wrought

Etymology
The past participle of, from (past tense , past participle ), from , from , from. Doublet of worked.

Cognate with (as in  etc.), 🇨🇬, archaic past participle of  (archaic past tense ), 🇨🇬, archaic past participle of  (archaic past tense, archaic past participle ).

Adjective

 * 1) Having been worked or prepared somehow.
 * Is that fence made out of wrought iron?

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Catalan:
 * Finnish:
 * French: ,
 * German:, , ,
 * Italian:
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian: ,
 * Sicilian: travagghiatu, manijatu
 * Spanish:, ,

Verb

 * What hath God wrought?
 * 1) (see usage notes)
 * 1) (see usage notes)
 * 1) (see usage notes)
 * 1) (see usage notes)
 * 1) (see usage notes)
 * 1) (see usage notes)

Usage notes

 * In contemporary English, is usually not interchangeable with, the more common past and past participle of.
 * While wrought usually lends a more archaic flavor, it is still fairly common in certain transitive constructions, e.g. in to work.
 * Because the phrase has become uncommon, its past tense  is now sometimes misinterpreted as being a past tense of.