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Word Meanings - INSOOTH - Book Publishers vocabulary database

In sooth; truly.

Related words: (words related to INSOOTH)

  • TRULY
    1. In a true manner; according to truth; in agreement with fact; as, to state things truly; the facts are truly represented. I can not truly say how I came here. Shak. 2. Exactly; justly; precisely; accurately; as, to estimate truly the weight
  • SOOTHNESS
    Truth; reality. Chaucer.
  • SOOTHLY
    In truth; truly; really; verily. "Soothly for to say." Chaucer.
  • SOOTH
    soth, AS. s, for san; akin to OS. s, OHG. sand, Icel. sannr, Sw. sann, Dan. sand, Skr. sat, sant, real, genuine, present, being; properly p. pr. from a root meaning, to be, Skr. as, L. esse; also akin to Goth. sunjis true, Gr. satya. Absent, Am,
  • SOOTHINGLY
    In a soothing manner.
  • SOOTHE
    1. To assent to as true. Testament of Love. 2. To assent to; to comply with; to gratify; to humor by compliance; to please with blandishments or soft words; to flatter. Good, my lord, soothe him, let him take the fellow. Shak. I've tried the
  • SOOTHING
    from Soothe, v.
  • SOOTHER
    One who, or that which, soothes.
  • SOOTHSAYER
    A mantis. (more info) 1. One who foretells events by the art of soothsaying; a prognosticator.
  • SOOTHSAY
    To foretell; to predict. "You can not soothsay." Shak. "Old soothsaying Glaucus' spell." Milton.
  • SOOTHFAST
    Firmly fixed in, or founded upon, the thruth; true; genuine; real; also, truthful; faithful. -- Sooth"fast`ness, n. "In very soothfastness." Chaucer. Why do not you . . . bear leal and soothfast evidence in her behalf, as ye may with
  • SOOTHSAYING
    1. A true saying; truth. 2. The act of one who soothsays; the foretelling of events; the art or practice of making predictions. A damsel, possessed with a spirit of divination . . . which brought her masters much gain by soothsaying. Acts xvi.
  • FORSOOTH
    In truth; in fact; certainly; very well; -- formerly used as an expression of deference or respect, especially to woman; now used ironically or contemptuously. A fit man, forsooth, to govern a realm! Hayward. Our old English word forsooth has been
  • INSOOTH
    In sooth; truly.

 

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