English

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Etymology

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From Middle English carven, a variant (with the vowel modified to match the present stem) of Middle English corven, y-corven (carved), from Old English corfen, ġecorfen (cut, carved), from Proto-West Germanic *korban, from Proto-Germanic *kurbanaz (cut, carved), past participle of *kerbaną (to carve). Equivalent to carve +‎ -en (past participle ending).

Adjective

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carven (not comparable)

  1. Made by carving, especially when intricately or artistically done.
    • 1842, Alfred Tennyson, “The Day-Dream. The Sleeping Palace.”, in Poems. [], volume II, London: Edward Moxon, [], →OCLC, page 151:
      The beams that thro' the Oriel shine / Make prisms in every carven glass, / And beaker brimm'd with noble wine.
    • 1903 April 11, F[lora] A[nnie] Steel, “The Beasts That Perish”, in The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art, volume 95, number 2,476, London, page 449, column 1:
      I can fancy myself there now, the sun and the sweetness of the orange blossom bewildering in their purity, the green parrotlings in a nest behind a carven god simmering away contentedly like half a dozen kettles until with an express train shriek a red and green parent whizzed past me bearing a dinner for one, []
    • 1920, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Thuvia, Maiden of Mars[1], HTML edition, The Gutenberg Project, published 2008:
      The facades of the buildings fronting upon the avenue within the wall were richly carven []
    • 1999, Lin Carter, The Quest of Kadji, page 118:
      The architecture was bewildering in its multiform complexity: great, sleepy-lidded faces of stone gazed down from the eight-sided towers; fantastic dragon-hybrids writhed entangled coils above portal and arch; many-armed and beast-headed gods thronged the paven ways, lining entire avenues in rank on rank of carven stone idols so innumerable as to suggest pantheons as populous as dynasties.

Verb

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carven

  1. (archaic) past participle of carve.

Anagrams

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Middle English

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Verb

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carven

  1. Alternative form of kerven