blent
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɛnt
Verb
blent
- (archaic, poetic) simple past tense and past participle of blend
- 1849, Charlotte Brontë, Shirley:
- She would return home comforted, carrying in her mind a clearer vision of his aspect, a distincter recollection of his voice, his smile, his hearing; and, blent with these impressions, was often a sweet persuasion that, if she could get near him, his heart might welcome her presence yet: that at this moment he might be willing to extend his hand and draw her to him, and shelter her at his side as he used to do.
- 1883, Omar Khayyám, trans. Edward Henry Whinfield, Quatrains of Omar Khayyám, No. 96, page 66:
- The good and evil with man's nature blent, / The weal and woe that heaven's decrees have sent— / Impute them not to motions of the skies— / Skies than thyself ten times more impotent.
- 1873 August 1, J.A. Symonds "Poliziano's Italian Poetry" Fortnightly Review Vol.20 No.80 p.167:
- His merit as a stylist was this—that he blent the antique and the romantic, pure outline with sensual fulness.
- 1908, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables
- 1973, Poul Anderson, The People of the Wind:
- Ranchland rolled beneath him. Here around Gray, the mainly Ythrian settlements northward merged with the mainly human south; both ecologies blent with Avalon’s own, and the country became a checkerboard.
- (no date), There was such a nice frosty, Octobery smell in the air, blent with the delightful odor of newly plowed fields.
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