appair
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English apeiren, from Old French empeirier (modern French empirer). See impair.
Verb
[edit]appair (third-person singular simple present appairs, present participle appairing, simple past and past participle appaired)
- (transitive, obsolete) To make worse; to injure or damage.
- 1643, William Prynne, The Soveraigne Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes:
- The ancient lawes, uſages, cuſtomes, and franchiſes of the Realm, have been, and be greatly appaired, blemiſhed, and confounded […]
- (intransitive, obsolete) To become impaired; to grow worse.
- 1510, The Summoning of Everyman, Everyman's Library (1909):
- I see the more that I them forbear
- The worse they be from year to year;
- All that liveth appaireth fast
- I see the more that I them forbear
- 1510, The Summoning of Everyman, Everyman's Library (1909):