gracen
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]gracen (third-person singular simple present gracens, present participle gracening, simple past and past participle gracened)
- (transitive, rare) To add grace (to); make graceful; to grace
- 1941, Saturday Review of Literature, volume 24, page xxii:
- Be with me in this hour: dread shapes of thee
Apparelled in the lustre not their own —
As buzzard, gracened by the wizardry
Of light, looks all but lovely as the swan —
Shall not appall.
- 1955, Post Wheeler, Hallie Erminie Rives, Dome of Many-coloured Glass, page 3:
- It marched to music. It clothed itself in a conventional beauty that the world saw nowhere else. Our story, to gracen it, should have that charm and beauty too.
Anagrams
[edit]Middle English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Old French graciier, from grace; equivalent to grace + -en (“infinitival ending”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]gracen
Conjugation
[edit]Conjugation of gracen (weak in -ed)
1Sometimes used as a formal 2nd-person singular.
Descendants
[edit]- English: grace
References
[edit]- “grācen, v.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-05-14.
Swedish
[edit]Noun
[edit]gracen
Categories:
- English terms suffixed with -en (inchoative)
- English lemmas
- English verbs
- English transitive verbs
- English terms with rare senses
- English terms with quotations
- Middle English terms borrowed from Old French
- Middle English terms derived from Old French
- Middle English terms suffixed with -en (infinitival)
- Middle English terms with IPA pronunciation
- Middle English lemmas
- Middle English verbs
- Middle English terms with rare senses
- Middle English weak verbs
- Swedish non-lemma forms
- Swedish noun forms