devide
Appearance
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]devide (third-person singular simple present devides, present participle deviding, simple past and past participle devided)
- Obsolete form of divide.
- 1560, Peter Whitehorne, Machiavelli, Volume I[1]:
- Thei devide all their inhabiters into divers partes: and every parte thei name of the kinde of those weapons, that thei use in the warre.
- 1590, Edmund Spenser, Spenser's The Faerie Queene, Book I[2], published 1921:
- XXXVII His owne two hands the holy knots did knit, 325 That none but death for ever can devide; His owne two hands, for such a turne most fit, The housling fire[*] did kindle and provide, And holy water thereon sprinckled wide; At which the bushy Teade a groome did light, 330 And sacred lamp in secret chamber hide, Where it should not be quenched day nor night, For feare of evill fates, but burnen ever bright.
- 1630, William Pemble, A Briefe Introduction to Geography[3]:
- The greater circles are those which devide this earthly globe into equall halfes or Haemispheres.
Galician
[edit]Verb
[edit]devide