See also: hôte

English edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English hoten, hoaten, haten, from Old English hātan (to command, be called), from Proto-West Germanic *haitan, from Proto-Germanic *haitaną (command, name), from Proto-Indo-European *keyd-, from *key- (put in motion, be moving).

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

hote (third-person singular simple present hotes, present participle hoting, simple past hight, past participle hoten)

  1. (transitive, dialectal or obsolete) To command; to enjoin.
    The captain hight five sailors stay on the other side of the inlet and guard the cargo.
    Beowulf hight his men build a great mead-hall, the kind of which man's progeny should hear tell forever.
  2. (obsolete) To promise.
  3. (obsolete, intransitive) To be called, be named.
  4. (obsolete, transitive) To call, name.

Usage notes edit

  • In the sense of "to command, enjoin", hight may be replaced as follows:
  • The captain hight five sailors stay on the other side of the inlet and guard the cargo. = The captain commanded five sailors to stay on the other side of the inlet and guard the cargo.
  • Beowulf hight his men build a great mead-hall, the kind of which man's progeny should hear tell forever. = Beowulf commanded his men to build a great mead-hall, the kind of which man's progeny should hear tell forever.
  • The word survives only as part of the oral tradition in rural Scotland and Northern England. It is no longer used in common speech.

Related terms edit

Anagrams edit

Middle English edit

Noun edit

hote

  1. Alternative form of ote

Yola edit

Adjective edit

hote

  1. Alternative form of hoat

References edit

  • Jacob Poole (1867), William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, London: J. Russell Smith, page 46