revow

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

re- +‎ vow

Verb[edit]

revow (third-person singular simple present revows, present participle revowing, simple past and past participle revowed)

  1. To vow again or anew.
    • 1885, Walford's Antiquarian Magazine and Bibliographical Review, page 16:
      [H]e himself was — all but — revowed to a monastic life.
    • 1938, Loyal Davis, Surgeon extraordinary: the life of J.B. Murphy:
      Not until he and Nettie had almost wept with joy together, not until they had decided that the boy should become a physician, not until they had decided his name should be Harold, not until he had revowed his love ...
    • 1949, Charles O'Neill, Morning Time: A Novel:
      Off in his Green Mountains, Ethan Allen revowed his willingness to defy and make war on the universal earth.

Anagrams[edit]