mout
English edit
Verb edit
mout
- Pronunciation spelling of might corresponding to US regional dialect.
- 1858, Harper's Weekly[1]:
- He was quickly silenced, however, by a burly individual, who "reckoned that it mout be jist as well for the stranger to keep his clam-shell shut."
See also edit
Anagrams edit
Dutch edit
Etymology edit
From Middle Dutch malt, mout, from Old Dutch malt, from Proto-West Germanic *malt, from Proto-Germanic *maltą.
Cognate with Limburgish maajt, Old Saxon malt, Middle Low German malt, German Low German Molt, Old Frisian malt, Saterland Frisian Moalt, Old English mealt, Middle English malt, English malt, Scots maut, Yola mault, Old High German malz, Middle High German malz, German Malz, Luxembourgish Malz, Kölsch Malz, Old Norse malt, Icelandic malt, Faroese malt, Norwegian Bokmål malt, Swedish malt, Danish malt, Gutnish malt.
More distantly related to Old Prussian maldai, Old Church Slavonic младъ (mladŭ), Russian молодой (molodoj), Czech mladý, Polish młody, Latin mollis, Sanskrit मृदु (mṛdu), Armenian մեղկ (meġk).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
mout m (uncountable)
Derived terms edit
-general:
-types of malt
Related terms edit
Descendants edit
- → West Frisian: mout
French edit
Noun edit
mout m (plural mouts)
Old French edit
Adverb edit
mout
- Alternative form of molt
- c. 1170, Chrétien de Troyes, Érec et Énide:
- Mout avoit changiee sa vie
- Much has it changed his life
Scots edit
Verb edit
mout