seent
English
Etymology
Apparently seen with the past tense suffix -t.
Verb
seent
- (dialectal, especially African American Vernacular) simple past tense and past participle of see
- 2008, Tracy Price-Thompson, A Woman's Worth →ISBN, page 6:
- "And"—Skeeter glared at Casper with killer eyes—"I kin tell you sumpthin' too, Mistah White Boy. Skeeter don't scare, and Slim Willie don't neither! Whatever you seent Slim do that night in Argle, you ain't seent shit."
- 2008, Tracy Price-Thompson, A Woman's Worth →ISBN, page 6:
Anagrams
- ESnet, Enets, NEETs, enset, neets, senet, sente, steen, teens, tense
Luxembourgish
Verb
seent
- inflection of seenen:
- third-person singular present indicative
- second-person plural present indicative
- second-person plural imperative