fremish
English
Etymology
From Middle English fremyssh, *fremysshen, from (the stem of) Middle French fremir, from Late Latin *fremīre, from Latin fremere.
Verb
fremish (third-person singular simple present fremishes, present participle fremishing, simple past and past participle fremished)
- (intransitive, rare, archaic) To shiver or shudder.
- 1859, Memoirs of Bartholomew Fair, p. 6:
- He fremiſhed and for dread trembled, and great cries out of his mouth proceeded […]
- 1954, University of New Mexico, New Mexico Quarterly, Vol. 24:
- I fremish to conceive what might happen to the style of certain avant-garde bellelettrists if they were made to assist at some frequentations with Shakespeare […]
- 1859, Memoirs of Bartholomew Fair, p. 6: