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Webster 1913 Edition
Lith
Lith
Webster 1828 Edition
Lith
LITH
,Definition 2024
lith
lith
English
Alternative forms
- lythe (15th century)
Noun
lith (plural liths)
- (Britain dialectal) A limb; any member of the body.
- (Britain dialectal) A joint; a segment or symmetrical part or division.
- lith and limb; out of lith
- 1485, Sir Thomas Malory, chapter xiij, in Le Morte Darthur, book III:
- he departed with the lady / & brouȝt her to Camelot / Soo as they rode in a valey it was ful of stones / and there the ladyes hors stumbled and threwe her doun that her arme was sore brysed and nere she swouned for payne / Allas syr sayd the lady myn arme is oute of lythe wher thorow I must nedes reste me
- (Scotland) A segment of an orange, or similar fruit.
Etymology 2
From Middle English lith, lyth (“owndom”), from Old Norse lýðr (“people, lede”), from Proto-Germanic *liudiz (“men, people”), from Proto-Indo-European *(e)lewedʰ- (“man, people”). Cognate with Dutch lieden and lui, German Leute (“people”), Old English lēode (“people”). More at lede.
Noun
lith (uncountable)
Etymology 3
From Middle English *lith, from Old Norse hlið (“a gap, gate, space”), from Proto-Germanic *hliþą (“door, lid, eyelid”), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱel- (“to conceal, hide”). Cognate with Norwegian dialectal lid, led (“an opening in a fence”), Scots lith (“a gap in a fence, gate opening”), Old English hlid (“lid, covering, door, gate, opening”). More at lid.
Noun
lith (plural liths)
Anagrams
Scots
Etymology
From Old English liþ, from Proto-Germanic *liþuz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [lɪθ]
Noun
lith (plural liths)
- (anatomy) limb, member
- (anatomy) joint
- (of an orange, apple, onion, etc.) segment, division
- joint, slice, segment
- one of the rings at the base of a cow's horn
Verb
lith (third-person singular present liths, present participle lithin, past lithit, past participle lithit)