bive

English

Etymology

From Middle English bivien, beofian, from Old English bifian, beofian (to tremble, be moved, shake, quake), from Proto-Germanic *bibōną, *bibjaną (to quake, shiver), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰoyǝ- (to frighten, be afraid). Cognate with Dutch beven (to quake), German beben (to quake, tremble), Swedish bäva (to quake, tremble), Icelandic bifa (to budge, be moved), Latin foedus (disgusting, shocking, abominable, heinous). More at bever.

Verb

bive (third-person singular simple present bives, present participle biving, simple past and past participle bived)

  1. (intransitive, obsolete) To shake; tremble.

Anagrams


Volapük

Noun

bive

  1. dative singular of biv
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