English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English forleten (forsake, reject, renounce, omit, lose, forgive), from Old English forlǣtan (to leave), from Proto-Germanic *fralētaną (to leave, dismiss), equivalent to for- +‎ let. Cognate with Scots forleet (to forsake, abandon), Saterland Frisian ferläite (to forlet, abandon), West Frisian forlitte (to forlet), Dutch verlaten (to desert, abandon), German verlassen (to leave), Swedish förlåta (to excuse, forgive, remit).

Verb edit

forlet (third-person singular simple present forlets, present participle forletting, simple past and past participle forlet)

  1. (transitive, archaic or UK dialectal) To abandon; give up; leave; leave behind; forsake; desert; neglect. [10th–17th c.]
    to forlet your sins
    • 1807, The Gothic Gospel of saint Matthew:
      I soothly quoth, then say, to you, for that each such, he that forlets wife his, be-out unclean lust doing forth-lying thing, doeth (works) he doeth the same to sin, [...]
    • 1834, Samuel Astley Dunham, A History of Europe During the Middle Ages - Volume 4:
      But, by my soul, I dare well swear His wretched life he shall forlet [...]
    • 1920, Alfred (King of England), Pope Gregory I, Paulus Orosius, King Alfred's books - Page 11:
      [...] whether his mind and his soul were deadly and perishing, or it were aye living and eternal; and again, about his good, what it was, and what good was best for him to do, and what evil to forlet.
    • 2014, Philemon Holland, Plutarch, Plutarch's Moralia - Page 121:
      [...] and then, if upon mature deliberation, when our mind is staid and our senses settled, the thing appear to be naught, we are to hate and abhor it, and in no wise either to forlet and put off, or altogether to omit and forbear correction, like as they refuse meats who have no stomach nor appetite to eat.
  2. (transitive, UK dialectal, Scotland) To forget.

Anagrams edit