ween
suomi-englanti sanakirjaween englanniksi
1481, Author unknown (pseudonym Sir (w)), ''The travels of Sir John Mandeville'':
- And when they will fight they will shock them together in a plump; that if there be 20000 men, men shall not ween that there be scant 10000.
(RQ:Mlry MrtDrthr)/ and sayd vnto Arthur Morgan le fey sendeth here your swerd for grete loue / and he thanked her / & wende it had ben so / but she was fals / for the swerd and the scaubard was counterfeet & brutyll and fals
- And right as Arthur was on horseback there came a damosel from Morgan le Fay, and brought unto Sir Arthur a sword like unto Excalibur, and the scabbard, and said unto Arthur, Morgan le Fay sendeth here your sword for great love. And he thanked her, and weened it had been so, but she was false, for the sword and the scabbard were counterfeit, and brittle, and false.
(RQ:Tyndale NT)
{{quote-text|en|year=1562|author=John Heywood|title=The proverbs, epigrams, and miscellanies of John Heywood
{{quote-text|en|year=1677|author=Thomas Mall|title=A cloud of witnesses
(RQ:Coleridge Christabel)
(RQ:Gilbert and Sullivan HMS Pinafore)
{{quote-text|en|year=1884|author=W.S. Gilbert|title=Princess Ida
(RQ:Melville Billy Budd)
{{quote-text|en|year=1974|translator=Michael Kandel|author=Stanisław Lem|title=The Cyberiad
(ux)
To lament.
(misspelling of).
(infl of)
(alternative spelling of)
(alternative form of)https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/27/The_aborigines_of_Victoria_-_with_notes_relating_to_the_habits_of_the_natives_of_other_parts_of_Australia_and_Tasmania_%28IA_b24885228_0002%29.pdf