leavest
English
Etymology
leave + -est
Verb
leavest
- (archaic) second-person singular simple present form of leave
- 1544-1595, Edward Fairfax (1560-1635);, Jerusalem Delivered:
- XXXVI "Whither, O cruel! leavest thou me alone?"
- 1878, Michael Angelo Buonarroti & Tommaso Campanella, Sonnets:
- But thou, thyself not knowing, leavest all For a poor price to strangers; since thy head Is weak, albeit thy limbs are stout and good.
- 1881, Madge Morris, Debris:
- Each loved one that thou leavest here, Some other love may wear, Each heart will have some other heart Its loneliness to share.
- 1901, Charles Alfred Downer, Frédéric Mistral:
- "My head is bursting, and since from the heights of my supernatural love a thunderbolt thus hurls me down, since, nothing, nothing henceforth, from this moment on, can give me joy, since, cruel woman, when thou couldst throw me a rope, thou leavest me, in dismay, to drink the bitter current--let death come, black hiding-place, bottomless abyss! let me plunge down head first!"
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Anagrams
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