withseien

Middle English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old English wiþsecgan (withsay), adapted to reflect the change of the verb secgan (say) to Middle English seien[1]; equivalent to with- + seien.

Verb

withseien

  1. to speak against, that is:
    1. to protest, to deny; to refute, to speak out against, to oppose in speech
      • c. 1225, “Oðer dale: fif ƿittes”, in Ancrene Ƿiſſe (MS. Corpus Christi 402), Herefordshire, published c. 1235, folio 22, recto; republished at Cambridge: Parker Library on the Web, January 2018:
        [] he hit ne maȝe naneſƿeiſ allunge wið ſeggen · he þah biuoꝛe þe mon ſeolf makeð hiſ uuel leaſſe ·
        [] that people can't in any way deny it entirely, though they will downplay the man's evil while they're with him.
      • c. 1445, in W. P. Baildon, Select cases in Chancery, A.D. 1364 to 1471 (1896), 136:
        He withseieth not the matier conteigned in the seid bille of complainte.
    2. to disparage; to denounce
    3. to contemn, to display contempt for
    4. to renounce, to repudiate, to give up
    5. to refuse; to forbid, to refuse permission to
      • c. 1450, Merlin (1899), XIV204:
        I will in no wise with-sey that ye requere.
    6. to decline, to refuse to do or accept
    7. to reply
    8. (law) to appeal, to contest the validity of a legal decision
    9. (law) to challenge, to contest the validity of a claim or argument
    10. (law) to disavow, to contest the validity of an oath

Descendants

  • English: withsay

References

  1. Middle English Dictionary. "Withseien".
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