oversit
English
Etymology
From Middle English oversitten (“to gain possession of”), from Old English ofersittan (“to occupy, possess; forbear”), from Proto-Germanic *uber (“over”) + *sitjaną (“to sit”), corresponding to over- + sit.
Verb
oversit (third-person singular simple present oversits, present participle oversitting, simple past and past participle oversat)
- To preside over, govern, rule; to control
- To conquer, gain control or owndom of
- To grasp, comprehend; to understand
- (archaic) To neglect, omit; to desist, refrain from, forbear
- (archaic) To overstay, outstay, overlinger
- (slang, humorous) To be misunderstood; to misread, misunderstand
- Nobody understands me, they all oversit me.
Related terms
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.