guesten
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]guesten (third-person singular simple present guestens, present participle guestening, simple past and past participle guestened)
- (dialectal, transitive, Scotland, Northern England) To entertain as a guest; to lodge as a guest.
- 1830, Walter Scott, Waverley Novels: The Monastery, volume 19, page 285:
- Here have I come this length, trusting the godly Earl of Murray would be on his march to the Borders, for he was to have guestened with the Baron of Avenel; and instead of that comes news that he has gone westlandways about some tuilzie in Ayrshire.
- 1861, Once a Week, page 111:
- This stone has the But as there is no longer a chamber to “guesten" peculiar interest of having furnished the key by within, the adventure is nought, and the prophecy which the succession of stations became identified fulfilled.
- 1882, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, volume 131, page 490:
- But Toppet Hob o' the Main had guestened in my house by chance.
- 1924, Virginia Terhune Van de Water, Present Day Etiquette: Including Social Forms, page 151:
- If hospitality be reckoned among the fine arts and moral virtues, to "guesten" aright is a saving social grace.
- 2013, Barnabe Barnes, The Devil's Charter, page 36:
- Hence came it that the ports of Rome were opened (At our behests) to give you guestening.
Derived terms
[edit]Scots
[edit]Verb
[edit]guesten
- (obsolete, transitive) To lodge as a guest.