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wharve. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
wharve, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
wharve in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
wharve you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English wharven (“to turn”), from Old English hweorfan (“to turn”), from Proto-West Germanic *hwerban (“to turn”), from Proto-Germanic *hwerbaną (“to turn”). Cognate with Dutch werven (“to recruit”), Icelandic hverfa (“to turn”), Faroese hvørva (“to disappear”), German werben (“to recruit, advertise”).
Verb
wharve (third-person singular simple present wharves, present participle wharving, simple past wharved or whorf, past participle wharved or whorven)
- (Scotland, Northern England) To turn, turn over (especially of mown grass).
- “Junda” Klingrahool (1898)ː
- It wharves the wair and stirs the sand.
References
Etymology 2
From Middle English wherve, from Old English hweorfa, related to the verb.
Noun
wharve (plural wharves)
- The whorl of a spindle.
- 1538, Elyot, Spondilus:
- a wherue, whyche is a rounde thyne of stone, or wodde, or leadde, put on a spyndell to make it runne rounde.
1590, Barrough, Meth. Phisick, volume xxiv, published 1596, page 339:He did lay […] a thick round peece of lead like vnto a wherue.
1601, Pliny, Holland, xi. xxiv, I. page 323:So fine […] a thread she [a spider] spinnes, hanging thereunto her self, and using the weight of her owne bodie in stead of a wherve.
- 1688, Holme, Armoury III, xxi, page 266:
- The Warve or small Pullas.
1693, Urquhart's Rabelais, III. xxviii, page 237:Wouldst thou […] joynt the Wherves, slander the Spinning Quills, […]
1884, W. S. B. McLaren, Spinning, second edition, page 171:The wharve, B, together with sliding tube, C, runs loosely on the spindle and carries the bobbin.
Anagrams