dow

verb
/daʊ/

Etymology

From Middle English douen, from Old English dugan, from Proto-West Germanic *dugan, from Proto-Germanic *duganą.

  1. inherited from *duganą
  2. inherited from *dugan
  3. inherited from dugan
  4. inherited from douen

Definitions

  1. To be worth.

  2. To thrive, prosper.

  3. To furnish with a dower

    To furnish with a dower; to endow.

  4. + 13 more definitions
    1. Alternative form of dhow (“sailing vessel”).

    2. Obsolete form of dove (“pigeon”).

      • The fauconer then was prest, Came runnynge with a dow, And cryed, ‘Stow, stow, stow!’ But she [his hawk] wold not bow.
    3. Alternative form of dah (“Burmese knife”).

    4. Obsolete form of dough

      • This day my Julia thou must make For Mistresse Bride, the wedding Cake: Knead but the Dow, and it will be To paste of Almonds turn’d by thee: Or kisse it thou, but once, or twice, And for the Bride-Cake ther’l be Spice.
    5. Initialism of day of the week

    6. A male given name.

    7. A surname transferred from the given name.

    8. Dow Jones average

    9. An unincorporated community in Jersey County, Illinois, United States.

    10. An unincorporated community in Perry County, Kentucky, United States.

    11. Initialism of United States Department of War.

    12. Initialism of department of war.

    13. Alternative form of DOW.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for dow. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA