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soothfast. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
soothfast, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
soothfast in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
soothfast you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From Middle English sothfast, from Old English sōþfæst (“true, trustworthy”), from Proto-West Germanic *sanþafast. Equivalent to sooth + fast.
Adjective
soothfast
- (archaic) Actual; real.
2012, original 1885, Sir Richard Burton, The Arabian Nights:So she brought him the China bowl saying in herself, “I shall know what to do when I find out if the words of my child concerning these jewels be soothfast or not”; […]
2009, J. P. MacLean, A History of the Clan MacLean, page 452:But her brother has taken and joined their hands,
And so soothfast was the kiss —
So dear love's due to her lips so true —
She had like to have died of bliss; […]
2022, Neil Munro, Brian D. Osborne, Ronald Armstrong, That Vital Spark, page 182:“I'll take your word for it,” said he, with another glance at a very soothfast mask that came down on as sweet a pair of lips as ever man took craving for.
2022, Evelyn Underhill, The Cloud of Unknowing:And hereby mayest thou see and learn, that there is no soothfast security, nor yet no true rest in this life.
- (archaic) Based on the truth, true; faithful; honest, veracious
2015, Richard Francis Burton, John Payne, Andrew Lang, One Thousand and One Nights:But he said to her, “Nay, mother mine, indeed he is soothfast and lieth not; for that, in the first of his dealing, he tried me and now his intent is to accomplish unto me his promise.”
2020, George Gordon Byron, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Christopher Marlowe, Harvard on the Beach:The "soothfast" souls adore true gods; […]
Derived terms
Translations
Adverb
soothfast
- (obsolete) Actually; truthfully.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:actually
1867, Ralph Waldo Emerson, “May-Day”, in May-Day and Other Pieces, Boston, Mass.: Ticknor and Fields, →OCLC, page 24:I care not if the pomps you show / Be what they soothfast appear, / Or if yon realms in sunset glow / Be bubbles of the atmosphere.