wither

verb
/ˈwɪðə/UK/ˈwɪðɚ/US

Etymology

From Middle English widren, wydderen (“to dry up, shrivel”), related to or perhaps an alteration of Middle English wederen (“to expose to weather”), from Old English wederian (“to expose to weather, exhibit a change of weather”). Cognates From Proto-Germanic: Dutch verwederen, Dutch verweren (“to erode by weather”), German verwittern, wittern (“to be ruined by weather; to erode”), Swedish vittra (“wither”). More at weather.

  1. inherited from wederian
  2. derived from wederen
  3. inherited from widren

Definitions

  1. To shrivel, droop or dry up, especially from lack of water.

    • The flowers began to wither in the hot sun without enough water.
    • She watched as the old tree slowly withered with time.
    • Without care, the crops will wither and fail to grow.
  2. To cause to shrivel or dry up.

    • There was a man which had his hand withered.
    • This is man, old, wrinkled, faded, withered.
    • now warm in love, now with'ring in the grave
  3. To lose vigour or power

    To lose vigour or power; to languish; to waste away; to pass away.

    • names that must not wither
    • States thrive or wither as moons wax and wane.
  4. + 6 more definitions
    1. To become helpless due to emotion.

    2. To make helpless due to emotion.

    3. singular of withers (“part of the back of a four-legged animal that is between the…

      singular of withers (“part of the back of a four-legged animal that is between the shoulder blades”)

      • Timozel had slid his feet quickly from the stirrups and swung his leg over the horse's wither as it slumped to the ground, standing himself in one graceful movement.
      • If a saddle tips too far forward it may rest on the horse's wither and cause pain. There should always be a gap of roughly 5 cm between the horse's wither and the pommel when you are sitting on the saddle.
    4. Against, in opposition to.

    5. To go against, resist

      To go against, resist; oppose.

    6. A surname.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for wither. 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