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sethen. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
sethen, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
sethen in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
sethen you have here. The definition of the word
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sethen, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
Middle English
- cethyn, sethyn, seþine, seþen, seoþe, zeoþen, seþe, seeþ, seeth, seþ, seeþe
Etymology
From Old English sēoþan, from Proto-Germanic *seuþaną; a cognate of Middle Low German sēden, Middle Dutch sieden, Middle High German sieden, and Old Swedish siūþa.
Pronunciation
Verb
sethen
- To boil or seethe; to heat a fluid:
- To boil food or meat as to cook or prepare it.
1470–1485 (date produced), Thomas Malory, “Capitulum ix”, in [Le Morte Darthur], book VI, by
William Caxton], published
31 July 1485,
→OCLC, leaf 98, verso; republished as H
Oskar Sommer, editor,
Le Morte Darthur , London:
David Nutt,
,
1889,
→OCLC,
page 196, lines
29–33:
A none ſyr kay ſayd ⸝ here is good mete for vs for one meale ⸝ for we had not many a day no good repaſt ⸝ And ſo that veneſon was roſted baken and ſoden ⸝ and ſo after ſouper ſomme abode there al that nyghte- Anon, Sir Kay said, here is good meat for us for one meal, for we had no good repast for many a day. And so that venison was roasted, baked and boiled, and so after supper some abided there all that night.
- To boil down or off; to reduce by boiling something.
- To boil something into an essence; to boil as a form of processing.
- To inflict punishment or injury by boiling (typically used of Hell)
- To cook or heat (especially used of processing ceramics or ingredients)
- To break down or process one's consumed food using stomach acid; to digest.
- (figurative, rare) To make pure; to revitalise.
Usage notes
While the past singular forms in seth- and present forms in seth- were spelt the same way, the past forms' vowel was /ɛː/ while the present forms had /eː/.
Conjugation
infinitive
|
(to) sethen, sethe
|
|
present tense
|
past tense
|
1st-person singular
|
sethe
|
seth, soth
|
2nd-person singular
|
sethest
|
sothe, sode, seth, soth
|
3rd-person singular
|
setheth, seth
|
seth, soth
|
subjunctive singular
|
sethe
|
sothe1, sode1
|
imperative singular
|
—
|
|
plural2
|
sethen, sethe
|
sothen, sothe, soden, sode
|
imperative plural
|
setheth, sethe
|
—
|
|
participles
|
sethynge, sethende
|
soden, sode, ysoden, ysode
|
1Replaced by the indicative in later Middle English.
2Sometimes used as a formal 2nd-person singular.
Derived terms
Descendants
References