giet

Etymology
From.

Adverb

 * 1) still
 * 2) * late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Boethius' 
 * "ang"
 * 1) * late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Boethius' 
 * "ang"

- Þȳ iċ wundriġe hwȳ þū ne mæġe onġietan þæt þū eart nū ġīet swīðe ġesǣliġ, nū þū ġīet leofast and eart hāl.


 * 1) * c. 897,, translation of Pope Gregory's 
 * "ang"

- Hēr man mæġ ġīet ġesēon heora swaðu, ac wē him ne cunnon æfter spyrian.


 * 1) * late 10th century, Ælfric, the Old English Hexateuch, Genesis 45:3
 * "ang"

- And hē cwæþ tō his ġebrōðrum, "Iċ eom Iosep! Leofaþ ūre fæder nū ġīet?"


 * 1) * Genesis 45:28
 * "ang"

- And hē cwæþ "Iċ hæbbe ġenōg ġif Iosep mīn sunu ġīet leofaþ. Iċ fare and ġesēo hine ǣr þām þe iċ swelte."


 * 1) (in negative phrases) yet
 * 2) * c. 992, Ælfric, "The Nativity of St. Andrew the Apostle"
 * "ang"

- Ne ġesāwon hīe þā ġīet hine ǣnegu wundru wyrċan.


 * 1) even (used to emphasize comparatives)
 * 2) * late 9th century, translation of Bede's Ecclesiastical History
 * "ang"
 * "ang"

- Līfes bōc and þrōwunge Sancte Anastase martyre, sēo wæs yfele of Crēcisċe on Lǣden ġehwierfedu and ġīet wiers fram sumum unġetȳdum ġeryhtedu, iċ ġeryhte swā swā iċ meahte.


 * 1) keep, continuing an action (+verb)
 * 2) * late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Boethius' 
 * "ang"

- Iċ wēne þēah, ġif wit ġīet uncru word tōsamne slēaþ, þæt þǣr āspringe sum spearca upp sōþfæstnesse þāra þe wit ǣr ne ġesāwon.