withershins

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From wither- + shins, sins, alteration of withersuns (contrary to the sun's course, literally against the sun's), modelled after Middle Low German weddersins, weddersinnes (in the opposite direction), from Middle High German widdersinnes (in the opposite direction, literally contrary to reason), from wider (opposite) + sinnes, genitive of sin (course). Compare also Old English wiþersīenes (backwards, withershins), Icelandic viðer (against), Danish veder, Swedish veder. More at wither, sense.

Adverb

withershins (not comparable)

  1. Anti-clockwise, in the contrary direction, especially to the left or opposite to the direction of the sun.
    • 1763, Allan Ramsay, The Gentle Shephard:
      Boils up their Livers in a Warlock's pow, Rins withershins about the Hemlock low
    • 1933, W.B. Yeats, Coole Park, 1929:
      The intellectual sweetness of those lines / That cut through time or cross it withershins.

Antonyms

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