, as if a piece of fleſh be exchanged from the biciptall muſcle of either parties arme, and about them both, an Alphabet circumſcribed; upon a time appointed as ſome conceptions affirme, they may communicate at vvhat diſtance ſoever. For if the one ſhall prick himſelf in A, the other at the ſame time vvill have a ſenſe thereof in the ſame part; […] vvhich is a vvay of intelligence very ſtrange, and vvould requite the Arte of Pythagoras; vvho could read a reverſe in the Moone.
This Roman Hierarchy ſhall be Politically killed, deveſted of all Povver and Authority: From vvhence vvill naturally flovv Mourning and Famine, grief of heart, vvith ſcarcity and poverty to requite their luxury before.
1528, Thomas More, “A Dialogue Concernynge Heresyes & Matters of Religion. Chapter XIV.”, in Wyllyam Rastell [i.e., William Rastell], editor, The Workes of Sir Thomas More Knyght,, London: Iohn Cawod, Iohn Waly, and Richarde Tottell, published 30 April 1557, →OCLC, book IV, page 278, column 2:
[…]Chriſt and his holy apoſtles, exhort euery man to pacience and ſufferance, without requiting of an euil dede or making anye defence but vſing further ſufferance, & doyng alſo good for euill, […]
Becauſe the ſpoiler is come vpon her, euen vpon Babylon, and her mightie men are taken, euery one of their vowes is broken, for the Lord God of recompenſes ſhall ſurely requite.
(transitive) to repay (a debt owed); to recompense or reward someone for (a favour, a service rendered, etc.); to repay (someone) a debt owed; to recompense or reward (someone) for a favour, a service rendered, etc.
Macedonian: please add this translation if you can
(transitive) to retaliate or seek revenge for (an insult, a wrong, etc.); to retaliate or seek revenge against (someone) for an insult, a wrong, etc.; to seek revenge for (oneself) — see also avenge